7 American Engines That Love To Rev

In a world of big-displacement V8 engines, there are still some American mills that like to rev. In fact, some of them are big-displacement V8 engines
7 American Engines That Love To Rev

I penned an article not long ago about the relationship between horsepower and torque. It got me thinking a bit more about American engines, which on the whole generally follow the formula of bigger is better. We think a 5.0-litre V8 is small, while the rest of civilisation (except perhaps for our Australian friends) live and breathe engines half that size while revving twice as high.

Power is power, whether you go small and rev the pee out of it, or go large with instant gratification. I’m all about instant gratification (I know there’s a joke in there somewhere but I’m not touching it), however I also positively adore the endless pull and chilling aural assault that only comes from pistons performing at ludicrous speed.

So I decided to look into some engines from American manufacturers over the last 30 or so years that at least rev to 7000. I’ve avoided some obvious global-market mills like Ford’s Zetec and Duratec engines, and instead looked at motors that had starring roles in American cars. And if you think these are all teeny four- or six-pot DOHC engines, think again. Turn your speakers up and enjoy the sound of RPM in various (and in some cases quite surprising) applications.

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When it debuted in the 1990 Chevrolet Corvette ZR-1, nothing like it had ever been seen in an American performance car. Spinning four overhead camshafts with 32 valves, this big V8 produced 375bhp and spun delightfully to 7000rpm. When the ZR-1 went away in 1995, it was making 405bhp which put it well into supercar territory for the time.

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Another high-revving DOHC product of the late 1980s, the 2.3-litre Quad 4 wasn’t a particularly refined four-cylinder and it did suffer from head gasket issues, but it also made 180bhp in high-output trim, and 190bhp in a few specialty performers of the day like the Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais 442. Keep in mind, that’s naturally-aspirated power, which is damn good for such a small four-pot even by today’s standards. Back then, its hefty output and ability to hit 7000 revs made cars like the Grand Am SE, Oldsmobile Achieva and Chevrolet Beretta GTZ surprisingly quick.

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Those who’ve seen my Car Throttle garage will know I’ve had a little bit of experience with this engine. And to be honest, even though it wears a Ford oval on the intake and was used exclusively in the American-market Taurus SHO, Ford contracted Yamaha to design and build the engine in Japan. It’s a 24-valve DOHC V6 with a 7200rpm cutoff and a gorgeous dual-stage intake manifold to make 220bhp up high, with 200lb ft as low as 2700 revs. It’s rumoured that this engine actually could turn 8500rpm, but was limited to 7200 for the sake of the accessories. I can attest to 8000 with a chip and some underdrive pulleys on my old 1989 SHO, and I loved every second of it.

Offered as the performance option for several front-wheel drive mid-size GM cars through the 1990s, the DOHC 24-valve V6 was a completely different animal to GM’s other much-loved V6, the pushrod 3800. Shoehorned into the likes of the Lumina Z34, the bulky 3.4-litre engine gained a rep for being finicky and hard to work on, but it sounded great at 7000rpm. It also delivered 210bhp - not outstanding given the size but its 215lb ft of torque gave the 3.4 good midrange pull.

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I am of course talking about the 526bhp, DOHC, 32-valve flat-plane crank V8 stuffed beneath the bonnet of the 2016 Mustang Shelby GT350. Everybody has heard about this car and its engine, which redlines at 8250 rpm to produce 102bhp per litre. Peak power comes at a lofty 7500 revs, but it still delivers 90 per cent of its 429 peak torques at a low 3450 RPM. It hits like a proper muscle car, pulls like a supercar, and sounds like nothing else on earth.

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Considering the Shelby’s ability to thrash pistons, hitting 7000rpm in an LS7-powered Corvette Z06 or Camaro Z/28 doesn’t seem quite as impressive. But here’s why it’s more impressive: the LS7 is 7.0-litres of old school American muscle. Its eight cylinders are capped with heads featuring just two valves per cylinder, operated via pushrods driven from a single camshaft in the block. This is a big ass engine that has no business revving to such heights, but GM has this design dialed in to make 505bhp up high with prodigious torque down low.

As impressive as the LS7 is, it’s nothing next to one of NASCAR’s 800bhp 5.9-litre pushrod engines turning 9000rpm for a 500-mile race. These are old-school engines by every definition, right down to the cam-in-block design capped with a massive four-barrel carburetor. Imagine taking a Land Rover around the Nurburgring in under six minutes and you’ll understand the insanity of these mills hitting 9k. They aren’t fancy, but they certainly put the engine in engineering. You gotta respect that.

Comments

TurboToddler (Straight-five)

Don’t forget Dom’s car, which apparently revs to 9k.

12/13/2015 - 08:27 |
178 | 6

I bet you were just looking for a reason to post this image somewhere on CT ヽ༼ຈلຈ༽ノ

12/13/2015 - 08:42 |
216 | 2

That plot. mmm

12/13/2015 - 15:33 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Replace those crappy fours and sixes with the coyote 5.0 and the 5.4 from the cobra R

12/13/2015 - 08:34 |
8 | 2
🎺🎺thank mr skeltal

I’m going to show this list to everybody who complains about American engines having a redline where Japanese engines are at idle.

Also, one more for the list: the 5.4l V8 used in the Ford GT (about 550hp and 774Nm torque)

12/13/2015 - 08:41 |
30 | 2

7k isn’t exactly high revving. The GT350 has a high revving engine yes, absolutely. But the others meh.

12/13/2015 - 12:30 |
22 | 4

Dont forget to show horsepower as well..

12/13/2015 - 19:28 |
0 | 0
Blodørn

Didn’t NASCAR switch to fuel injection in 2012?

12/13/2015 - 09:18 |
8 | 0

I don’t know, but by the looks of the technician, the video looks like the 80’s

12/13/2015 - 10:18 |
0 | 0

Yes they did

12/13/2015 - 16:00 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

But vtec yo!

12/13/2015 - 09:36 |
0 | 0
Matt Harley

Is 7k really considered high revving?

12/13/2015 - 09:38 |
24 | 6

For the size of the engine, yes.

12/13/2015 - 09:39 |
60 | 6
Anonymous

e93 M3, 8400 rpm, 4.0 V8, 420 hp. German engineering ladies and gentlemen.

12/13/2015 - 09:52 |
56 | 26
Anton 3

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Does the Porsche Mezger engine count too? 4.0 B6, currently making 500 hp. And it revs up to 8800 rpm.

12/13/2015 - 10:32 |
12 | 4
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

BTCC laguna’s engine: 2.0 I4 320 HP N/A and redline was 8400rpm. Its a shame its really really hard to get that engine as it wasnt mass produced.

12/13/2015 - 11:33 |
2 | 2
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

So… Germany has finally been caught then?

The Voodoo 5.2 Nearly produces the same HP/L with 526 HP @ 8250RPM from a V8 too…

Wait…

If the Americans can do it, make it pass emissions and all that, that just means BMW really just wants to be more eco friendly with the S55… Shafting Naturally Aspirated Fans in the process.

Guess the GT350 is the new M3 really… with R Variant as the new CSL…

12/13/2015 - 13:26 |
6 | 2
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

also there is the 918 with a 9200 rpm red line with a 4.6L V8

12/13/2015 - 13:42 |
2 | 0
Slow_C1500

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

And Audi’s 4.2L

12/13/2015 - 13:48 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Did somebody say LS SWAP?

12/13/2015 - 09:52 |
12 | 2
Anonymous

does 7000 rpm really count as high revving? I thought that was just 8000+ rpm that would count to that category

12/13/2015 - 10:33 |
12 | 8
Dzonny the e36 maniaq

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Well, if engine is a 7-liter monstrosity it counts

12/13/2015 - 11:51 |
32 | 0
Anonymous

Ouch … that video was not an LS7. The car was a Corvette C5 Z06 which has the LS6 engine.

video with tuned LS7

http://youtu.be/-MJ9V-tEybw

12/13/2015 - 11:11 |
6 | 0
Andrew Papas

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

it was swapped with an ls7

12/13/2015 - 17:07 |
2 | 0

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