2015 Corvette Z06 Rated at
650 Horsepower
Supercharged LT4 V-8 engine
is the most powerful ever from
Chevrolet
DETROIT – The all-new 2015
Corvette Z06 is the most powerful
production car ever from General
Motors and one of a few production
cars available in the United States
that delivers more than 600
horsepower.
The Z06’s LT4 supercharged 6.2L
V-8 engine is SAE-certified at 650
horsepower (485 kW) at 6,400 rpm and
650 lb-ft of torque (881 Nm) at
3,600 rpm.
“The LT4 Small Block sets a new
benchmark for power and torque at
GM,” said Steve Kiefer, vice
president, GM Powertrain
Engineering. “The engine also puts
the new Corvette Z06 on par with the
most powerful supercars offered in
America, while delivering
performance with impeccable manners
that make it suitable for daily
driving.”
Compared with other supercar
engines, the LT4 is a veritable
fountain of low-end torque,
producing 457 lb-ft (619 Nm) just
off idle and 625 lb-ft (847 Nm) by
only 2,800 rpm. The V-12-powered
Ferrari F12 Berlinetta, for example,
produces about 28 percent less
torque than the Z06, despite
offering about 12 percent more
horsepower – and its peak torque
isn’t achieved until 6,000 rpm. The
LT4 maintains 90 percent of its peak
torque, or 592 lb-ft (802 Nm), from
2,500 to 5,400 rpm.
The new LT4 engine eclipses the
Porsche 911 Turbo S engine’s peak
power levels by 90 horsepower (67
kW) and 134 lb-ft of torque (182
Nm).
“Torque is the pulling power of
an engine and the LT4’s abundance of
it at every rpm in the engine’s
speed range helps the 2015 Corvette
Z06 accelerate quicker and respond
nearly instantaneously,” said Jordan
Lee, chief engineer for Small Block
engines. “It’s the very definition
of power on demand.”
The new Z06 engine produces 40
percent more peak torque (180 lb-ft
/ 244 Nm) than the
previous-generation’s 7.0L LS7
engine – and 7.5 percent more than
the supercharged 2013 Corvette ZR1’s
604 lb-ft (819 Nm). At 3,200 rpm,
the new LT4 surpasses the LS7 by 208
lb-ft of torque (252 Nm). On the
horsepower side of the graph, the
LT4’s 650-hp rating is 29 percent
greater than the LS7’s 505
horsepower (376 kW), and 12 horses
more than the ZR1’s LS9 engine.
“The new LT4 engine builds on the
design strengths of our previous
supercharged engine and leverages
the technologies introduced on the
Corvette Stingray – direct
injection, cylinder deactivation and
continuously variable valve timing –
to take Corvette performance to an
all-new plateau,” said Lee. “Our
new, very compact supercharger also
helps the engine make power more
quickly, and perhaps more
importantly, it helps produce more
torque earlier in the rpm band.”
“It’s also worth mentioning that
the LT4’s supercar performance
numbers are achieved with an engine
that is nearly the same size as the
very compact LT1 engine introduced
in the 2014 Corvette Stingray,” Lee
said. “The power density of the LT4
makes it one of the smallest and
lightest 650-hp engines in the
industry.”
LT4 details
The new LT4 engine is based on
the same Gen 5 small block
foundation as the Corvette
Stingray’s LT1 6.2L naturally
aspirated engine, incorporating
several unique features designed to
support its higher output and the
greater cylinder pressures created
by forced induction, including:
- Rotocast A356T6 aluminum
cylinder heads that are stronger
and handle heat better than
conventional aluminum heads
- Lightweight titanium intake
valves
- Machined, forged powder
metal steel connecting rods for
reduced reciprocating mass
- High 10.0:1 compression
ratio – for a forced-induction
engine – enhances performance
and efficiency and is enabled by
direct injection
- Forged aluminum pistons with
unique, stronger structure to
ensure strength under high
cylinder pressures
- Stainless steel exhaust
manifolds and an aluminum
balancer that are lighter than
their LT1 counterparts
- Standard dry-sump oiling
system with a
dual-pressure-control oil pump.
A new 1.7L supercharger spins at
up to 20,000 rpm – 5,000 rpm more
than the supercharger on the
Corvette ZR1’s engine. The rotors
are smaller in diameter, which
contributes to their higher-rpm
capability – and enables them to
produce power-enhancing boost
earlier in the rpm band. That boost
is achieved more efficiently via a
more direct discharge port that
creates less turbulence, reducing
heat and speeding airflow into the
engine.
“The Small Block’s cam-in-block
design heritage has always enabled
very high performance and
responsiveness in a small, compact
package – an attribute amplified by
the performance of our new
supercharger’s design,” said Lee.
The LT4 is assembled at the new
Performance Build Center at GM’s
Bowling Green Assembly Plant and at
GM’s Tonawanda engine plant in New
York. It is matched with a standard
seven-speed manual transmission or
an all-new, paddle-shift eight-speed
automatic transmission built in
Toledo, Ohio.
Designed to deliver shift
responses on par with the world’s
best dual-clutch transmissions, it
is the first automatic offered in a
Z06. It also makes the Z06 one of
the few cars this powerful to offer
the choice of a conventional manual
transmission or an eight-speed
automatic.
The 2015 Corvette Z06 goes on
sale in the fourth quarter of 2014