News

One of the tricks of mounting engines is having the right mount bolted to it. I have always shied away from ones that had a stud sticking down or the old biscuit, front mount-style that the ...
The first thing you need to be aware of is that the motor mounts are different from the traditional small-block to the LS1. The easiest solution is to source a stock K-member (and engine stands) from ...
Newsflash: GM’s excellent Gen III and Gen IV (often lumped together as “LS”) small-blocks are great for engine transplants. They make great power, don’t weigh a ton, and are so compact it’s hard to ...
Chevrolet C10 trucks, especially those from 1963 to 1972, have become insanely popular. We remember being able to buy clean ones for a few grand, but that ship has sailed in terms of price. They're ...
Hedman Performance Group’s sub-brands including Hedman Hedders, Hamburger’s Performance, and Trans Dapt have put together a kit that they’re calling an “LS Swap-in-a-box.” The kit was created in an ...
The venerable LS engine swap is a meme for one very good reason – the LS V8 is a great engine. With its relatively low weight, compact size, big power potential, and a seemingly endless supply of ...
The fourth-generation Cutlass Supreme embodies the Malaise Era’s drought of exciting cars. Oldsmobile even offered a V8 diesel back then, a mill that suffers from woeful reliability issues and poor ...
When the Chevelle rolled out for the 1964 model year, Chevrolet adopted a go-wide strategy in the guise of body styles that ranged from a four-door sedan to a two-door hardtop, convertible, coupe ...