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Blue Devil sollte kommen...und heißt jetzt ZR1 ! - Druckversion

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+---- Thema: Blue Devil sollte kommen...und heißt jetzt ZR1 ! (/showthread.php?tid=20642)



- GM LS-X - 23.12.2007

Zitat:Original von Mankra
Zitat:Original von GM LS-XLoL, das wäre als würdest du 150-200kg Heben und sagen: Das wiegt ja nix
Seit wann hat die C6 1700kg?

Wenn du die Ganzen Sachen, wie vorgeschlagen, von der ZO6 und ZR1 einbauen willst schon. Idee


- AK - 23.12.2007

Sam: Yeeah!


- Hajo - 23.12.2007

Moin,


ich bin auch etwas enttäuscht von dem Mehrgewicht der ZR1, dafür müssten die Bremsen Top sein.....Was ist jetzt entscheident besser bei der ZR1 gegenüber der Z06? Bremsen, Ok..... Fahrwerk ? Motor ? Steifere Karosse ? Räder/Reifen ?
Meiner Meinung nach hätte man bei der Z06 bleiben sollen und eine Sonderserie ala F430 Scuderia oder Gallardo Superleggera bringen sollen,bischen Mehrleistung etwas Gewicht runter und den Innenraum fein ausgestattet mit Alcantara, Echtcarbon, Schalensitze,das wäre doch was feines gewesen.........
Dann eine C6 Sonderserie mit Kompressor mit 580 ps die von mir aus 1550kg oder 1650 kg hätte wiegen können......

Es muss sich zeigen ob sich die Anschaffung für Z06 Fahrer lohnt, kann mir gut vorstellen die Z06 noch etwas mehr aufzupeppeln( Bremsen, Motor evtl Fahrwerk)dann hat mann bestimmt mehr Spass mit der Z06......


- RainerR - 24.12.2007

Da ist das Auto noch nicht einmal inden Verkaufsräumen,und schon schwindet die Begeisterung mehr und mehr.Nun wartet doch erst mal ab bis das Ding auf der Strasse ist.

Gruss RainerR


- Leonie - 24.12.2007

Und immer dran denken: ein sehr stabiler Block, ein sehr hochwertiger Kurbeltrieb, eine effiziente Ladeluftkühlung, ein sehr effizientes Kompressordesign, die Verdichtung reduziert auf 9.1:1, und "nur" etwa 0.7 bar Ladedruck... huahua

Und dazu ne Zweischeibenkupplung, ein verstärktes Torquetube, gehärtete Getriebeteile etc. etc.

Warum erinnert mich dieses Konzept nur so verdammt stark an den "Terminator"...

Werksangabe 390 h.p. an der Schwungscheibe (was die meisten schon an den HA hatten), und ein grosser Teil davon fährt mit nahe 500 rwhp durch die Gegend...

Abgesehen von den Dämpfern, die den stehenden Start unterstützen sowie endlich nem "echten" 6-Gang-Getriebe...

Jetzt mal alle kurz in Gedanken lange Fächer und ne kleinere Kompressor Riemenscheibe samt passendem "Tune" hinzufügen, und ab 100 km/h wird es auch für Enzo & Konsorten vielleicht ne überraschende Begegnung... Yeeah!

Gruss, Bernd Hallo-gruen


- Disparador - 24.12.2007

Also ich bin jetzt alles durch und verwirrt! Kopfschütteln

Demnach(ich fasse zusammen) hat die "Neue" C6: SS,Blue Devil, ZR1:

1X Größere Reifen (aus welchen Gründen auch immer),
1XLe Mans Frontlippe der C5(ich gebe eine ab),
1XPlexiglasscheibe in der Motorhaube,die anscheinend keiner haben will,weil da ein Kompressor drunter ist,den keiner haben will,
1Xkleinerer Motor mit wahrscheinlich kleinerer Gesammtlaufleistung weil überzüchtet
1X Tinitus,
Jede Menge neue,alte Öffnungen vorn und an der Seite,
1X echte "deutsche Bahn Akkustik"beim Bremsen(krieg´ich mit Hawk Klötzen auch hin),

und einen höheren Preis.TOLL!

Für die Rennstrecke mag das Ding nach etlichen Mods ja diverse Vorteile bieten.Das mögen
Profis entscheiden.
Der Rest möge das Erscheinen dieses Autos abwarten und sich am evtl. Preissturz der "armen" Z06 erfreuen und zuschlagen.Wer möchte,kann sich ja dann eine Scheibe in die
Motorhaube kleben. Yeeah! huahua King Feixen sich vor Lachen auf dem Boden wälzen


- TIKT-Performance - 24.12.2007

.........ich würde eher sagen, auf das Auto gehören meine Felgen und fertig ist ein
Supersportwagen für alle die nur sporadisch auf den Track gehen, mit steigerungs
Potenzial (PS) nach oben.
Auf der Straße hat das Ding kaum Gegner und gehört zu den schnellsten 10 Yeeah! Yeeah! Yeeah!

Fazit.: beide kaufen.................

Hallo-gruen


- Leonie - 24.12.2007

@Disparador: Pssst!!
Ich versuch das Ding hier unter die Leute zu bringen, damit der Markt von gebrauchten Z06 überschwemmt wird und du machst das alles kaputt... Feixen

Nee im Ernst, alleine der "beefed-up drivetrain" ist das Baby wert...

Gruss, Bernd Hallo-gruen


- GM LS-X - 25.12.2007

Zitat:Original von Leonie
@Disparador: Pssst!!
Ich versuch das Ding hier unter die Leute zu bringen, damit der Markt von gebrauchten Z06 Throttle body:überschwemmt wird und du machst das alles kaputt... Feixen

Nee im Ernst, alleine der "beefed-up drivetrain" ist das Baby wert...

Gruss, Bernd Hallo-gruen

Und hier kommt gleich mehr Info zum "beefed-up drivetrain"

Quelle: GM Inside News: NAIAS 08

Zitat:NAIAS 08: 2009 6.2L LS9 Small-Block V8
http://www.gminsidenews.com

Short Take: The engine everyone has been waiting for. A Supercharged small-block V8 that pumps out 620 HP and nearly 600 lb-ft of torque. Take a look at GM Powertrain's latest masterpiece below with detail images.

[Bild: ls91.jpg]

[Bild: ls92.jpg]

[Bild: ls93.jpg]

Tremec TR6060 RWD 6-Speed Manual that will be used with the LS9

[Bild: ls94.jpg]

[Bild: ls95.jpg]

[Bild: ls96.jpg]

[Bild: ls97.jpg]

2009 CORVETTE ZR1 POWERED BY THE MOST POWERFUL PRODUCTION ENGINE EVER FROM GM: THE SUPERCHARGED LS9 SMALL-BLOCK V-8
PONTIAC, Mich. – When it arrives next summer, the 2009 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1 will be the most powerful and fastest production car ever produced by General Motors, with performance enabled by a new, supercharged 6.2L LS9 small-block V-8 engine.


Incorporating the engineering experience already found in the Corvette Z06’s LS7 engine and the new-for-2008 6.2L LS3 of the Corvette, GM Powertrain is targeting 100 horsepower per liter for the LS9, or 620 horsepower (462 kW), and approximately 595 lb.-ft. of torque (807 Nm); final SAE-certified power levels will be available in early March 2008.
It is, indeed, the ultimate small-block engine for the ultimate Corvette.
“When you experience the LS9 in the Corvette ZR1, the terms performance and refinement take on a new meaning,” said Tom Stephens, group vice president for GM Powertrain and Quality. “The LS9 demonstrates an outstanding performance range, with smooth driveability at low speeds, and surprisingly fierce performance when the customer wants more power.”
The enabler of the LS9’s performance is a new, large positive-displacement Roots-type supercharger – with a unique four-lobe design – developed for the engine by Eaton. It is teamed with an integrated charge cooling system that reduces inlet air temperature for maximum performance. The LS9 represents the first of several new, supercharged small-block engines that will be introduced in GM vehicles in the near future, each using superchargers of similar design.


“The small-block V-8 once again demonstrates it boundless horsepower potential, versatile design and an architecture with proven quality, durability and reliability,” said Stephens. “We haven’t yet realized the small-block’s performance potential.”


Performance range

More than just its tremendous peak horsepower and torque numbers, the supercharged LS9 makes big power at lower rpm and carries it in a wide arc to 6,600 rpm. GM Powertrain testing shows the engine makes approximately 300 horsepower (224 kW) at 3,000 rpm and nearly 320 lb.-ft. of torque (434 Nm) at only 1,000 rpm. Torque tops 585 lb.-ft. (793 Nm) at about the 4,000-rpm mark, while horsepower peaks at 6,500 rpm. The engine produces 90 percent of peak torque from 2,600 rpm to 6,000 rpm.


Heavy-duty and lightweight reciprocating components enable the engine’s confident high-rpm performance, while the large-displacement Eaton supercharger pushes enough air to help the engine maintain power through the upper levels of the rpm band.


“The sixth-generation design of the supercharger expands the ‘sweet zone’ of the compressor’s effectiveness, broadening it to help make power lower in the rpm band,” said Ron Meegan, assistant chief engineer. “To put it simply, the low-end torque is amazing.”


The LS9 is assembled by hand at GM’s Performance Build Center, a unique, small-volume engine production facility in Wixom, Mich., that also builds the Corvette Z06’s LS7 engine and other high-performance GM production engines.


Cylinder block and reciprocating assembly details

The LS9’s aluminum cylinder block features steel, six-bolt main bearing caps, with enlarged vent windows in the second and third bulkheads for enhanced bay to bay breathing. Cast iron cylinder liners – measuring 4.06 inches (103.25 mm) in bore diameter – are inserted in the aluminum block and they are finish-bored and honed with a deck plate installed. The deck plate simulates the pressure and minute dimensional variances applied to the block when the cylinder heads are installed, ensuring a higher degree of accuracy that promotes maximum cylinder head sealing, piston ring fit and overall engine performance.


Nestled inside the cylinder block is a forged steel crankshaft that delivers the LS9’s 3.62-inch (92 mm) stroke. It features a smaller-diameter ignition-triggering reluctor wheel and a nine-bolt flange – the outer face of the crankshaft on which the flywheel is mounted – that provides more clamping strength. Other non-supercharged 6.2L engines, such as the base Corvette’s LS3, have a six-bolt flange. A torsional damper mounted to the front of the crankshaft features a keyway and friction washer, which also is designed to support the engine’s high loads.


Attached to the crankshaft is a set of titanium connecting rods and forged aluminum pistons, which, when combined with the cylinder heads, delivers a 9.1:1 compression ratio. This combination is extremely durable and lightweight, enabling the LS9’s high-rpm capability.


Cylinder head details

The basic cylinder head design of the LS9 is similar to the L92-type head found on the LS3 V-8, but it is cast with a premium A356T6 alloy that is better at handling the heat generated by the supercharged engine – particularly in the bridge area of the cylinder head, between the intake and exhaust valves.


In addition to the special aluminum alloy, each head is created with a rotocast method. Also known as spin casting, the process involves pouring the molten alloy into a rotating mold. This makes for more even distribution of the material and virtually eliminates porosity – air bubbles or pockets trapped in the casting – for a stronger finished product.


Although the heads are based on the L92 design, they feature swirl-inducing wings that are cast into the intake ports. This improves the mixture motion of the pressurized air/fuel charge. The charge enters the combustion chambers via titanium intake valves that measure 2.16 inches (55 mm) in diameter. Spent gases exit the chambers through 1.59-inch (40.4 mm) hollow stem sodium-filled exhaust valves. The titanium intake and sodium-filled exhaust valves are used for their lightweight and high-rpm capability.


To ensure sealing of the pressurized engine, unique, four-layer steel head gaskets are used with the LS9’s heads.


Camshaft and valvetrain

The broad power band enabled by the LS9’s large-displacement supercharger allows it to make strong low-end torque and great high-rpm horsepower, which allowed engineers to specify a camshaft with a relatively low lift of 0.555-inch (14.1 mm) for both the intake and exhaust valves. This low-overlap cam has lower lift and slower valve-closing speeds than the Z06’s 505-horsepower (377 kW) LS7, helping the LS9 – with its approximately 620 horsepower – deliver exemplary idle and low-speed driving qualities.


The camshaft actuates a valvetrain that includes many components, including the lifters, rocker arms and valve springs, of the LS3 engine. However, LS7 retainers are used to support the engine’s high-rpm performance.


Supercharger and charge cooler details

The LS9’s R2300 supercharger is a sixth-generation design from Eaton, with a case that is specific to the Corvette application. The supercharger features a new four-lobe rotor design that promotes quieter and more efficient performance, while its large, 2.3-liter displacement ensures adequate air volume at high rpm to support the engine’s high-horsepower aspiration. Maximum boost pressure is 10.5 psi (0.72 bar).


The supercharger is an engine-driven air pump that contains a pair of long rotors that are twisted somewhat like pretzel sticks. As they spin around each other, incoming air is squeezed between the rotors and pushed under pressure into the engine – forcing more air into the engine than it could draw under “natural” aspiration. The rotors are driven by a pulley and belt that are connected to the engine’s accessory drive system.


Because the pressurized air is hotter than naturally aspirated air, the LS9 employs a liquid-to-air charge cooling system to reduce inlet air temperature after it exits the supercharger – reducing the inlet air temperature by up to 60 degrees C (140 F). Cooler air is denser and allows the engine to make the most of its high-pressure air charge. The charge cooling system includes a dedicated coolant circuit with a remote-mounted pump and reservoir.


The design of the supercharger case and its integrated charge cooling system was driven by the space and dimensions afforded under the Corvette’s hood. To that end, the charge cooler was designed as a “dual brick” system, with a pair of low-profile heat exchangers mounted longitudinally on either side of the supercharger. Coupled with the supercharger itself, this integrated design mounts to the engine in place of a conventional intake manifold and is only slightly taller than a non-supercharged 6.2L engine. The air inlet and rotor drive pulley are positioned at the front of the supercharger.


Additional engine details

Oiling system: The LS9 uses a dry-sump oiling system that is similar in design to the LS7’s system, but features a higher-capacity pump to ensure adequate oil pressure at the higher cornering loads the ZR1 is capable of achieving. An oil-pan mounted oil cooler is integrated, too, along with piston-cooling oil squirters located in the cylinder block. The expanded performance envelope of the Corvette ZR1 required changes to the dry sump system also used in the Z06. System capacity is increased and scavenge performance improved to meet the demands of Chevrolet's highest-performance sportscar.


Water pump: To compensate for the heavier load generated by the supercharger drive system, an LS9-specific water pump with increased bearing capacity is used.


Accessory drive system: To package the accessory drive system in the Corvette’s engine compartment, the supercharger drive was integrated into the main drive system. This required a wider 11-rib accessory drive system to be used with the LS9 in order to support the load delivered by the supercharger.


Fuel system: The LS9 uses high-capacity 48-lb./hr. fuel injectors with center-feed fuel lines. The center feed system ensures even fuel flow between the cylinders with less noise. In order to ensure fuel system performance during low speed operation as well as under the extreme performance requirements of wide open throttle (WOT), a dual pressure fuel system was developed. This system operates at 250 kPa at idle and low speed, and ratchets up to 600 kPa at higher-speed and WOT conditions.


Throttle body: An 87-mm, single-bore throttle body is used to draw air into the engine. It is electronically controlled.


Rocker covers / ignition coils: Unique rocker covers with new, direct-mount ignition coils are used. Other Gen IV engines, such as the LS3, feature coil packs mounted to a bracket. The LS9’s direct-mounted coils offer a cleaner appearance and a shorter lead between the coil and spark plug.


Beauty cover: A special engine cover is attached to the top of the LS9. It surrounds the intercooler, which is visible through a hood window. The intercooler has the legend “LS9 SUPERCHARGED” embossed on the left and right sides, and the engine beauty cover features the Corvette crossed flags logo debossed at the front.


New six-speed manual transmission

The Corvette ZR1’s LS9 engine is backed by a Tremec TR6060 six-speed manual transmission, with a twin-disc clutch system. It is based on the new-for-2008 TR6060 six-speed, but upgraded to handle the LS9’s torque output and delivers improved shift quality.


The twin-disc clutch system provides exceptional clamping power, while maintaining an easy clutch effort. The system employs a pair of 260-mm discs, which spreads out the engine’s torque load over a wider area, enabling tremendous clamping power to channel the LS9’s torque. It also dissipates heat better and extends the clutch life (in normal driving).
Thanks to comparatively small plates, the twin-disc system enables similar disc inertia to the Corvette Z06, which has a 290-mm single-disc system, contributing to low shift effort and providing exceptionally smooth engagement and light pedal effort. In fact, the more powerful ZR1 has a pedal effort similar to the Z06.


ZR1-specific gearing in the transmission provides a steep first-gear ratio that helps launch the car. The car’s top speed is achieved in sixth gear – a change from the fifth-gear top-speed run-outs in the manual transmission Corvette and Corvette Z06. The gears also are designed to balance performance with refinement. The angles of the gear teeth are optimized to provide both strength and quietness.

Want More?

LS9 High-Resolution Images
Corvette ZR1 Details and Photos



- Disparador - 26.12.2007

@Leonie


Damit ich nicht noch weiter dummschwatze: Feixen

Was verstehe ich unter "beefed up drivetrain"??? Frage

Das müßte ja dann das alles entscheidende Detail sein... Idee