2010 H3 getting DI 3.6L V6, Atlas Dead?
The Atlas is a neat engine on paper, but in reality, it serves as justification for GM's OHV V8 strategy.
With a GMT900 Tahoe, I've typically obtained highway mileage of ~18MPG at 75-80 MPH. That's a truck with more power, more weight, and more frontal area - and the same transmission.
The Atlas is a neat engine on paper, but in reality, it serves as justification for GM's OHV V8 strategy.
The Atlas is a neat engine on paper, but in reality, it serves as justification for GM's OHV V8 strategy.
If GM add DI, dual VVT, and all the other enhancements in the uplevel 3.6, the 4.2 (actually maybe it would be 4.4 or 4.5 if it got the same enhancements made to the other Atlas engines) would probably be 330hp and better economy to boot. But how would GM justify spending the $$ on those changes to an engine that fits only in larger trucks, and how would it position that engine against the V8?
I'd much rather see GM investing in smaller clean diesels (like the new 4.5L) and alternative fuel technologies than spending money on an engine that's limited to one or two platforms.
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mschmidt33
General 1967-2002 F-Body Tech
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Mar 15, 2015 07:20 PM



