LS 4 banger

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pishta

I know I'm right....
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LS3 topped 3.6 "Origin" industrial engine makes 340 na HP. Said the block could also mount a Windsor head....? Stout 4 banger!
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Shades of the old MP W-head sprint car motor.
 
With as many threads as we had on this, we could build a 12 cylinder

Any Lincoln fans on board?
My old friend the Caddy mechanic was a huge V12 Lincoln fan! Had one on a motor stand that looked like it could hold a Merlin. He also had the matching Lincoln convertible parade car, beautiful!
 

Nice writeup below.​

In short it's a complete white paper design. Loosely based on a gm iron Duke 2.5, or inline 3.0. Has almost nothing in common with those engines besides the water pump and bell pattern. Increased bore, stroke, commonized parts with sbc and Windsor and LS offerings. Kind of the best of everything. However.....current application is 100% industrial. Title is a little leading, as it probably redlines at 2800 the way it's currently configured. Would take some doing to make it an actual street car, or jeep engine. Possible for sure, we were just shocked it got the attention it did. The block can easily be machined for LS, Windsor, or cleveland head. The most common version uses the Windsor head.

Pretty cool offering, and very representative of our capabilities.

thanks for sharing guys!

Exclusive First Look! 340-HP 3.6-Liter Four-Cylinder LS-Headed Crate Engine​

One of the hits of the 2022 PRI show was this oddball crate engine hiding in the corner of the Blueprint Engines booth.​

Steven RuppWriter
Dec 19, 2022
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When you're walking a trade show you never know what you will come across, and the 2022 PRI show was no exception. We definitely weren't expecting to stumble across a four-cylinder crate engine topped with an LS3-port head! Blueprint Engine's John Chrise told HOT ROD, "We were there to show off some new racing V-8s, and weren't exactly thrilled they wanted us to take this new four-cylinder from our R&D Department since we didn't think PRI was the place to debut something like that. We were wrong! Turned out that the 3.6-liter "LS" was a major hit at the show, and we constantly had people coming by the booth asking about it!" This explains why the small mill was hiding in a corner of the booth.


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Chrise continued, "This combination starts out utilizing our tried-and-true heavy-duty block from our industrial division, Origin Engines. Similar engines are widely used in everything from industrial wood-chippers to airport tugs, forestry equipment, mobile equipment, power generation, and other applications. The block is rugged and designed for high-torque continuous use in extreme environments. We then slightly altered the block to successfully mate with our Blueprint Engines LS head." Blueprint brought the engine to see if there's a market, and they were flooded with ideas from attendees, including swaps into S10 trucks, early Jeeps, circle track cars, and more.

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The engine block has external dimensions similar to a 3.0-liter GM engine. With dedicated piston-oilers and a large, full-loop-capable oil galley. The iron block is built for strength and the long-block tips the scales at around 300 lbs. In an industrial application, this small package, at only 1,800 rpm, will put out diesel-like torque numbers. If configured for a performance application, this bore and stroke combination could produce well over 300 horsepower and nearly 500 lb-ft of torque! The bore of 4.125 inches is the same as an LS7, and it can go bigger, but the "smaller" bore means the walls are super strong, and we think a single turbo or big shot of nitrous would be perfect for this half-LS. The Blueprint Engines 3.6-liter will accept any standard GM bellhousing, so the swap possibilities are endless. We are already imagining this engine with something like a Tremec TKX five-speed trans bolted to it!
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The engine displayed at PRI was outfitted with one of Blueprint's LS3-style heads. That means the block could accept any LS head, although it's hard to beat the LS3-port design and aftermarket support. Blueprint also stated that the block will be able to accept a Ford Windsor head as well. This was an 11th-hour build by Blueprint's R&D department, so details are limited, but although we don't have a price or release date, the interest shown at PRI means that Blueprint will be fast-tracking this into production, and when it's ready, we called dibs on some power-adder dyno testing!
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Blueprint Engines 3.6-Liter Four-Cylinder LS Specs:

  • 4.125-inch bore
  • Max bore 4.185 inches
  • 9.145-inch deck height
  • 4.05-inch stroke
  • Coil-near-plug-ready
  • Cam Sensor
  • Crank Sensor
  • Could also run a distributor
  • Additional capacity water jacket
  • High-capacity water pump, capable of 38+ GPM
  • 5.7, 4340 connecting rods, tapered pin end
  • 351 Windsor main bearings
  • SBC rod bearing
  • SBC cam bearings
  • Current crank is nodular iron
  • SBC one-piece RMS-style flywheel flange
  • Uses SBC flywheels or flexplates
  • Uses SBC starter
 
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A supercharged, EFI, 4V Cleveland headed 4 cylinder. That's gettin interestin.
 
Just curious. Marine use, stationary generator use or equipment use (eg forklift)?
stationary generator on this one. Natural gas. We have an entire industrial division called Origin engines, that manufactures engines for forestry equipment, forklifts, gensets, industrial irrigation, etc.
 
add to the the fact it redlines at 2800 and we basically have a VW diesel engine

YUP! the best feedback i got from PRI for it, the way it sits, is a 3BT or 4BT swap rock crawler....that weights 500 lbs less.
 
YUP! the best feedback i got from PRI for it, the way it sits, is a 3BT or 4BT swap rock crawler....that weights 500 lbs less.
right, there are plenty of situations where i could see me needing piles of torque, but in a low RPM, somewhat controlled delivery

this sounds like just the ticked for those situation

i could even see it in a light snow plow
 
I worked with a guy back in the '80's who mated Cleveland heads to a four cylinder block to run in circle track cars.
 
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