Quiet cabin, responsive chassis, power boost from E85.
Sometime during the seven model years of the
previous-generation Silverado, we lost track of how many different engines
Chevrolet offered. Actually, we just quit counting when we ran out of fingers.
There were V-8s in four different displacements, one of which, the 5.3-liter,
came in both iron- and aluminum-block versions, and with and without FlexFuel
E85 capability. GM would rather strike from the annals of history its
“two-mode” hybrid pickup, which proved to have only one mode: salesproof. And
what ever happened to the plug-in conversion that Bob Lutz was hawking at the
2012 Detroit auto show?
On the highway,
however, the V-6 Silverado verado cruises quietly and comfortably
Lest we forget, there was also a V-6, a choice that was, in
fact, forgotten by retail customers. Chevrolet says it accounted for only 5
percent of sales, and most of those went into fleets. Yet, a V-6 returns as the
base engine in the redesigned 2014 Silverado in consideration of the new strain
of frugality afflicting full-size trucks. It’s an aluminum-block 4.3-liter
rated at 285 horsepower and 305 pound-feet of torque. It even has a new name,
Ecotec3, to help distinguish it from last year’s 195-hp 4.3-liter Vortec V-6
with its cast-iron block and heads.
You will not see a multi-million-dollar branding campaign
(like the one Ford has for its EcoBoost F-150) touting GM’s new engine, but the
naturally aspirated V-6 benefits from modern technologies, including direct
injection and variable valve timing. This helped our V-6-powered Silverado turn
a quarter-mile time of 15.7 seconds at 89mph. that’s a tenth of a second faster
than the 6.0-liter V-8 “VortecMAX” Silverado we tested back in 2007. But there
is a catch: We had E85 in the tank this time. GM’s latest FlexFuel truck
engines get an output bump from ethanol, which helps the new V-6 make 297
horses and 330 pound-feet of torque. Ethanol’s downside is that, owing to a
lower energy density than gasoline, it hurts fuel economy; the EPA combined
estimate for a V-6, four-wheel-drive Silverado drops from 19 miles per gallon
to just 13.
A single balance
shaft can’t keep the Silverado V-6 from shaking a bit at idle, and vibrations
can be felt through both the gas pedal and steering wheel while accelerating
Burning just gas, our quarter-mile time increased to 16
seconds flat at 87mph. and no matter which fuel you put in the V-6, it’s still
off the pace of the new and much ballyhooed LT1 V-8 that did 15.3 seconds at
92mph.
The Chevy V-6 is also less refined than its bigger brother,
the 5.3-liter V-8, which is a $1095 option on Lt trims and standard on LTZ
models. It’s much coarser, too, than Chrysler’s polished Pentastar 3.6-liter
V-6, the minivan motor that’s found its way under the hood of Ram pickups and
is the standard-bearer in the entry-level V-6 pickup class that also includes
the F-150’s 3.7-liter. A single balance shaft can’t keep the Silverado V-6 from
shaking a bit at idle, and vibrations can be felt through both the gas pedal
and steering wheel while accelerating. The workman-like six-speed automatic
shared by all new Silverado models also lacks the seamlessness of the Ram’s
eight-speed.
GM’s latest
FlexFuel truck engines get an output bump from ethanol, which helps the new V-6
make 297 horses and 330 pound-feet of torque
On the highway, however, the V-6 Silverado verado cruises
quietly and comfortably. A Silverado won our last pickup comparo, and the V-6
model has the same responsive chassis, with good steering and brake feel. A
slippery torque converter masks the power deficit until you hit an on-ramp.
Chevy says the V-6 Silverado can even be equipped to tow up to 7600 pounds. The
V-6 has cylinder deactivation like the V-8, though it doesn’t switch to V-4
mode nearly as often. We still averaged 16 miles per gallon, 3 mpg better than
in the V-8.
The biggest problem with the Silverado V-6 likely has
nothing to do with engineering and everything to do with being mistaken for its
miserable Vortec predecessor. Sharing a displacement and a 90-degree angle
between their cylinder banks, both engines are essentially V-8s with two
cylinders chopped off – though the new one is based on the fifth generation of
Chevy’s small-block architecture, while the previous engine’s roots reach back
to 1955.
Chevy says the V-6
Silverado can even be equipped to tow up to 7600 pounds
Good luck to the Bow-Tie salesmen who have to explain this
argot. It will be challenge enough convincing Chevy-pickup buyers – many of
whom haven’t set foot in a dealership since The Sopranos was still on HBO –
that a naturally aspiratedV-6 is up to the task of motivating a 5477-pound
full-size pickup with four-wheel drive. Even if, at least in this case, it is.
Specs
·
Price: $42,610
·
Vehicle type: front-engine, rear/4-wheel-drive, 5-passenger,
4-door pickup
·
Engine type: pushrod 12-valve V-6, aluminum block and heads,
direct fuel injection
·
Power: 285 hp @ 5300 rpm
·
Torque: 305 lb-ft @ 3900 rpm
·
Transmission: 6-speed automatic with manual shifting mode
·
Weight: 5477lb
·
0-60mph: 7.7sec
·
Top speed: 106mph
·
EPA: 17/22mpg
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