Home » Four Decades Ago, General Motors Tried To Make The Holy Grail Of Diesel Truck Engines Only To Make Something People Still Hate Today

Four Decades Ago, General Motors Tried To Make The Holy Grail Of Diesel Truck Engines Only To Make Something People Still Hate Today

Detroit Diesel Ts
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In the 1980s, diesel engines were not seen as the stump-pulling powerhouses they are today, but as the magic bullet solution to high fuel prices and the abysmal fuel economy of gas-guzzling American V8s. And so, General Motors tried to create the Holy Grail of diesel V8s: an engine that produced respectable power while still sipping fuel at a miserly rate compared to similarly sized gasoline-burning engines. The result was the General Motors Detroit Diesel, a 6.2-liter diesel V8 that succeeded in its mission of saving money, but also suffered a slew of problems that would eventually earn it and its 6.5-liter companion a spot on the list of most-hated diesels. But was it really that bad? Let’s take a look.

The diesel engines of today are known for their stellar fuel economy and impressive power numbers, but that wasn’t always the case. For four decades, trucks all over America and the world have driven on the might of dependable Cummins, Duramax, and Power Stroke engines. The most famous of which are the Cummins 5.9-liter straight-six, International/Ford 7.3-liter Power Stroke V8, and the General Motors 6.6-liter Duramax LBZ. Then there are the infamous passenger car diesels of Volkswagens and others out there.

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Just a few years before the 1984 launch of the Cummins B Series, diesel engines weren’t a symbol of power, but one of fuel economy and depending on the engine, reliability. You didn’t buy a diesel because you felt like you wanted to pull a train through the Wasatch Range, but because you couldn’t afford to keep on fueling your truck’s 10 mpg V8 gasser.

Chevrolet C K Series 1996 Pictur

Prior to the multiple oil crises of the 1970s, truck diesels usually lived in medium- and heavy-duty equipment. I’m talking about straight trucks and semi-tractors. These engines were practically the size of Smart Fortwos all on their own and sang the kinds of songs we don’t hear on the open road anymore. However, there were experiments in putting diesel power into regular pickup trucks.

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It’s debated which company was the first to put a diesel engine into a pickup truck, but it’s commonly reported that Dodge first experimented with a diesel pickup in 1962 with the Dodge W300. International Harvester had its own diesel pickups at about the same time with its C-1100 to C-1300 trucks. Both companies saw that there was a strong interest in diesel engines in medium-duty trucks and figured people would also want diesel power in pickup trucks. As it turns out, Dodge and International Harvester were right, but were also perhaps a decade too early.

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General Motors had long been in a special place when it comes to diesel engines. For decades, General Motors was essentially an unstoppable force. The General spread its wings far and wide. If you took a commuter train, it was nearly guaranteed that the power at the front of the train was built by GM’s Electro-Motive Division. If you shipped your goods by a truck, chances are that truck was powered by a Detroit Diesel engine. General Motors dominated diesel so much that its engines often became the default option for buses, emergency equipment, military vehicles, and even some watercraft.

Sadly, General Motors doesn’t have nearly the grasp it used to on diesel, but if you were alive several decades ago, there was a chance that your life depended on a GM diesel at least for something.

This domination of diesel would come in handy during the 1970s. America suffered from multiple fuel crises and a weakened economy while auto manufacturers faced more stringent fuel economy and emissions standards. Large gas-guzzling land yachts fell out of vogue while affordable, economical imports became sizzling hot. At the time, America’s gasoline engines found themselves choked out by emissions equipment, and they still didn’t get that great fuel economy. The answer for some automakers was to chase the holy grail of fuel economy: The diesel engine.

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GM made a bizarre decision back then. It owned Detroit Diesel and could have used the company for help. Instead, GM’s passenger vehicle diesel would come from Oldsmobile. But, GM ran the program on a shoestring budget and demanded the engine go into production quickly. Oldsmobile engineers delivered, but what GM got was an engine rushed into production and based on a gas engine’s architecture, with disastrous results. An engineer who allegedly warned GM about its mistake was sacked. Well, 10,000 people across 14 states demanded a uniform redress program from GM, so GM probably should have listened.

It looked like General Motors did just that when it came time to put another diesel on the market.

What GM Should Have Done In The First Place

002 1982 Gm Detroit Diesel V8

When it came time to launch a new diesel engine, General Motors went to the place it should have gone to in the first place, its Detroit Diesel subsidiary. The engine manufacturer did not have experience in building light-duty truck engines, but it had an established record of building practically bulletproof truck, bus, and locomotive powerplants.

Detroit Diesel says it built its first four-cycle diesel engine somewhere in the timeframe between 1970 and 1986. This engine predates one of the best-selling diesel engines of all time, the legendary Detroit Diesel Series 60 straight-six four-stroke, which was released in 1987.

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History is fuzzy on what exactly was the first four-cycle Detroit Diesel, and even the company itself doesn’t say. Some sources point to the unloved and gutless 1980 8.2-liter “Fuel Pincher” diesel V8, which went into heavier applications such as box trucks and school buses, as Detroit’s first four-stroke. What I can say is Detroit Diesel made its fortunes and fame on two-cycle screamers, but the 1980s demanded the higher fuel economy offered by a four-cycle, so Detroit Diesel began cranking out the engines.

Chevrolet Blazer (1982) Images 0

While I have not been able to find a full development history on the Detroit 6.2, I have been able to figure out its objective. As I said earlier, the early 1980s were a time when diesels were more for fuel economy than power. In Detroit Diesel’s own advertising, the GM subsidiary mentions that the 6.2-liter diesel merely has “enough power” for heavy pulling, then the marketing copy spends the rest of the time explaining how this engine is really going to save you a ton of money.

Unlike the Oldsmobile Diesel, the Detroit 6.2-liter V8 diesel was designed to be an oil burner from the start. Detroit says the secret sauce of the 6.2 V8 was its compression ratio, which was a sky-high 20.3:1. The engines were of a 2-valve pushrod valvetrain design and while they weren’t based on gas architecture, 6.2s were meant to be dropped directly to the existing engine bay infrastructure of GM trucks of the day. When combined with a Stanadyne DB-2 rotary injection pump, the same used by other diesels at the time, Detroit said its naturally aspirated cast iron block engines burned diesel fuel “very completely.”

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No matter if the engine is idling or pulling, Detroit claimed that the 6.2-liter would get better fuel economy than comparable gasoline engines. These engines had water separators and block heaters, too, showing some lessons learned from the Oldsmobile diesel debacle.

In April 1982, Four Wheeler magazine published its review of the 1982 Chevrolet Blazer diesel, and sure enough, Detroit’s claims held water, from Four Wheeler:

We wrote that the Blazer wasn’t changed much from the 1981 model, so obviously the engine was the big news. This diesel engine was groundbreaking for GM. The previous 5.7L diesel, found in GM cars and two-wheel-drive trucks, was a reworked gasoline engine, whereas the 6.2L was built from the ground-up for truck use. It was available in four-wheel-drive models, too. The non-turbocharged engine had a power rating of 130 hp at 3,600 rpm and a torque rating of 240 lb-ft at 2,000 rpm.

1983 Chevrolet Blazer Img 1167 5
Bring a Trailer Seller

Of these numbers, we wrote, “Both figures are impressive for a diesel, and they are reflected in excellent power and outstanding performance. We can’t stress that enough.” We went on to note that the diesel also returned good fuel mileage. “But the kicker is that at the same time, it delivers fuel economy exceeding the EPA ratings of similar size gasoline engines by about 25 percent.” During our testing, the diesel-powered Blazer returned a maximum of 26.46 mpg on-road and a maximum of 18.72 mpg off-road. The Blazer we tested was equipped with the four-speed overdrive automatic transmission and optional 3.42:1 axle gearing. “With the power this diesel has with a 3.42 axle, we can imagine what it would do with a set of 4.10 or 4.56 gears,” we said.

In some cases, it has been reported that the 6.2 was so thrifty that not only did it achieve better fuel economy than a V8, but it also beat some sixes, too. Depending on the configuration, GM claimed as much as 31 mpg on the highway – but remember, we’re talking testing methodologies that are now more than 40 years old.

Chevrolet C K Series 1985 Pictur

Just in case you skipped over some of that, these engines really did have just 130 HP and 240 lb-ft of torque at launch. However, this was before engines like the Cummins 6BT and the Power Stroke 7.3 proved diesels could be powerful and economical.

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General Motors was also a pioneer in shoving diesel into a variety of different machines. Detroit 6.2s found homes in half-ton, three-quarter-ton, and one-ton GM pickups and SUVs. Weirdly, Wikipedia claims that there were Impalas with the 6.2, but the only diesel Impalas I could find from the era came from the tail end of the Olds 5.7 diesel. Anyway, at the time, the biggest competition came from International Harvester, which loaded Ford F-250 HD and F-350 pickups with its own 6.9-liter indirect injection V8 diesel. To illustrate how far down GM was on power, a 1983 6.9 IDI made 161 HP and 307 lb-ft of torque. However, those engines were also known for drinking more than their GM competition.

The Detroit 6.2 was also very unlike a modern diesel, and I’m not just talking about its old-school indirect mechanical fuel injection. Starting a Detroit 6.2 doesn’t sound much different than firing up a Cessna 172. The startup procedure involves cycling the glow plugs a few times, waiting for the glow plug light to extinguish, and then turning the key. Remember, the starter has a ton of compression to work against, so, you might have all of 30 seconds to get the engine running before the batteries bow out.

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Older diesels like these also don’t like to be run hard. The Detroit 6.2 has a max RPM of just 3,600 when you have a load and 4,000 RPM when the engine is free. But you don’t want to be bumped up on the limit for that long if you want that engine to last.

Unfortunately, GM’s configuration made sense, but not for a long time. In 1987, IH debuted the 7.3-liter IDI V8, which made a healthy 185 HP and 338 lb-ft of torque. In 1989, the Cummins 5.9-liter 12-valve straight-six swung a 160 HP and 400 lb-ft of torque hammer at the competition. Suddenly, GM’s Detroit 6.2-liter wasn’t so hot anymore.

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In 1990, the Detroit 6.2 was upgraded to an output of 143 HP and 257 lb-ft of torque in light-duty applications. If you got the engine in a heavy-duty application, you might have been lucky to see 160 HP and 275 lb-ft of torque. Later versions of the Detroit 6.2 saw compression as high as 21.5:1. The Detroit was now an old-school engine, one meant for ranchers to haul stuff for less money. Now, the new diesel competition promised both power and fuel economy, leaving poor GM behind, chugging slowly uphill.

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Come 1992, it was time for Detroit Diesel to open its next salvo in the diesel wars. Detroit increased the 6.2’s cylinder bore from 3.98 inches to 4.06 inches. The manufacturer also strengthened the engine’s internals and added piston oil squirters. The new, stronger, and more powerful Detroit 6.5-liter V8 was born.

At its weakest, a naturally aspirated 6.5 made 160 HP and 290 lb-ft of torque. The real fun happened with the factory addition of a turbocharger, which sent HP up to 180 and torque to 380 lb-ft in 1992. Just a year later in 1993, the Detroit 6.2 would finally die while the 6.5 turbo rose to 190 HP and 380 lb-ft of torque.

Improvements in later years came from upgrading the engine to electronic injection pump regulation and trading the Stanadyne DB-2 rotary injection pump for the Stanadyne DS-4, which featured the aforementioned electronic controls. Later improvements included high-flow water pumps and improved thermostats. At its best, a Detroit Diesel 6.5 turbo put out 215 HP and 430 lb-ft of torque.

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Fuel Injection Turbos32018072613

The power upgrades were welcome, but GM still trailed behind the competition in power. For example, late model 7.3-liter Power Strokes made 275 HP and 525 lb-ft of torque when attached to manual transmissions. Also, like the 6.2, the 6.5s were available in everything from half-ton trucks to military vehicles. The Detroit 6.5 can be found in all sorts of vehicles from the AM General HMMWV to various motorhomes. General Motors stopped production of the 6.5 after 2001, replacing it with the LB7 Duramax, but some motorhomes and commercial vehicles were assembled with the engines into the mid-2000s. AM General is still making a variant of the engine today as the aptly-named Optimizer 6500.

Why People Hate These Engines

So, GM’s 6.2s and 6.5s weren’t really the most powerful powerplants out there, but they did deliver stellar fuel economy compared to an equivalent gas engine. Why will you see no shortage of articles and forum posts hating on these engines?

Pictures Gmc Suburban 1983 1

While Detroit Diesel and GM designed some stout mills, it appears that some of them have not aged well. Diesel Hub notes that the 6.2 can suffer from issues including chronic overheating, cracked engine blocks, and my favorites, failures of the crankshaft, flywheel, or harmonic balancer, the destruction of any of which will turn your 700-pound (dry) 6.2 V8 into scrap in an instant.

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Sadly, the 6.5 suffers from a similar list of issues but adds to the fun with possible cracked cylinder heads and failures of the electronic controls. I have personally seen turbocharger failures on a number of 6.5-equipped trucks and RVs. DrivingLine notes other well-known issues from oil pressure switch failures and wastegate failures to engines that either stall out or just fail to start. The publication notes that starting issues could just be failures of your truck’s glow plugs, which is something I’ve also personally seen with a 6.5, but also the truck’s vacuum pump could just seize, wiping out the engine’s serpentine belt with it.

Then there’s just the fact that these trucks are so old now that even if they do have intact electronics, they’re getting pretty crusty, which could cause issues with that electronically controlled injection pump.

So, the Detroits have a sour reputation in the world of diesel pickups. The competition made more power while these engines suffered from sometimes catastrophic issues. As such, you’ll often find one of these trucks for dirt cheap compared to something with a Cummins 5.9 or a Power Stroke 7.3.

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Photos Chevrolet Blazer 1982 1

That’s not to say that these are bad engines. The Detroit pickup diesels have their fans, especially preppers, who love 6.2s for their total lack of electronics or the 6.5 for its greater power, but still fewer electronics than newer engines. Motor Trend‘s Senior Editor Aaron Gold has a 1983 GMC Suburban with a 6.2 diesel under the hood and while he describes performance as “acceleration is excruciatingly slow” and the engine can’t even hold highway speed on hills, his shows no sign of stopping. Others love tuning these engines because they aren’t just another Cummins or Power Stroke and they don’t require a huge investment of cash upfront.

Enthusiasts have valid reasons to dislike these engines, but don’t discount the power of Detroit Diesel. The modding world for these engines remains healthy, even more than a couple of decades past their expiration date. Banks made a turbo kit for 6.2s as recently as 2018 and you can still buy other turbo kits for these engines today.

The Detroit Diesel 6.2-liter and 6.5-liter V8 engines were never the most powerful or the most popular, but by all accounts, it seems like they achieved their missions. These engines sipped fuel compared to gassers and even gave half-ton truck owners the option to go diesel when the rest of the Big Three locked diesels to bigger trucks. Sure, they weren’t perfect, but they might be worth looking at today if you’re a diesel nut.

(Images: GM, unless otherwise noted.)

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rctothefuture
rctothefuture
1 month ago

I owned a Suburban with the 6.5TD. It was slightly more fun to drive than one with a BBC, however the fuel economy was almost double of the 454. I hauled friends, boats, and all sorts of stuff with it and it never missed a beat…

Until one day, going downhill, the engine shut down. Had to 2 foot it to get to stop and then it wouldn’t refire for 2 minutes. After that, it ran fine and never gave me another issue until I traded it for an AMC Ambassador.

Elhigh
Elhigh
1 month ago

Calling the 20.5:1 compression “sky high” doesn’t sound like much when I know a lot of diesels of that era were running as high as 22:1. Granted those were ag diesels and engineered to run under heavy load all the time, but still. VW had automotive diesels pumping 23.5:1 in the late 70s.

I also know that there were other ag diesels from an earlier generation, also designed to run under load all the time, whose CRs clocked in around 16.5:1. So it goes both ways.

Rust Buckets
Rust Buckets
1 month ago
Reply to  Elhigh

Yeah, 20.5:1 is exactly in line with its only real competitor, the 6.9IDI which is 21:1.

Angry Bob
Angry Bob
1 month ago

I have a ’97 K3500 with the 6.5 Diesel and I love it! 400k miles and still running strong. Seat of the pants performance is on par with Fords and Dodges of the same era. The difference is, while you can turn up a Ford or Dodge, what power the 6.5 has is all it’s ever going to get. But it’s the fastest accelerating truck I’ve ever had and being a crew cab long bed 1-ton 4×4, it’s probably double the weight of any other truck I’ve ever had.

UnseenCat
UnseenCat
1 month ago

The DD 6.2 and its cousin the 8.2 were OK. Or “not bad”. The problem was that they couldn’t hold a candle to the performance or reputation of their predecessor family of Detroit 2-stroke diesels.

It probably didn’t help that they were generally hooked up to a torque-converter automatic transmission of the era, which didn’t do anything for acceleration or perceived power. On the other hand, an automatic could be set up to make sure the engine never got a chance to over-rev, so these trucks just sort of churned along, making a fair bit of noise while hauling a lot of stuff without burning a lot of fuel. Which was the design goal, anyway. I’d call that a success, really — just not an exciting one.

For pickups with limited space for batteries, the high compression ratio of the 6.2 was probably one of its biggest downsides. Cold starting one even with a dual battery setup was going to be difficult and hard on the relatively small batteries that could be put in a pickup. That wasn’t a problem for it in larger trucks, or for 8.2 applications, where a big battery box under the cab allowed for much larger, higher-output batteries. But cranking a 6.2 in subzero weather with car-size batteries wasn’t going to be fun.

I haven’t had much experience with the 6.2, but in the 90s where I worked at an armored car terminal, we had a couple of trucks with the 8.2. They were all right. The only real problems were with one having its fuel cutoff solenoid fail on the road (which I MacGyvered a fix for with a paper clip, a rubber band, and a Leatherman tool) and the other having an appetite for eating the air conditioner drive belt until I suggested using a reinforced belt designed for agricultural machines and lawn mower decks instead of the automotive belts that kept snapping. (The chief mechanic, who used to work for the city bus company and had experience with the 8.2, facepalmed with a “Why didn’t I think of that?” after fighting the belt problem for years. Those belts just weren’t in his wheelhouse.)

They started (as long as the block heaters were plugged in in the cold) and ran (not terribly fast) and would get the day’s work done. Nothing more, nothing less.

3WiperB
3WiperB
1 month ago

Our family hauler when I was growing up was a early 80’s Chevy G20 van that my parents had special ordered. 6.2L diesel with every option except a radio and no interior other than a driver seat. I’m sure it was a one of one. It was the time of van customization, so they did the interior themselves with parts from the van customization shop and they put a high end stereo in it. They even had to have someone cut out and install windows in the side. It was so slow, but I remember it getting very good fuel economy for the day. They never had many problems with the engine. Lots of other problems though, since it was an 1980’s Gm product. I ended up learning to drive on that van… they had it so long. The engine was still running fine when they sold it, and I know it had around 270,000 miles that that point and it was almost 20 years old, so they got their money out of it.

Last edited 1 month ago by 3WiperB
Major Malfunction
Major Malfunction
1 month ago

I guess we are spoiled these days with longevity and durability of the modern diesel. Did you take notice to the “3 year/50k mile limited warranty….that’s heavy on value”?

Things have come a long way!

404 Not Found
404 Not Found
1 month ago

Hmmm. It’s rather the opposite with modern diesels. Big power, sure, but longevity and durability have been significantly compromised by the demands of that power production combined with current emissions requirements.

Rust Buckets
Rust Buckets
1 month ago

A brand new Chevy diesel offers a 5 year/60k mile power train warranty. And they’re famous for needing major work before the warranty is over.

Have things really come a long way? A 15% longer warranty and a worse reliability record doesn’t sound like much of an improvement.

Major Malfunction
Major Malfunction
1 month ago
Reply to  Rust Buckets

I have 5/100 on my Cummins and havent had 1 issue with the drivetrain after 6 years and 100k miles. And that includes 25k towing a heavy 5th wheel all over the country. Maybe Chevy and Ford are having issues?

David Frisby
David Frisby
1 month ago

Over on this side of the pond, Rover tried doing a similar thing converting the (ex Buick) all alloy 3.5 litre V8 to diesel for use in the SD1 cars, Land Rover and Range Rover as Project Iceberg. Including a Stanadyne fuel pump… scroll to Project Iceberg in link…
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rover_V8_engine

Ramaswamy Narayanaswamy
Ramaswamy Narayanaswamy
1 month ago

The PMD and other stuff were weak points of the 6.5TD…if I remember correctly. That said, I still have seen some with 400k+ on the internet.

Slow Joe Crow
Slow Joe Crow
1 month ago

This reminds me of a used truck I wanted to buy. In the very early oughts I saw an ad for an 84 Suburban with a 6.2 and day glow yellow paint because it was former fire chief’s car. My son would have loved it. His Suburban is a 99 K2500, with a 350, I have yet to own one.
I have a decent amount of seat time in Fords withe 6 9 IDI, they were slow but unstoppable.

Greg Winson
Greg Winson
1 month ago

The Motorweek crew had an ’86 Suburban 2WD with the 6.2 Diesel. They averaged 23 MPG, with a 0-60 time of 15.1 sec.and a quarter mile of 19.0 seconds at 65 mph. It also had a weird mix of the ‘fun’ Suburban badging and more serious 6.2 Diesel badges. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQoYh5pBeSg

LMCorvairFan
LMCorvairFan
1 month ago

Another masterclass Mercedes. The de Boss Garage series on diesels is very good as well.

Toecutter
Toecutter
1 month ago

Compared to a Cummins 4BT, this engine sucks. You can tune a 4BT to reliably make 800 peak horsepower, and have the whole functioning engine weighing around 700 lbs. I wonder what would happen if Casey Putsch built a sub-2500 lb mid-engined streamliner around it? Or less impressive, if someone put one in a Triumph Spitfire/GT6?

Diesels can rip with the right tune and chassis selection. See this 240Z with an OM606 Mercedes engine:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4RghY0For0Q

LMCorvairFan
LMCorvairFan
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

That thing was crazy. Sacreligeous but strangely fun.

Toecutter
Toecutter
1 month ago
Reply to  LMCorvairFan

40 mpg too. And it would be fun to pull up to a supercar at a red light while sounding like a farm tractor, rev the engine, get an enthusiastic response, then blow its doors off after the light turns green.

LMCorvairFan
LMCorvairFan
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

Went down the internet rabbit hole on those OM engines. Very interesting design light and powerful and very tunable with the mechanical pump.

Lizardman in a human suit
Lizardman in a human suit
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

Toecutter! You have been less prolific commenting here recently. We’ve been missing you. Everything ok?

Toecutter
Toecutter
1 month ago

Yes.

Been getting shit done:

https://i.imgur.com/ERBQpwv.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/jmG7GLB.jpg

This won’t accelerate as fast as my custom build, but I’m looking at the possibility of only needing 0.005 kWh/mile plus moderate pedaling effort to hold 45 mph on flat ground. We’ll see.

Lizardman in a human suit
Lizardman in a human suit
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

Nice!

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

You can tune a 4BT to reliably make 800 peak horsepower, and have the whole functioning engine weighing around 700 lbs.

Will it pass all required emissions AND get excellent MPG as well?

Rust Buckets
Rust Buckets
1 month ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

Excellent mpg maybe, but it definitely wouldn’t be bad.

Pass all required emissions depends on where you live. California? No. Here in Idaho? You can definitely do that without incurring an “excessive smoking” ticket, so yeah.

Rust Buckets
Rust Buckets
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

Compared to a Cummins 4BT, the 6.2 Detroit won’t rattle your fillings out, bolts up to existing GM transmissions and motor mounts, and actually fits in vehicles. SBCs and LSs fit in XJ Cherokees, so I assume this would, but a Cummins oil pan rail is too wide to fit between the frame rails on an XJ. That’s just one example, the XJ can’t be the only vehicle with that limitation.

They both have their place. The Detroit is also likely a little more efficient and has a wider powerband than the Cummins.

Toecutter
Toecutter
1 month ago
Reply to  Rust Buckets

The 6.2 Detroit is too heavy to fit into anything sporty and keep it under 3,000 lbs with acceptable weight distribution. For an Overland vehicle that weighs 2 tons, it would be great.

Along with Martin, Dutch Gunderson, Lana and Sally Decker
Along with Martin, Dutch Gunderson, Lana and Sally Decker
1 month ago

Missing from the synopsis of the 6.2l Diesel was the thousands of Chevrolet pickups (M1008) Blazers (M1009) and ambulances (M1010) CUCVs to the U.S. military in the 80s.

Bucko
Bucko
1 month ago

I think the “everyone hates this engine” statement is a bit harsh. It had 80% of the HP that the 5.7L of the time had with essentially the same torque. Even the top end 7.4L only had 230HP and 360 lb-ft of torque. HP and torque need to be put in context. Was it outclassed by the IH 6.9 and the Cummins 5.9? Absolutely. Would I buy an an old Blazer or Suburban with a 6.2? For the right price, absolutely.

67 Oldsmobile
67 Oldsmobile
1 month ago

I’ve had both of these engines and the 6.2 was not bad. The sound and idle give the engine lots of character and while it was slow as shit in a 4×4 Suburban it was really strong and never quit. With a little tuning of the pump it got a bit revvier as well. It did have a horrible appetite for starters and batteries though.
The 6,5 idles like it has a bunch of nails down the cylinders but with the turbo it didn’t run too bad. Nice cruiser, and also strong enough to tow. I did find it more prone to problems though,with the pump control module going tits up and vacuum pump issues. Also a good appetite for batteries and starters,again.

George R
George R
1 month ago

Worked on the DD 6.2 way back when it was just going over to be a GM engine. Kept dealing with it after AM General took it over in all of its guises(as well as the 4L80/85). 6.2 N/A, 6.5 N/A. 6.5 TD for HUMVEE. Even a version that was 250hp and 560lbf-ft torque. There is a version of the 6.5 detuned as a 6.2 replacement. Still in production to this day!

67 Oldsmobile
67 Oldsmobile
1 month ago

“It owned Detroit Diesel and could have used the company for help. Instead, GM’s passenger vehicle diesel would come from Oldsmobile.”
This is just so fucking GM..

Last edited 1 month ago by 67 Oldsmobile
Jnnythndrs
Jnnythndrs
1 month ago

My father went 365K on his 6.2 and it only expired due to a split oil cooler line. My ’93 6.5 is still working perfectly after 30 years with nary an issue other than the ubiquitous oil-pressure sender fault and a water pump/radiator swap. What everybody forgets these days is that upon introduction, the 6.5 made more power than either the Cummins 5.9 or the Ford 7.3 IDI when it was introduced, and it’s a ton smoother with a much friendlier powerband than either. It just suffered from the typical GM fault of leaving things to rot far too long, and it was hopelessly obsolete by the time the Duramax replaced it.

LTDScott
LTDScott
1 month ago

I would love to see one of the supposed Impalas with a 6.2L. While Wikipedia says they were in “1981 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe (only available with upgraded suspension)” I find it hard to believe GM would only offer the engine in one body style of one model year of one model when the 5.7L Olds diesel was available in basically every RWD car that GM offered in those years across all divisions.

Matt Sexton
Matt Sexton
1 month ago
Reply to  LTDScott

I’ve never heard of a 6.2 being in a passenger car of any kind, my guess is that’s either a misprint or some shadetree guy crammed one in.

Squirrelmaster
Squirrelmaster
1 month ago

I remember my dad wanting a 6.2L Suburban to replace his 350 gas Suburban. Then he got a K5 Blazer with the 6.2L as a rental and changed his mind completely. The same thing happened a decade later when he got a GMT400 2500 with a 454 as a company truck. He wished it had the turbo 6.5L until he got to drive one of his hand’s 3500s with the 6.5L and was let down. He was certain the Duramax was going to be a disappointment until he rode in my 2005 LLY and was glad GM finally had a diesel worth giving a crap about (though by that point he had moved on to Ford trucks).

Rust Buckets
Rust Buckets
1 month ago
Reply to  Squirrelmaster

He moved on to Fords just in time for Ford diesels to be trash.

Squirrelmaster
Squirrelmaster
1 month ago
Reply to  Rust Buckets

Unfortunately true.

StillNotATony
StillNotATony
1 month ago

I had a ’93 Silverado half ton with the 6.5 turbo. I sold it at 300k miles with the original, unrebuilt engine still getting 23mpg on a regular basis.

I have no problem with the Detroit Diesel.

Cam.man67
Cam.man67
1 month ago

Ehhh…they certainly weren’t anywhere near as good as the Cummins or IDI or Powerstroke (pre-6.0), but I don’t hate the 6.2. I had one in an M1008 and with 4.56 gears it was perfectly adequate. Slow, yes. But economical. I probably wouldn’t go out of my way to buy another, but it truly wasn’t a bad engine. I think the Banks Turbo kit really would have woken my old one up.

But, the 6.5…yeah. Not great, and the PMD location is absolutely idiotic.

Squirrelmaster
Squirrelmaster
1 month ago
Reply to  Cam.man67

The M1008 with the Banks kit would be good. I knew a guy with a 6.2 HMMWV that he put the Banks kit on that made a world of difference. The HMMWV was almost exclusively used for parades around his large, metropolitan city, so he put the Banks kit on it so he could keep up with busy traffic. Impressive kit, honestly.

H4llelujah
H4llelujah
1 month ago

I love these engines for one reason and one reason only:

They sound like nothing else, save for one thing:

They sound EXACTLY like a train.

Particularly, the (distantly related, in GM manners) EMD SW900.

That low, steady grumble of an idle is just music.

LMCorvairFan
LMCorvairFan
1 month ago
Reply to  H4llelujah

Deltic -https://m.youtube.com/shorts/QxqvKwAjqv4

Last edited 1 month ago by LMCorvairFan
AssMatt
AssMatt
1 month ago

Carnac the Magnificent: a Thanksgiving turkey, Disney’s Gaston, and a GM diesel engine.

Jatkat
Jatkat
1 month ago

Guess what, they are STILL making the 6.5! AM General bought the rights to produce them, and they are still being installed in Humvees. On a semi-unrelated note, the second image in the article, of the C3500HD with the Apache on the rear is fascinating, because I don’t think I’ve ever seen a C3500HD in the wild with that style grill on it. They nearly always had the sealed beam base model grill on them.

Speedway Sammy
Speedway Sammy
1 month ago
Reply to  Jatkat

Those were conversions built by Monroe Truck Equipment in Wisconsin. They raised the cab and put a filler panel between the grill and bumper. They also installed a HD I-beam front axle and frame reinforcements. Sort of a 1-ton plus typically for dumps or rollback body. We purchased a number of them at Allison to use for development of the 1000 series automatic back in the late 90s with Banks uprated 6.5s before prototype GMT800s were available.

Jatkat
Jatkat
1 month ago
Reply to  Speedway Sammy

Whats the difference between that and a regular C3500HD?

Speedway Sammy
Speedway Sammy
1 month ago
Reply to  Jatkat

Biggest changes I remember was the front I-beam axle (vs the production independent) and the longer frame with beefed up rails.

Jatkat
Jatkat
1 month ago
Reply to  Speedway Sammy

Correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe all C3500HD have solid axle front suspension, vs the independent you’d get on the regular C3500.

Cam.man67
Cam.man67
1 month ago
Reply to  Speedway Sammy

Interesting. This was all C3500HD’S that were done by Monroe? I know they were rare as hen’s teeth, but did Monroe have anything to do with the Napco K3500 HD’s?

Weirdly, my K2500 has a tag on the door from Monroe, but dii of want say what was unfitted on the truck.

Speedway Sammy
Speedway Sammy
1 month ago
Reply to  Cam.man67

Not sure about the Napco trucks. Or have much detail on the Monroe ones other than what we had purchased. They’re still in business up in Wisconsin upfitting cab/chassis into work trucks and it appears they are now part of a Swiss multinational group.

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