List of GM Engines - Specs, Common Problems, Reliability
Gasoline Engines
2.0L Ecotec LTG Engine
Camaro, Malibu, ATS
2013-present
2.4L Ecotec Engine
Malibu, Equinox, Cobalt, Ion, Sky
2006-2019
2.7L L3B Turbo Engine
Silverado 1500, Sierra 1500, CT4-V
2018-present
4.3L V6 EcoTec3 LV3 Engine
Silverado 1500, Sierra 1500, Express
2014-2021
5.3L EcoTec3 L83 Engine
Silverado, Sierra
2014-present
6.2L EcoTec3 L86/L87 Engine
Silverado, Sierra, Tahoe, Yukon, Escalade
2014-present
F14D3 1.4L Engine
Aveo
2002-2008
F16D3 1.6L Engine
Aveo, Cruze
2004-2013
F16D4 1.6L Engine
Aveo, Cruze
2008-2020
F18D3 (T18SED) Engine 1.8L
Lacetti
2004-2014
GM EV Powertrain Specifications
No e-powertrains yet.
GM

General Motors Company (GM) is an American multinational corporation that desings, produces, and distributes vehicles globaly. General Motors is home to Chevrolet, Buick, GMC and Cadillac.
GM's engine line is very diverse. In the history of the brand, there is a list of dozens of models with small 3-cylinder engines and impressive V8 engines. Until the mid-70's, every division of General Motors has developed and produced its engines with a low degree of unification, which led to confusion among customers, made high cost of certification, etc. In the 1980s, concern has focused their engine production on individual lines and markets. So for the European market, almost all engines are created in the division Adam Opel AG (3, 4 and 6-cylinder gasoline and diesel engines). Often, these engines had one designation but produced at other plants located in South Korea. Technology exchange agreements with other manufacturers such as Isuzu and Nissan are aimed at reducing the cost of the final product. The unification of models provides significant savings in their price, which makes GM's vehicles popular around the world.