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Posted

Ok guys just looking for some info I’ve got a 2018 Sierra and am looking to swap the 4.3 for a 6.2. Not wanting to do any huge power upgrades just a stock 6.2 so I can still use it daily. Does anybody know if the transmission that came in the truck will work with the 6.2 or what am I really getting in to here?

Posted

This may be a stupid question, but wouldn’t it be easier, cheaper, faster, more safer, etc to just trade/sell the 4.3 and get a 6.2??

Trucks these days aren’t like the 80s where you just drop in another bigger engine and everything works. There’s too much electronics and wiring that would have to be altered.

Seems like a crazy task, but hey, more power to you.


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Posted

Probably sounds crazy lol I just prefer this body style and I already have the truck so the idea was bouncing around in my head on things I could do to it

Posted

Probably sounds crazy lol I just prefer this body style and I already have the truck so the idea was bouncing around in my head on things I could do to it

Posted (edited)

It can be done of course. But it will cost you more do it than it would to sell the truck and buy one with the engine you want. It sounds like the 6.2L will be available nearly across the board for the 2020 model year. If  you have a RCSB, I would hold out to see if you can get a 2020 RCSB with a 6.2L. Your not just swapping the engine, I would assume the ECM would need to be changed or at least reprogrammed. You might have to find a donor 2014 6.2L/6L80e TCM to control the transmission, as that was the only year you could get a 6.2L bolted to a 6L80e. If you can do the work yourself it is probably feasible, but if not you will have $15-20k into that swap by the time your done. And if you do go that route get and LT1 instead of the L86. My advise is keep it V6 and wait for GM to drop info on the 2020's, we will know more shortly. 

Edited by L86 All Terrain
Posted

I’ve done a few mods. A few years back I was getting ready to do a 2 door Tahoe. Beef up the trans stroke and S/C etc. My wife a smart chic suggested go through EBay. Long story short eight years later I’m still playing with the 92 I paid just 7500$ for. The truck has just over 100K miles. It has everything and then some of what I was going to go to the Tahoe, for a little more than the engine mods and S/C would have cost. All I’ve done is general maintenance. My point list and price you’re mods, the go on a site like EBay check out what’s there. I couldn’t have built the Tahoe for what a paid for a completed project.


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Posted
It can be done of course. But it will cost you more do it than it would to sell the truck and buy one with the engine you want. It sounds like the 6.2L will be available nearly across the board for the 2020 model year. If  you have a RCSB, I would hold out to see if you can get a 2020 RCSB with a 6.2L. Your not just swapping the engine, I would assume the ECM would need to be changed or at least reprogrammed. You might have to find a donor 2014 6.2L/6L80e TCM to control the transmission, as that was the only year you could get a 6.2L bolted to a 6L80e. If you can do the work yourself it is probably feasible, but if not you will have $15-20k into that swap by the time your done. And if you do go that route get and LT1 instead of the L86. My advise is keep it V6 and wait for GM to drop info on the 2020's, we will know more shortly. 
Where did you read that the 6.2 will be available in the RCSB? I definitely want to read that, I've always hoped that we could the 6.2 in a regular cab.

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Posted
On 7/26/2019 at 9:05 PM, SirenRed16 said:

Where did you read that the 6.2 will be available in the RCSB? I definitely want to read that, I've always hoped that we could the 6.2 in a regular cab.

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I wish that was true but GM will never do it because it makes to much sense. They wouldn't even make the 2000's SS trucks with the 6.0 in a regular cab. My buddy just bought a 2019 F150 reg cab 5.0 10 speed 3:73 gears and that thing rips.

  • 5 years later...
Posted

I have a 2014 Silverado with a 6.2L LT1 engine swap. It is not a cheap endeavor but it’s absolutely worth it. 
 

I blew the engine in 2021 (at 220K) and the engine went from mechanics and dealerships all over NC. Nobody could properly fix the issue so in 2024 after sitting for 3 years I decided to make it a beast as the body style is (in my opinion) the best. 
 

2015 C7 Corvette LT1 6.2L Engine with all accessories. ECM, ECU, exhaust manifolds, intake etc. 8k miles with a video of it operating as it should. EBay is the way to go and I found a recycling company that was cheaper and higher quality than most other vendors. I’d suggest looking there. The LT1 these days is cheaper than the L86.
$6500 for the motor with shipping from Florida to NC. Hit my loading dock in phenomenal shape 3 days later and I was ready to roll.

 

Took it to a reputable shop and in a week it was ready. Reused the L83 oil pan, exhaust manifolds and flex plate. Everything else bolted on without too much trouble. The cost was $7500 from the shop for the whole shabang including a base tune to get it running. I ended up in total at $14K for strictly the engine swap. Does not include the $500-$800 street tune that is necessary. I had other odds and ends replaced but they were unrelated to the engine swap. If you are trying to sort a budget I’d HIGHLY recommend pulling the old motor yourself, pulling the oil pan, exhaust manifolds, and flex plate to minimize costs. Bring the necessary parts in an organized fashion and bring the old engine too in the event something else has to swap over. It’ll save you well over $1000 and the mechanic won’t have to go to war with disconnecting all of the wires. 
 

after I drive 80k or so miles I’m going to pull it and rebuild for reliability and a little more power (DoD delete, link bar lifters, valve springs, cam etc) I hope this helps as there isn’t much online. 

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