The L98 cars have some seriously strange electrical problems. The sensors and controllers that manage the engine have something like 11 separate grounds, but some of them share the power side of the circuits. They also have a MAF and a MAP sensor. Why? I remember reading an article about an editor's C4 in Car Craft that started out on a, "how to diagnose L98's," tack, and ended up being a, "look at all the crazy shit that went wrong with this car," article. He ended up getting a Painless harness made, and rewiring the whole engine bay. Pass.
I can tell you this from owning an L98 based car. Get the LT1. Those L98's are touchy as hell. One sensor goes bad and it runs like ass. I will tell you this about the L98, they can make demonic levels of torque when you start modding them. Super chevys did a 383 stroker with ported stock heads, a better intake and cam. Made 438hp/534ftlbs of torque.
What's wrong with having a MAF and MAP sensor on the same engine?
His ended up having one of them go out, so the car tried to compensate with the other and went into limp mode, dumping fuel in. He averaged 10mpg suddenly, and ended up spinning a bearing because his oil was so diluted with gas. Should he have noticed that on the front end? Hell yes. He was the editor of a DIY car-modding mag. It just made the whole attempt to hot-rod on the cheap with one look taxing. That said, my personal experience with them is limited, and I had no issues fixing the two total C4 corvettes I've ever turned a wrench on. I'm being a chicken about it.
I can tell you this from owning an L98 based car. Get the LT1. Those L98's are touchy as hell. One sensor goes bad and it runs like ass. I will tell you this about the L98, they can make demonic levels of torque when you start modding them. Super chevys did a 383 stroker with ported stock heads, a better intake and cam. Made 438hp/534ftlbs of torque.
His ended up having one of them go out, so the car tried to compensate with the other and went into limp mode, dumping fuel in. He averaged 10mpg suddenly, and ended up spinning a bearing because his oil was so diluted with gas. Should he have noticed that on the front end? Hell yes. He was the editor of a DIY car-modding mag. It just made the whole attempt to hot-rod on the cheap with one look taxing. That said, my personal experience with them is limited, and I had no issues fixing the two total C4 corvettes I've ever turned a wrench on. I'm being a chicken about it.
Serves me right for changing my post and then not reading it fully before submitting the reply. It's a turd in stock form, it can make a ton of torque when modded, but is a rat bastard to keep running right.
They're cheap! There was a high-mile one on Ebay a couple years ago that went for ~$9k!
Shit. They wanted 2k more for the ZR1 than the Cobra, and it was 9 years older back then. lol, ended up being a no brainer, but that would have been a cool car to have.
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