What if I told you Chevy is lining up a new V8? Reports say a Gen 6 small‑block, in 5.7L and 6.6L, is set to hit the 2027 Silverado/Sierra first, then slide into C8 Stingray and E‑Ray soon after. If that happens, the base Corvette moves up while trucks get fresh muscle. That also puts Mopar on the clock. If GM rolls out Gen 6 small block V8, Dodge can’t sit with a Gen 3 HEMI forever. A Gen 4 HEMI needs to be in the plan, fast.
What GM Authority is reporting
- Two new displacements: 5.7L and 6.6L.
- Launch window: 2027 trucks first.
- Performance trim to follow for C8 Corvette.
The current Stingray runs a 6.2L LT2 just under 500 hp. A performance 6.6L V8 with better airflow and new controls could land in the 500–550 hp range naturally aspirated. That lifts the base car without forced air.
What it means for Corvette
Stingray: A bigger, smarter V8 gives more mid‑range and better mileage at cruise. It also resets the base car’s value. A manual could follow if Tremec’s mid‑engine box goes live and give C8 owners a reason to upgrade.
E‑Ray: Extra cubes pair well with the front motor. The car gains low‑rpm shove from both ends and keeps the hybrid super car killer a sleeper.
Z cars: If Chevy revises the top trims later, a flat‑plane version is not crazy talk if the team wants a wild note, but that is a wait‑and‑see.
Why this pressures Dodge
SRT just pulled the HEMI back into the light. That move was smart. Still, GM stepping into Gen 6 while Mopar stays Gen 3 is not a long‑term play. Buyers notice when one brand talks fresh blocks while the other leans on stage kits. A clear Gen 4 HEMI plan would calm that. Even a teaser would help.
What a Gen 4 HEMI should have
- Dual‑injection: direct plus port for power and clean valves.
- Better heads for better breathing and tuning.
- Stronger blocks in both iron and aluminum, plus forged internals on high trims.
- E85 calibration on SRT models. Pump gas wins; corn fuel gives more power at a lower fuel cost.

Trucks: why 2027 matters
New power in Silverado/Sierra will sell. I’m sure hp, towing, and payload will probably improve but it is clear that General Motors is still innovating its lineup of vehicles with the latest technology. Stellantis tried to innovate with technology and engines no one wanted and is behind the curve when it comes to V8 engines. Ford also announced they will upgrade their V8’s in the future, most likely to counter GM’s new Gen 6 Small Block V8. It is time for Stellantis to do the same or they will be left behind in third place.
How Dodge can counter
Short term
- Ship the TRX back with stage kits to jack up the power.
- Approve a Ram street truck with a 392.
- Keep Durango Hellcat around until the next generation version is ready.
Mid term
- Announce Gen 4 HEMI development. Share teases, not secrets.
- Drop a HEMI AWD Charger special using E85 for a true “Last Call” before the 4th gen.
- Offer a manual where it fits. Give fans a reason to buy new.
The bigger picture
EV plans got trimmed because customers pushed back. Buyers still want sound and great V8 performance. GM sees that and is funding V8s. Ford just proved it with a 900‑hp Raptor kit and announced they will do a new V8. Dodge has the brand heat to win this era, but only if the hardware keeps moving forward to the next generation.
My take
If Chevy lands a 6.6L in the C8 by 2028, the base car becomes a bargain rocket again. That’s good for car fans. It’s also a warning shot. I want Mopar to answer with a sharp Gen 4 HEMI, not a press note about yet another inline‑six trim. I want to see a Gen 4 Hemi arrive in cool cars like a next generation Viper, Durango, and fingers crossed a Cuda. Give us big cubes, sound, and tech that keeps the customer happy. The market will do the rest.






