New Design “Box”
The R07 replaces the SB2 (Small-Block / 2nd generation) engine that has been used by GM Cup teams since 1998 – an eternity in racing. Teams and GM started working on a successor to the SB2 in 1999, and multiple variations of a conventional small-block V-8 were designed, tested, and evaluated. There were R03 and R05 versions along the way that didn’t make the cut.
NASCAR and its participating manufacturers discussed in 2004 a potential "Engine of the Future." The thought was that it would come into the series alongside the Car of Tomorrow body/chassis that the Cup teams are starting to use now. The Engine of the Future was shelved, but the framework for future NASCAR engines started to take place.
Jim Covey, NASCAR engine program manager for GM Racing explains, "The discussions with NASCAR and the other manufacturers about the Engine of the Future were extremely productive. Although the Engine of the Future program was put on the shelf in 2005, NASCAR Nextel Cup Series director John Darby developed a list of parameters that defined the envelope for all manufacturers, thus giving Chevrolet an opportunity to develop the R07 engine. This 'box' set the boundaries for specific design features and minimum and maximum dimensions for key engine components.
"We had started to lay the foundation for a future Chevrolet engine, and we were able to adapt that design to the Chevrolet R07," Covey notes. "A prototype R07 engine was running durability tests on a dyno six months after we kicked off the program. The R07 engine development team included Ed Keating and Ron Sperry, who focused on cylinder heads and intake manifolds, and Ondrej Tomek, who was responsible for the cylinder block. We also worked with our key Chevrolet teams, GM Powertrain, and our suppliers.