V8 engine
|
The Liberty V8 aircraft engine clearly shows the configuration. |
A
V8 engine is a
V engine with eight
cylinders.
The V8 is a very common configuration for large
automobile engines. V8 engines are rarely less than 4 L in displacement and in automobile use have gone up to 8.5 L or so.
The V8 is a common engine configuration in the highest echelons of motorsport, especially in the USA where it is required in
IRL,
ChampCar and
NASCAR.
Formula One began the 2006 season using
naturally aspirated 2.4L V8 engines, which replaced the 3.0L
V10's as a move to cut down power.
V angles
The most common V angle for a V8 by far is 90°. This configuration produces a wide, low engine with optimal firing and vibration characteristics. Since many
V6 and
V10 engines are derived from V8 designs, they often use the 90° angle as well, but sometimes with
balance shafts or more complex cranks to even the firing cycle.
However, some V8s use different angles. One notable example is the
Ford/Yamaha V8 used in the
Ford Taurus SHO. It was based on
Ford's
Duratec V6 and shares that engine's 60° vee angle. This engine is used by
Volvo Cars as of
2005.
Cross-plane and flat-plane
There are two classic types of V8s which differ by crankshaft:
* The
cross-plane V8 is the typical V8 configuration used in American road cars. Each crank pin (of four) is at a 90° angle from the previous, so that viewed from the end the crankshaft forms a cross. The cross-plane can achieve very good balance but requires heavy counterweights on the crankshaft. This makes the cross-plane V8 a slow-revving engine that cannot speed up or slow down very quickly compared to other designs, because of the greater rotating mass. While the firing of the cross-plane V8 is regular overall, the firing of each bank is not LRLLRLRR; this leads to the need to connect exhaust pipes between the two banks to design an optimal exhaust system. This complex and encumbering exhaust system has been a major problem for single-seater racing car designers.
* The
flat-plane V8 design has crank pins at 180°. They are imperfectly balanced and thus produce vibrations unless
balance shafts are used, counter rotating pair flanking the crankshaft, counter 2nd order vibration transverse to the crankshaft centerline. As they don't require counterweights, the crankshaft has less mass and thus inertia, allowing higher rpm and quicker acceleration. The design was popularized in modern racing with the
Coventry Climax 1.5 L V8 which evolved from a cross-plane to a flat-plane configuration. Flat-plane V8s on road cars come from
Ferrari (the
Dino),
Lotus (the
Esprit V8), and
TVR (the Speed Eight). This design is popular in racing engines, the most famous example being the
Cosworth DFV.
In 1992, Audi left the German
DTM racing series after a controversy around the crankshaft design of their V8-powered race cars. After using the road car's cross-plane 90°-crankshaft for several years, they switched to a flat-plane 180° version which they claimed was made by "twisting" a stock part. The scrutineers decided that this would stretch the rules too far.
The cross-plane design was neither obvious nor simple to design. For this reason, most early V8 engines, including those from
De Dion-Bouton,
Peerless, and
Cadillac, were flat-plane designs. In
1915, the cross-plane design was proposed at an automotive engineering conference in the United States, but it took another eight years to bring it to production. Cadillac and Peerless (who had hired an ex-Cadillac mathematician for the job) applied for a patent on the cross-plane design simultaneously, and the two agreed to share the idea. Cadillac introduced their "
Compensated Crankshaft" V8 in
1923, with the "Equipoised Eight" from Peerless appearing in November of
1924.
More information is available
here.
The
United States can be considered the "home of the V8" â€" it has always been more popular there than anywhere else, and it is certainly now the preferred arrangement for any large engine. With the recent exceptions of the
Dodge Viper's
V10, the similar Dodge
Built Ram Tough V10, and the
Ford large truck engine of the same arrangement, there are practically no large engines in the US of post-
World War II design that have not been of this type.
A full decade after Britain's 1904
Rolls-Royce Legalimit,
Cadillac produced the first American V8 engine,
1914's
L-Head. It was a complicated hand-built unit with cast iron paired closed-head cylinders bolted to an aluminum crankcase, and it used a flat-plane crankshaft.
Peerless followed, introducing a V8 licensed from
amusement park manufacturer,
Herschell-Spillman, the next year. Cadillac and Peerless were one year apart again (
1923 and
1924, respectively) with the introduction of the cross-plane crankshaft.
Cunningham race cars, built by
Briggs Cunningham, and
Lincoln also had V8 cars in those years.
Ford was the first company to use V8s
en masse. Instead of going to a
straight-6 like its competitors when something larger than a
straight-4 was needed, Ford designed a modern V8, the famous
Flathead of
1932. This engine powered almost all larger Ford cars until
1953, and was produced until around
1970 by Ford licensees around the world, mostly powering commercial vehicles.
After
World War II, greater vehicle size meant that the straight-6 became increasingly underpowered, while lower hoods and more aerodynamic styling meant that the straight-8 was simply too large.
General Motors responded to Ford's V8 success with the
1949 introduction of the
Oldsmobile Rocket and
Cadillac OHV, the first
OHV V8 engines ever produced.
Chrysler introduced their
FirePower hemi-head V8 the next year. Sales were beyond all expectations, so
Buick,
Chevrolet, and
Pontiac introduced V8s of their own in
1954.
A full history of each manufacturer's engines is out of scope in this article, but engine sizes on
full-size cars grew throughout the
1950s,
1960s and into the early to mid
1970s. The increasing size of full-size cars meant that smaller models of car were introduced and became more popular, with the result that by the
1960s Chrysler, Ford, and Chevrolet had two V8 models.
The larger engines, known as
big-block V8s, were used in the full-size cars. Big-blocks generally had displacements in excess of 6 L (360 in³), but in stock form are often not all that efficient. Big-block displacement reached its zenith with the 1970
Cadillac Eldorado's 8.2 L (500 in³)
500. Once the 1970s oil crisis and pollution regulations hit, big-block V8s didn't last too much longer in cars; luxury cars lasted the longest, but by
1977 or so they were gone. In
trucks and other larger vehicles, big-block V8s continue to be used today, though some manufacturers have replaced them with small-block-based V10s.
Smaller engines, known as
small-block V8s, were fitted in the
mid-size car ranges and generally displaced between 4.4 L (270 in³) and 6.0 L (360 in³), though some grew as large as Ford's 6.7 L (408 in³)
400 Cleveland. As can be seen, there is overlap between big-block and small-block ranges, and an engine between 6.0 L and 6.6 L could belong to either class. Engines like this (much evolved, of course) are still in production.
During the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, every
General Motors division had their own engines, whose merits varied. This enabled each division to have its own unique engine character, but made for much duplication of effort. Most, like the comparatively tiny
Buick 215 and familiar
Chevrolet 350, were confusingly shared across many divisions. Ford and Chrysler had fewer divisions, and division-specific engines were quickly abandoned in favor of a few shared designs. Today, there are less than a dozen different American V8 engines in production.
Lately, Chrysler and General Motors have designed larger displacement V8s out of existing modern small-block V8s for use in performance vehicles, such as Chrysler's 6.1L(370in³) and 6.4L(392in³) Hemis, and the LS7(7.0L/427in³) version of General Motors' LS engines.
See also (American V8s)
*
Ford** 1932-1953
Flathead V8** 1954-1962
Y-block V8** 1958-1967
MEL V8** 1962-1995
Windsor V8** 1963-1976
FE V8** 1968-1997
385 V8** 1970-1982
335/Cleveland V8** 1991-present
Modular V8/
Triton V8** 1996-present
Jaguar AJ-V8** 1996-present
Yamaha V8**
Cosworth DFV*
General Motors** 1914-1992
Cadillac V8** 1949-1990
Oldsmobile Rocket V8** 1954-1970s
Pontiac V8** 1950s-1970s
Buick V8** 1954-1968
Chevrolet small-block V8** 1969-1993
Chevrolet 350 small-block**
Chevrolet Big-Block engine** 1992-present
Northstar/Premium** 1993-1997
Generation 2 small-block** 1998-present
Generation 3 small-block** 2005-present
Generation 4 small-block**
Duramax Diesel*
Chrysler**
A family**
FirePower**
B family**
RB family**
Original Hemi**
AMC V8**
LA Family**
PowerTech**
New HemiThe first British V8 was the 3.5 L
Rolls-Royce Legalimit, predating the first American (
Cadillac) V8 by a full
decade. While America may be considered the "home of the V8", Britain can be considered the first major-user or "father" of the V8 engine.The most common British V8 is the
Rover V8, used in countless British performance cars. This is not actually a British design at all but was imported from America, its roots being in
General Motors'
Oldsmobile/
Buick cast-
aluminum 215 V8 in 1960. It was of the small (for the US market) size of 3.5 L (215 in³) and very light for a V8. It appeared in production in
1961 on some of that year's Buick, Oldsmobile and Pontiac models, but was soon dropped in favor of more conventional iron-blocked units.
As the aluminium block made this engine one of the lightest stock V8s built there were some attempts to use it in racing at Indianapolis. The Australian firm Repco converted this engine for
Formula One by reducing it to 3 L and fitting a
single overhead camshaft per bank rather than the shared pushrod arrangement. Repco-powered
Brabhams won the F1 championship twice, in 1966 and 1967.
Rover was in need of a new, more powerful engine in the mid 1960s, and became aware of this small, lightweight V8. After some negotiation they acquired rights to it and have produced it ever since. After extensive redesign, which left few parts interchangeable with the original Buick engine, it first appeared in Rover saloons in the late 1960s.
As well as appearing in Rover cars, the engine was widely sold to small car builders, and has appeared in all kinds of vehicles. Rover V8s feature in some models from
Morgan,
TVR,
Triumph,
Marcos, and
MG, among many others. Land Rover also used the V8 frequently, appearing in the Range Rover in various guises, from 3.5 litres in the earlier models to the 4.6 litre used in the 1994-2002 model.The Rover V8 is also the standard British engine in
hot rods, much like the Chevrolet 350 small-block is to American builders.
The last mass-produced car to use the Rover V8 was the Land Rover Discovery, which was replaced by an all-new model in 2005. Many independent sports cars manufacturers still use it in hand-built applications.
Triumph used the
Triumph Slant-4 engine as a base of a V8 engine. The
Triumph V8 was used in the
Triumph Stag and in a limited number of
Saab 99s.
Edward Turner designed the 2.5 litre and 4.5 litre hemi-head
Daimler V8 engines announced in 1959. The 2.5 saw service in the Daimler SP250 (1959 - 1964), and, after the Jaguar takeover, in the "Daimler 2.5 Litre V8"/"Daimler 240" (1962 - 1969) versions of the Mk2 Jaguar bodyshell. The 4.5 was used in the Daimler Majestic Major, (1959-1968) a heavy car with advanced mechanical specification for the time.
The Jaguar company introduced the new AJ26 V8 engine in 1996. It has been developed and updated since, and appears in the S-Type Jaguar and later vehicles from Jaguar.The current V8 used in The Ford Motor Group's British Luxury Division appears in Jaguar and Land Rover, in a 4.2 (Jaguar XJ, XK and S-Type), 4.2 supercharged (Jaguar XJR, XKR, S-Type-R, Land Rover Range Rover and Range Rover Sport)and a 4.4 (Range Rover and Range Rover Sport)Note: The 4.4 is not the same 4.4 as used in the Volvo XC90 and forthcoming S80, that is a Yamaha V8.
To be done :
Aston-MartinRolls-RoyceThe French
De Dion-Bouton firm was first to produce a V8 engine for sale in
1910. Later examples came from
Citroën, with the never produced
1934 22CV
Traction Avant, and
Simca.
Tatra used air-cooled V8 engines.
*
Daimler-Benz*
Porsche 928,
Porsche Cayenne*
Audi*
BMW**
M60**
M62**
N62Alfa Romeo
The
Alfa Romeo Montreal was powered by a 2593 cm³ (158 in³) 90-degree quad-cam V8 derived from the Tipo 33 race car. The engine was also used in a very limited production
Alfetta GTV8 (22 cars were made).
Ferrari
Arguably,
Ferrari had their first contact with V8 power with the "inherited" Lancia D50s in 1955.
Ferrari adopted the V8 configuration for themselves for racing in
1962 with the
268 SP. The first V8-powered Ferrari road car was 1974's
308 GT4, with the familiar
308 GTB following closely behind. The company continued to use this
Dino V8 engine ever since with the
328,
348, and successors. Ferrari's smallest V8 (and indeed,
the smallest ever) was the 2.0 L (1990 cc) unit found in the 1975
208 GT4. The company produced a slightly-larger 2.0 L V8 in the
208 GTB of the
1980s. Five-valve versions of Ferrari's 3.5 L and 3.6 L V8s were found in the
Ferrari 355 and
Ferrari 360. The old
Dino V8 was retired for 2005 with the introduction of a shared Ferrari/
Maserati V8 in the
F430.
Fiat
The only Fiat to have a V8 was the
Fiat 8V. The engine was a very compact
OHV 1996 cm³ (122 in³) V8 with a 70° V angle and 2 valves per cylinder. The Fiat 8V was designed to partake in the italian two-litre racing class.
Lamborghini
Lamborghini have always fitted V12s in their top-of-the-line cars, but have built many V8s for their lower models, including the
Urraco and
Jalpa.
Maserati
Maserati have used V8s for many of their models, including the
Maserati Bora. This engine was initially designed as a racing engine for the Maserati 450S. The company's latest V8, found in the
Quattroporte,
Coupe, and
Spyder, is a new design shared with
Ferrari.
The
GAZ-53 was powered by a 4254 cc ZMZ-53 engine.
ZIL-41047 is powered by a ZIL-4104 engine, a 7680 cc carburetted V8 giving 315 hp (232 kW).
ZIL-114 was powered by a 7000 cc V8 giving almost 300 hp.
Spanish truck company
Pegaso made around 100 cars in the
1950s and
1960s. These cars were powered by a DOHC 32 valve V8, with up to 360
hp (270 kW).
The V8 is a very popular engine amongst Australians. This popularity can be attributed to both the popularity of the V8 in the
USA, but also the V8's inherent characteristics. The V8's deep growl (actually a property of the
muffler system) and its powerful mid-range torque have made it a more popular engine to the more refined I6 and V6 engines.
Holden (including its performance vehicle operations
HDT Special Vehicles and
HSV) have been manufacuring V8 performance vehicles since the late 1960's, as has
Ford Australia. The performance arm of Ford Australia,
Ford Performance Vehicles (FPV), have recently resurged in the market with the new
Falcon BA based models.
The Australian V8 is typically an American manufactured block from either
Ford,
Chrysler or
General Motors yet often use local heads and auxiliary systems (pistons, exhaust etc.). However, there are a couple of exceptions to this - the
Holden small block V8, and the
British Leyland alloy small block V8.
The
Holden small block V8 was an all Australian designed and manufactured cast-iron 90 degree pushrod OHV engine, manufactured in the capacities of 4.2 L (253 in³), 5.0 L (308 in³), later destroked to 304 in³), and 5.7 L (348 in³), later stroked to 350 in³). First introduced in 1969, finally ceasing production in 1999, it powered a variety of Holden vehicles including the
Kingswood,
Monaro,
Torana and
Commodore, and proved to be a popular and successful powerplant in Australian motorsport (especially
Touring cars).
The
British Leyland small block V8 was also a pushrod OHV engine, however it was an all alloy block like the British
Rover V8 it was based on. The stroke was increased to give it a capacity of 4.4L. The motor was originally designed and fitted to the
Leyland P76 sedan.
* 45° Liberty engine V8.
*
Hispano-Suiza WW1 V8.
Moto-Guzzi raced a 500cc 90 degree V8 from 1955 to 1957. Morbidelli produced an 848cc V8 in 1998.
*
Ford V8 Pages*
Customer power: the Cosworth DFV story