I "hope" you're (best engined) car doesn't. Blow up. Again as I can't afford to give you another 'tenner' for it
What? How is it "huge"? If it was a 27% improvement over a comparable "traditional" 2.0 4-pot, then yes, I'd agree. Comparing it to a different layout, with a different cylinder count, a different breathing method, and a massively different displacement is hardly ground-breaking.
Simply by buying in a Gen 3 EA888 VAG 2.0 petrol TFSI engine they could have had 48% fuel efficiency over the same 3.5l V6.
No turbo is quite an improvement .
Jalopnik Link said:The engine is a 2.0 liter turbocharged four-cylinder that Nissan is calling the VC-T
Wow, a whole 27% more efficient than a large displacement N/A V6. That's well worth the investment, production and maintenance costs.
Now compare it to a cylinder on demand turbo 4-pot.
That would be lovely, however:
[TW]Fox;29906010 said:27% is incredibly good in terms of efficiency gains surely?
I "hope" you're (best engined) car doesn't. Blow up. Again as I can't afford to give you another 'tenner' for it
Again, if you were talking apples with apples, yes.
How much of the efficiency gains above the old N/A 3.5l V6 come from the smaller displacement and use of forced induction? How much of it actually comes from the variable displacement/compression ratio?
I'd wager most of the "efficiency" gains over the far larger (75% more displacement) N/A V6 don't come from the complex new tech.
The Gen 3 EA888 with 300PS has book figures of 295BHP, 380NM Torque, 160G/KM emissions, and a quoted economy figure of 40MPG.
[TW]Fox;29906274 said:The 340i has lower CO2, similar economy