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AMC V8 engine showing the four cylinders on each side of the V configuration

A V8 engine is a V engine with eight cylinder (engine)s. In its simplest form it is basically two straight-4 engines sharing a common crankshaft. However, this simple configuration has the same engine balance as two straight-4s, resulting in annoying vibrations in large-displacement engines. As a result, most modern passenger car V8s use a complex crossplane crankshaft with heavy counterweights to eliminate the vibrations. This results in a powerful engine which is almost as smooth as the straight-6, while being considerably less expensive than the even smoother and more powerful V12 engine. However, flat-plane crankshafts are still common in purpose-designed V8 engines for racing cars, since a crossplane crankshaft results in uneven firing into the exhaust manifolds, interfering with engine tuning, and the heavy counterweights prevent the engine from accelerating rapidly.

The V8 engine is generally too long and wide to be used in the efficient transverse engine front-wheel drive layout, so with a few exceptions is limited to front-engine design, rear-wheel drive cars and light trucks. Heavy trucks more commonly use the straight-6 configuration since it is simpler and easier to maintain, and truckers prefer a slow-turning engine with fewer but bigger components. Aircraft have seldom used the V8 engine since the heavy crankshaft weights are a liability, and modern light planes commonly use the flat-8 configuration instead since it is lighter and easier to air-cooled engine.

Historically, the V8 was very popular in passenger vehicles in the United States, especially prior to the 1973 oil crisis but its popularity has been inversely proportional to gasoline prices, and especially after the oil price increases of 2004-2006, the V6 engine has become more common. In many cases, V6s were derived from V8 designs by removing two cylinders without changing the V-angle, as a result of which they can be built on the same assembly lines as the V8, and with modern computer-aided design they can be made almost as smooth. In modern times, V8s are generally limited to more powerful rear-wheel drive sports cars, luxury cars, pickup trucks, and SUVs.

Overview The V8 is a very common configuration for large automobile engines. V8 engines are rarely less than 3 L in displacement and in automobile use have gone up to and beyond 9 liters.

The V8 is a common engine configuration in the highest echelons of motorsport, especially in the USA where it is required in Indy Racing League, ChampCar and NASCAR. Formula One began the 2006 season using Naturally aspirated engine 2.4L V8 engines, which replaced the 3.0L V10 engine in a move to reduce power.

Pioneers of the V8

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 engine and V10 engine 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 engine used in the Ford Taurus SHO. It was based on Ford Motor Company's Ford Duratec engine#Duratec 25 and shares that engine's 60° vee angle. A version of this engine is used by Volvo Cars as of 2005. In years past, GM-EMD produced an 8 cylinder version of their model 567 Diesel locomotive engine, which has a 45 degree cylinder angle.

Cross-plane and flat-plane There are two classic types of V8s which differ by crankshaft:

In 1992, Audi left the German Deutsche Tourenwagen Meisterschaft 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 (automobile), 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 "Cadillac V8 engine" V8 in 1923, with the "Equipoised Eight" from Peerless appearing in November of 1924.

More information is available here.

American V8 engines The United States can be considered the "home of the V8" — 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 engine, the similar Dodge Chrysler LA engine#Ram Tough V10, and the Ford Triton V10 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 Limited Legalimit, Cadillac (automobile) produced the first American V8 engine, 1914's Cadillac V8 engine. 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. Chevrolet produced a crude overhead valve V8 in 1917, in which the valve gear was completely exposed. It only lasted through 1918 and then disappeared. They would not produce another V8 until the introduction of the famous Chevrolet Small-Block engine in 1955.

Cadillac and Peerless were one year apart again (1923 and 1924, respectively) with the introduction of the cross-plane crankshaft. Lincoln (automobile) also had V8 cars in those years, as did Ferro (car company), Northway (supplier to Cadillac, Cole (car company) {Indianapolis}, and Jackson {Jackson, MI}), Perkins (Detroit), Murray, Vernon, and Yale.Georgano, G.N. Cars: Early and Vintage, 1886-1930. (London: Grange-Universal, 1985).

Ford was the first company to use V8s en masse. Instead of going to an straight-6 like its competitors when something larger than an straight-4 was needed, Ford designed a modern V8, the famous Ford Flathead engine 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, the strong demand for larger status-symbol cars made the common straight-6 less marketable. A straight-8 engine would introduce problems with crankshaft whip and require a longer engine bay. In the new wider body styles, a V8 would fit in the same space as a straight-6. Manufacturers could simplify production and offer the bigger engines as optional upgrades to base models.

In 1949 General Motors Corporation responded to Ford's V8 success by introducing the Oldsmobile V8 engine and Cadillac V8 engine#OHV. Chrysler Corporation introduced their Chrysler FirePower engine 331 cubic inch hemi-head V8 in 1951. Sales were beyond all expectations, so Buick followed in 1953, and Chevrolet and Pontiac introduced V8s of their own in 1955.

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 smaller models of car were introduced and became more popular, with the result, by the 1960s, Chrysler, Ford, and Chevrolet had two V8 model ranges.

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) Cadillac V8 engine#500. Once the 1970s oil crisis and pollution regulations hit, big-block V8s did not 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 or more efficient Diesels.

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) Ford 335 engine#400. 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 Corporation 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 V8 engine#215 and familiar Chevrolet Small-Block engine, 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 fewer 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 (370 in³) and 6.4L (392 in³) Hemis, and the LS7 (7.0L/427in³) version of General Motors' LS engines.

Today, the major use for big V8s is in racing, where aluminum copies of the venerable Chrysler 426 still dominate professional drag racing (Top Fuel and Pro Stock), while "stock" V8s are the standard in NASCAR.

American V8s (by mfg. & date)

British V8 engines The first British V8 was the 3.5 L Rolls-Royce V-8 (1905), predating the first American (Cadillac) V8 by a full decade.

The Rolls-Royce (car) and Bentley V8 still used in modern Bentleys was designed from 1952 and entered production in 1959 in the Rolls Royce Silver Cloud and Bentley S2. Following then current design practice it featured overhead valves (Overhead valve), a central camshaft and wedge-shaped combustion chambers. Sometime rumoured to be a US-license built (possibly a confusion with the 4-speed automatic gearbox), it is indeed an original British design by the Rolls-Royce and Bentley Motors engineering team led by Jack Phillips. This is obvious in advanced design-features like aluminium block with wet liners, gear-driven camshaft, (initially) outboard spark-plugs or porting inspired by the Rolls-Royce Merlin aircraft engine. Early version were 6.25 liters of displacement, growing to 6.75 liters in the 1970s. Turbocharging in various Bentley models beginning in the 1980s led the resurgence of Bentley Motors and increased power in several steps to currently 500 bhp and 1000 Nm in the 2007 model-year Bentley Arnage while meeting all emission standards. The Bentley V8 has thus increased power and torque by more than 150% in its life.It is the highest torque V8 used in a production car.

The most common British V8 is the Rover V8 engine, 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 Corporation' Oldsmobile/Buick cast-aluminum Buick V8 engine#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 (car) 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 Motor Company, TVR, Triumph Motor Company, Marcos (automobile), and MG (car), 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.

Recently Land Rover company (ford) have added the TDV8 to the list of engines. it is a V8 version of the popular TDV6 found in discoveries. This diesel engine will be found in 07 Range Rovers the point of interest in this engine is the amount of torque produced by this 3.6L engine, it manages at a mere 2000 rpm.

Triumph Motor Company 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 2.5 & 4.5 litre 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 250" (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.

French V8 engines The 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 Citroën Traction Avant, and Simca. Peugeot's upcoming 608 and its Citroën C6 stablemate may have a new HDi 3.6 and 4.4 V8 as well as a possible petrol 4.0-5.0 V8.

Czech V8 engines Tatra (car) used air-cooled V8 engines. These culminated in the 2.5 litre unit used in the Tatra T603 range of cars. The most powerful of these was fitted to the racing variant - known as the B-5. This was a higher compression version of the standard engine which replaced a standard single 2BBL carburettor with two 4BBL downdraft units on a new induction manifold.
Later, Tatra produced another air cooled engine, used in Tatra 613 and later, in Tatra 700. These engines were well known for their reliability, good fuel consumption, and specific sound.
In the Tatra 603, two engine driven fans help pull cooling air into the engine bay - when the vehicle is in motion the air enters through intakes in the rear wing panels and is exhausted through cut-outs below the bumper and alongside the engine itself. In the Tatra 613, one large ventilator pushes fresh cold air into the engine bay.
The later variants of the T613 & T700 and indeed the T603 are unusual in having a petrol powered heating system taking its supply from the main tank. In the latter cars the system is programmable in a similar way to systems found for house heating. Additionally the T700 especially was available in high-spec models with unusual options present in almost no other passenger car.
The T700 was available in the UK for a short while, and would have sold well but for the all too common problem of no-one knowing the car was available (a similar story with the Renault Safrane cost sales in the UK).Tatra has used air cooled engines in their heavy duty trucks until the present day.


T77 - 2.97 Litre Air-Cooled V8
T77a - 3.4 Litre Air-Cooled V8 - 75 hp
T87 - 2.97 Litre Air-Cooled V8 - 75 hp
T607 Monopost - 2.35 Litre V8 - 161 hp (later 181 hp in 607-2)
T603 - 2.5 Litre Air Cooled V8 - 95 hp
T603B5 - 2.5 Litre Air Cooled V8 - 143 hp
T613 - 3.5 Litre Air Cooled V8 - 168 hp
T613i- 3.5 Litre Air Cooled V8 - 200 hp
T700 - 3.5 Litre Air Cooled V8 - 200 hp (234 hp in 4.36i)


German V8 engines German V8s (by mfg. & date)









Italian V8 engines Alfa Romeo The Alfa Romeo Montreal was powered by a 2,593 cc 90-degree quad-cam 16-valve V8 derived from the Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 race car. There were also eighteen Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale cars built with a detuned 2 liter 260 hp Tipo 33/2 flat-crank engine. The Montreal cross-crank engine was also used in a very limited production run of 22 Alfa Romeo Alfetta GTV2.6i. The Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione sports car has a Maserati-built 4,691 cc 450 bhp cross-crank V8. A similar engine is likely to be used in the upcoming Alfa Romeo 169 and Alfa Romeo 159 GTA.

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 Ferrari Dino#268 SP. The first V8-powered Ferrari road car was 1974's Ferrari GT4#308 GT4, with the familiar Ferrari 308 GTB following closely behind. The company continued to use this Ferrari Dino engine#V8 V8 engine ever since with the Ferrari 328, Ferrari 348, and successors. Ferrari's smallest V8 (and indeed, list of automotive superlatives) was the 2.0 L (1990 cc) unit found in the 1975 Ferrari GT4#208 GT4. The company produced a slightly-larger 2.0 L V8 in the Ferrari 308 GTB#208 GTB of the 1980s. Five-valve versions of Ferrari's 3.5 L and 3.6 L V8s were found in the Ferrari F355 and Ferrari 360. The old Dino V8 was retired for 2005 with the introduction of a shared Ferrari/Maserati V8 4.3 L in the Ferrari F430.

Fiat The only Fiat to have a V8 was the Fiat 8V. The engine was a very compact Overhead valve 1996 cc (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 Lamborghini Urraco and Lamborghini 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 Maserati Quattroporte, Maserate Coupe, and Maserati Spyder, is a new design shared with Ferrari.

Japanese V8 engines Japanese manufacturers are traditionally not known for V8 engines in their roadcars, however they have built a few V8 engines to meet the needs of consumers, as well as for their own racing programs.

Nissan Nissan built its first V8, the Nissan Y engine#Y40 in 1965 for its Nissan President. The Y engine has been succeeded by two families of V8, the Nissan VH engine series during the '80s and '90s and the new Nissan VK engine series.



Honda Honda, despite being known as an engine company, have never built a V8 for their roadcars. However, they have built V8s for racing, most notably for Formula One. Honda is also the sole engine builder for Indy Racing. The Honda Indy V-8 has a 10,300 rpm redline. Also, their affiliate Mugen Motorsports has also built racing V8s that have eventually found their way into limited production road cars as well as concept cars. Their Mugen Motorsports#MF408S engine technical specifications: engine, which powers cars in the ALMS is also found in a few limited production road cars such as the Mooncraft Shiden, it is more known however for being the engine in the Honda Legend based Mugen Max concept.

Toyota Toyota's first V8 engine family was the Toyota V engine series used in the prestigious Toyota Century ultra luxury car. This engine, unique from other Toyota engines in that it had a hemisperical combustion chamber, remained in use in the Century until it was replaced by a V12 in 1997. Other Toyota V8 families are the Toyota UZ engine engines and the new Toyota UR engine engines.



Yamaha While better known as a manufacturer of bikes, Yamaha Motor Company also makes engines under contract from auto-manufacturers. They currently produce a V8 engine in conjunction with Volvo Cars for vehicles such as the Volvo XC90 and the Volvo S80.

Swedish V8 engines The most well-known Swedish V8 engine is probably the Scania 14 litre diesel, which was released in 1969 for use in the 140 model heavy trucks. At this point, the 350 hp turbo-charged engine was the most powerful diesel in Europe.

Volvo's 1950's concept car Philip also had a gasoline V8 engine. The car never went into production, but the engine evolved into a 120 hp 3,6 litre V8 (in many aspects a "double B18" engine) for use in the light trucks Snabbe and Trygge from the late 1950s on.

Supercar manufacturer Koenigsegg has developed a 4.7 litre twin-supercharged V8 based on the Ford Modular engine. This engine is unique in that it is a flexible fuel engine and actually produces more power while running on biofuel than on regular unleaded.

Russian V8 engines 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 V8 engines Spain 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 Horsepower (270 kW).

Australian V8 engines Holden, including its performance vehicle operations being: Holden Dealer Team and Holden Special Vehicles have been manufacturing V8 performance vehicles since the late 1960s, as has Ford Motor Company Australia. The performance arm of Ford Australia, Ford Performance Vehicles (FPV), have recently resurged in the market with the new Ford Falcon (Australia) BA and BF based models.

The Australian V8 is typically an American manufactured block from either Ford Motor Company, Chrysler Group or General Motors Corporation 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). First introduced in 1969, finally ceasing production in 1999, it powered a variety of Holden vehicles including the Holden Kingswood, Holden Monaro, Holden Torana and Holden Commodore, and proved to be a popular and successful powerplant in Australian motorsport (especially Touring car racing).

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.

V8s in aviation

V8s in motorcycles Moto Guzzi built a 148 kg 82 bhp water cooled DOHC V8 4-stroke motorcycle for Grand Prix racing between 1955 and 1957, referred to as the Moto Guzzi Grand Prix 500 cc V8. Morbidelli produced an 848 cc V8 in 1998.

V8s in motorsport Up until recently, Formula 1 cars used 3-litre V10 engines. However, the FIA thought speeds were getting too high to be safe (even with the banning of turbochargers in 1989, which allowed engines to develop 1500 bhp, 1000 bhp from a naturally-aspirated engine was not impossible by 2005, and with better aerodynamics, cars were shattering straight-line speed records.) So, the permitted engine size was cut to 2.4-litre V8 (This reduced average power output of the engines from 900 bhp, or about 680 kW, in the 2005 season, to a 2006 season average of 700 bhp / 550 kW - equivalent to power outputs that were being achieved on 3 litres around the 1999/2000 seasons.)

External links AMC V8 engine showing the four cylinders on each side of the V configuration

A V8 engine is a V engine with eight cylinder (engine)s. In its simplest form it is basically two straight-4 engines sharing a common crankshaft. However, this simple configuration has the same engine balance as two straight-4s, resulting in annoying vibrations in large-displacement engines. As a result, most modern passenger car V8s use a complex crossplane crankshaft with heavy counterweights to eliminate the vibrations. This results in a powerful engine which is almost as smooth as the straight-6, while being considerably less expensive than the even smoother and more powerful V12 engine. However, flat-plane crankshafts are still common in purpose-designed V8 engines for racing cars, since a crossplane crankshaft results in uneven firing into the exhaust manifolds, interfering with engine tuning, and the heavy counterweights prevent the engine from accelerating rapidly.

The V8 engine is generally too long and wide to be used in the efficient transverse engine front-wheel drive layout, so with a few exceptions is limited to front-engine design, rear-wheel drive cars and light trucks. Heavy trucks more commonly use the straight-6 configuration since it is simpler and easier to maintain, and truckers prefer a slow-turning engine with fewer but bigger components. Aircraft have seldom used the V8 engine since the heavy crankshaft weights are a liability, and modern light planes commonly use the flat-8 configuration instead since it is lighter and easier to air-cooled engine.

Historically, the V8 was very popular in passenger vehicles in the United States, especially prior to the 1973 oil crisis but its popularity has been inversely proportional to gasoline prices, and especially after the oil price increases of 2004-2006, the V6 engine has become more common. In many cases, V6s were derived from V8 designs by removing two cylinders without changing the V-angle, as a result of which they can be built on the same assembly lines as the V8, and with modern computer-aided design they can be made almost as smooth. In modern times, V8s are generally limited to more powerful rear-wheel drive sports cars, luxury cars, pickup trucks, and SUVs.

Overview The V8 is a very common configuration for large automobile engines. V8 engines are rarely less than 3 L in displacement and in automobile use have gone up to and beyond 9 liters.

The V8 is a common engine configuration in the highest echelons of motorsport, especially in the USA where it is required in Indy Racing League, ChampCar and NASCAR. Formula One began the 2006 season using Naturally aspirated engine 2.4L V8 engines, which replaced the 3.0L V10 engine in a move to reduce power.

Pioneers of the V8

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 engine and V10 engine 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 engine used in the Ford Taurus SHO. It was based on Ford Motor Company's Ford Duratec engine#Duratec 25 and shares that engine's 60° vee angle. A version of this engine is used by Volvo Cars as of 2005. In years past, GM-EMD produced an 8 cylinder version of their model 567 Diesel locomotive engine, which has a 45 degree cylinder angle.

Cross-plane and flat-plane There are two classic types of V8s which differ by crankshaft:

In 1992, Audi left the German Deutsche Tourenwagen Meisterschaft 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 (automobile), 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 "Cadillac V8 engine" V8 in 1923, with the "Equipoised Eight" from Peerless appearing in November of 1924.

More information is available here.

American V8 engines The United States can be considered the "home of the V8" — 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 engine, the similar Dodge Chrysler LA engine#Ram Tough V10, and the Ford Triton V10 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 Limited Legalimit, Cadillac (automobile) produced the first American V8 engine, 1914's Cadillac V8 engine. 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. Chevrolet produced a crude overhead valve V8 in 1917, in which the valve gear was completely exposed. It only lasted through 1918 and then disappeared. They would not produce another V8 until the introduction of the famous Chevrolet Small-Block engine in 1955.

Cadillac and Peerless were one year apart again (1923 and 1924, respectively) with the introduction of the cross-plane crankshaft. Lincoln (automobile) also had V8 cars in those years, as did Ferro (car company), Northway (supplier to Cadillac, Cole (car company) {Indianapolis}, and Jackson {Jackson, MI}), Perkins (Detroit), Murray, Vernon, and Yale.Georgano, G.N. Cars: Early and Vintage, 1886-1930. (London: Grange-Universal, 1985).

Ford was the first company to use V8s en masse. Instead of going to an straight-6 like its competitors when something larger than an straight-4 was needed, Ford designed a modern V8, the famous Ford Flathead engine 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, the strong demand for larger status-symbol cars made the common straight-6 less marketable. A straight-8 engine would introduce problems with crankshaft whip and require a longer engine bay. In the new wider body styles, a V8 would fit in the same space as a straight-6. Manufacturers could simplify production and offer the bigger engines as optional upgrades to base models.

In 1949 General Motors Corporation responded to Ford's V8 success by introducing the Oldsmobile V8 engine and Cadillac V8 engine#OHV. Chrysler Corporation introduced their Chrysler FirePower engine 331 cubic inch hemi-head V8 in 1951. Sales were beyond all expectations, so Buick followed in 1953, and Chevrolet and Pontiac introduced V8s of their own in 1955.

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 smaller models of car were introduced and became more popular, with the result, by the 1960s, Chrysler, Ford, and Chevrolet had two V8 model ranges.

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) Cadillac V8 engine#500. Once the 1970s oil crisis and pollution regulations hit, big-block V8s did not 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 or more efficient Diesels.

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) Ford 335 engine#400. 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 Corporation 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 V8 engine#215 and familiar Chevrolet Small-Block engine, 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 fewer 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 (370 in³) and 6.4L (392 in³) Hemis, and the LS7 (7.0L/427in³) version of General Motors' LS engines.

Today, the major use for big V8s is in racing, where aluminum copies of the venerable Chrysler 426 still dominate professional drag racing (Top Fuel and Pro Stock), while "stock" V8s are the standard in NASCAR.

American V8s (by mfg. & date)

British V8 engines The first British V8 was the 3.5 L Rolls-Royce V-8 (1905), predating the first American (Cadillac) V8 by a full decade.

The Rolls-Royce (car) and Bentley V8 still used in modern Bentleys was designed from 1952 and entered production in 1959 in the Rolls Royce Silver Cloud and Bentley S2. Following then current design practice it featured overhead valves (Overhead valve), a central camshaft and wedge-shaped combustion chambers. Sometime rumoured to be a US-license built (possibly a confusion with the 4-speed automatic gearbox), it is indeed an original British design by the Rolls-Royce and Bentley Motors engineering team led by Jack Phillips. This is obvious in advanced design-features like aluminium block with wet liners, gear-driven camshaft, (initially) outboard spark-plugs or porting inspired by the Rolls-Royce Merlin aircraft engine. Early version were 6.25 liters of displacement, growing to 6.75 liters in the 1970s. Turbocharging in various Bentley models beginning in the 1980s led the resurgence of Bentley Motors and increased power in several steps to currently 500 bhp and 1000 Nm in the 2007 model-year Bentley Arnage while meeting all emission standards. The Bentley V8 has thus increased power and torque by more than 150% in its life.It is the highest torque V8 used in a production car.

The most common British V8 is the Rover V8 engine, 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 Corporation' Oldsmobile/Buick cast-aluminum Buick V8 engine#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 (car) 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 Motor Company, TVR, Triumph Motor Company, Marcos (automobile), and MG (car), 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.

Recently Land Rover company (ford) have added the TDV8 to the list of engines. it is a V8 version of the popular TDV6 found in discoveries. This diesel engine will be found in 07 Range Rovers the point of interest in this engine is the amount of torque produced by this 3.6L engine, it manages at a mere 2000 rpm.

Triumph Motor Company 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 2.5 & 4.5 litre 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 250" (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.

French V8 engines The 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 Citroën Traction Avant, and Simca. Peugeot's upcoming 608 and its Citroën C6 stablemate may have a new HDi 3.6 and 4.4 V8 as well as a possible petrol 4.0-5.0 V8.

Czech V8 engines Tatra (car) used air-cooled V8 engines. These culminated in the 2.5 litre unit used in the Tatra T603 range of cars. The most powerful of these was fitted to the racing variant - known as the B-5. This was a higher compression version of the standard engine which replaced a standard single 2BBL carburettor with two 4BBL downdraft units on a new induction manifold.
Later, Tatra produced another air cooled engine, used in Tatra 613 and later, in Tatra 700. These engines were well known for their reliability, good fuel consumption, and specific sound.
In the Tatra 603, two engine driven fans help pull cooling air into the engine bay - when the vehicle is in motion the air enters through intakes in the rear wing panels and is exhausted through cut-outs below the bumper and alongside the engine itself. In the Tatra 613, one large ventilator pushes fresh cold air into the engine bay.
The later variants of the T613 & T700 and indeed the T603 are unusual in having a petrol powered heating system taking its supply from the main tank. In the latter cars the system is programmable in a similar way to systems found for house heating. Additionally the T700 especially was available in high-spec models with unusual options present in almost no other passenger car.
The T700 was available in the UK for a short while, and would have sold well but for the all too common problem of no-one knowing the car was available (a similar story with the Renault Safrane cost sales in the UK).Tatra has used air cooled engines in their heavy duty trucks until the present day.


T77 - 2.97 Litre Air-Cooled V8
T77a - 3.4 Litre Air-Cooled V8 - 75 hp
T87 - 2.97 Litre Air-Cooled V8 - 75 hp
T607 Monopost - 2.35 Litre V8 - 161 hp (later 181 hp in 607-2)
T603 - 2.5 Litre Air Cooled V8 - 95 hp
T603B5 - 2.5 Litre Air Cooled V8 - 143 hp
T613 - 3.5 Litre Air Cooled V8 - 168 hp
T613i- 3.5 Litre Air Cooled V8 - 200 hp
T700 - 3.5 Litre Air Cooled V8 - 200 hp (234 hp in 4.36i)


German V8 engines German V8s (by mfg. & date)









Italian V8 engines Alfa Romeo The Alfa Romeo Montreal was powered by a 2,593 cc 90-degree quad-cam 16-valve V8 derived from the Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 race car. There were also eighteen Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale cars built with a detuned 2 liter 260 hp Tipo 33/2 flat-crank engine. The Montreal cross-crank engine was also used in a very limited production run of 22 Alfa Romeo Alfetta GTV2.6i. The Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione sports car has a Maserati-built 4,691 cc 450 bhp cross-crank V8. A similar engine is likely to be used in the upcoming Alfa Romeo 169 and Alfa Romeo 159 GTA.

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 Ferrari Dino#268 SP. The first V8-powered Ferrari road car was 1974's Ferrari GT4#308 GT4, with the familiar Ferrari 308 GTB following closely behind. The company continued to use this Ferrari Dino engine#V8 V8 engine ever since with the Ferrari 328, Ferrari 348, and successors. Ferrari's smallest V8 (and indeed, list of automotive superlatives) was the 2.0 L (1990 cc) unit found in the 1975 Ferrari GT4#208 GT4. The company produced a slightly-larger 2.0 L V8 in the Ferrari 308 GTB#208 GTB of the 1980s. Five-valve versions of Ferrari's 3.5 L and 3.6 L V8s were found in the Ferrari F355 and Ferrari 360. The old Dino V8 was retired for 2005 with the introduction of a shared Ferrari/Maserati V8 4.3 L in the Ferrari F430.

Fiat The only Fiat to have a V8 was the Fiat 8V. The engine was a very compact Overhead valve 1996 cc (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 Lamborghini Urraco and Lamborghini 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 Maserati Quattroporte, Maserate Coupe, and Maserati Spyder, is a new design shared with Ferrari.

Japanese V8 engines Japanese manufacturers are traditionally not known for V8 engines in their roadcars, however they have built a few V8 engines to meet the needs of consumers, as well as for their own racing programs.

Nissan Nissan built its first V8, the Nissan Y engine#Y40 in 1965 for its Nissan President. The Y engine has been succeeded by two families of V8, the Nissan VH engine series during the '80s and '90s and the new Nissan VK engine series.



Honda Honda, despite being known as an engine company, have never built a V8 for their roadcars. However, they have built V8s for racing, most notably for Formula One. Honda is also the sole engine builder for Indy Racing. The Honda Indy V-8 has a 10,300 rpm redline. Also, their affiliate Mugen Motorsports has also built racing V8s that have eventually found their way into limited production road cars as well as concept cars. Their Mugen Motorsports#MF408S engine technical specifications: engine, which powers cars in the ALMS is also found in a few limited production road cars such as the Mooncraft Shiden, it is more known however for being the engine in the Honda Legend based Mugen Max concept.

Toyota Toyota's first V8 engine family was the Toyota V engine series used in the prestigious Toyota Century ultra luxury car. This engine, unique from other Toyota engines in that it had a hemisperical combustion chamber, remained in use in the Century until it was replaced by a V12 in 1997. Other Toyota V8 families are the Toyota UZ engine engines and the new Toyota UR engine engines.



Yamaha While better known as a manufacturer of bikes, Yamaha Motor Company also makes engines under contract from auto-manufacturers. They currently produce a V8 engine in conjunction with Volvo Cars for vehicles such as the Volvo XC90 and the Volvo S80.

Swedish V8 engines The most well-known Swedish V8 engine is probably the Scania 14 litre diesel, which was released in 1969 for use in the 140 model heavy trucks. At this point, the 350 hp turbo-charged engine was the most powerful diesel in Europe.

Volvo's 1950's concept car Philip also had a gasoline V8 engine. The car never went into production, but the engine evolved into a 120 hp 3,6 litre V8 (in many aspects a "double B18" engine) for use in the light trucks Snabbe and Trygge from the late 1950s on.

Supercar manufacturer Koenigsegg has developed a 4.7 litre twin-supercharged V8 based on the Ford Modular engine. This engine is unique in that it is a flexible fuel engine and actually produces more power while running on biofuel than on regular unleaded.

Russian V8 engines 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 V8 engines Spain 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 Horsepower (270 kW).

Australian V8 engines Holden, including its performance vehicle operations being: Holden Dealer Team and Holden Special Vehicles have been manufacturing V8 performance vehicles since the late 1960s, as has Ford Motor Company Australia. The performance arm of Ford Australia, Ford Performance Vehicles (FPV), have recently resurged in the market with the new Ford Falcon (Australia) BA and BF based models.

The Australian V8 is typically an American manufactured block from either Ford Motor Company, Chrysler Group or General Motors Corporation 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). First introduced in 1969, finally ceasing production in 1999, it powered a variety of Holden vehicles including the Holden Kingswood, Holden Monaro, Holden Torana and Holden Commodore, and proved to be a popular and successful powerplant in Australian motorsport (especially Touring car racing).

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.

V8s in aviation

V8s in motorcycles Moto Guzzi built a 148 kg 82 bhp water cooled DOHC V8 4-stroke motorcycle for Grand Prix racing between 1955 and 1957, referred to as the Moto Guzzi Grand Prix 500 cc V8. Morbidelli produced an 848 cc V8 in 1998.

V8s in motorsport Up until recently, Formula 1 cars used 3-litre V10 engines. However, the FIA thought speeds were getting too high to be safe (even with the banning of turbochargers in 1989, which allowed engines to develop 1500 bhp, 1000 bhp from a naturally-aspirated engine was not impossible by 2005, and with better aerodynamics, cars were shattering straight-line speed records.) So, the permitted engine size was cut to 2.4-litre V8 (This reduced average power output of the engines from 900 bhp, or about 680 kW, in the 2005 season, to a 2006 season average of 700 bhp / 550 kW - equivalent to power outputs that were being achieved on 3 litres around the 1999/2000 seasons.)

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V8 Engine



 
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