- V10 engine
A V10 engine is a
V engine with 10 cylinders in two banks of five.Mechanicals
The V10 configuration is not an inherently balanced design like a straight-6 or V12. It can be balanced with crankshaft counterweights as an odd firing 90 degree V engine (BMW M5, Dodge Viper). It can be balanced with a balance shaft as an even firing 72 degree engine, or with a split crankshaft journal 90 degree V angle (Lamborghini Gallardo, Ford 6.8 V10).
Road cars
Until recently V10s had rarely been a popular configuration for road cars: a
V12 is only slightly more complicated and runs more smoothly and aV8 is less complex and more economical. Nevertheless, modern engineering has made it possible to use V-10 engines for applications where a V-8 would produce insufficient power and a V-12 would be too complicated or bulky.Dodge was the first to develop a modern V-10 engine, originally designing a version of its LA series small block for use in trucks. However, the engine saw its first production use in substantially revised form in theDodge Viper . The original truck version of the engine was eventually used starting in 1994 in theDodge Ram . It discontinued in that application after 2003. However, 2003 also saw the introduction of the Ram SRT-10, a performance model meant to rival Ford's successful F-150 SVT Lightning. The Viper engine (a 90-degree engine with odd firing order to obviate the need for a balance shaft) has been tweaked through the years, and now produces 600 horsepower (447 kW) in a standard state of tune from its 8.4 liter displacement. The engine is also used by Bristol, in tuned form, in their two-seat Fighter coupe, where it can produce upward of 630 horsepower (470 kW).Ford also developed a heavy-duty V-10 version of their Triton engine to replace the aging 460 big block in truck applications. It was introduced in the E-Series/Econoline full-size
van , and also saw duty in the F-Series Super Duty line and theFord Excursion SUV, and is still in production in 2008.European marques were slower to adopt the V-10 configuration. However, high-revving V-10 powerplants were incorporated into supercars from
Lamborghini andPorsche .BMW andAudi later unveiled ten-cylinder versions of their mid-range sedans (the 5-Series and A6 families, respectively). Interestingly, Volkswagen developed a ten-cylinder engine as well, but as aturbodiesel .A list of post-war V-10-engined production cars (sorted alphabetically by manufacturer, sub-sorted by year of introduction):
*Audi S6
*Audi RS6
*Audi S8
*BMW M5
*BMW M6
* Bristol Fighter
*Connaught Type-D (entering production in2007 )
* Dodge Viper SRT-10 (the first modern V-10-engined car)
* Dodge Ram 2500/3500 Heavy Duty (pickup trucks)
* Dodge Ram SRT-10 (pickup truck)
* Ford E-350 (full-size van)
* Ford F-250/F-350 Super Duty (pickup trucks)
*Ford Excursion (sport-utility vehicle)
*Lamborghini Gallardo
*Porsche Carrera GT
*Volkswagen Touareg (aturbodiesel )
*Volkswagen Phaeton (a turbodiesel)Racing
The most widespread use of the V10 has been in
Formula 1 racing. Alfa Romeo made the first modern [ [http://www.racecar-engineering.com/allarticles/273555/inside-an-f1-engine.html] Formula One V10] in 1986; although it was never used in Formula One car.Cite web|url=http://velocetoday.com/cars/cars_134.php|title=164 Pro-Car|accessdate=2007-12-28|work=velocetoday.com] Later the configuration was introduced by Honda and Renault before the 1989 season. The introduction of the 3 litre rule made the V10 seem the best compromise between the V8 and the V12. Renault had a more flat 110° angle motor in 2002 and 2003, but reverted to a more conventional layout (a 72° angle) following the change in rules which dictated that an engine must last two race weekends. In a further change to the rules, V10s were banned for the 2006 season in favour of 2.4 litre V8s.There are also cars with V10 engines in
sports car racing , usually with Judd powerplants with 4 or 5 litre engines, made available for customers, although the first V10 was seen in the worksPeugeot 905 , in the final races of the 1990World Sportscar Championship .Notes
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