V5 engine
A V5 engine is a five-cylinder piston engine where the cylinders share a common crankshaft and are arranged in a V configuration.
V5 engine designs are very uncommon, with the first production version of one being the 1997–2006 Volkswagen Group VR5 engine. The others are the award winning Audi Twin Turbo Coupe and Roadster Mark 1 two seated sports Car a 1800cc Petrol engine and the Alfa Romeo standard engines in the Brera , Giullietta and 156 the larger engine is the common V6 or C6. (the abbreviation of the word cylinder of an Engine is C e.g. C5 not V5 which means the number of the Valves fuel injectors air injectors , electricity injectors etc (per each of the five cylinders))
Automobiles
General Motors
In the early 1980s, Oldsmobile developed a prototype 2.5 L (153 cu in) V5 diesel engine, however it never reached production stages and the project was subsequently abandoned.[1] The engine is based on the Oldsmobile V6 diesel engine with the fuel injection pump in the location of the "missing" sixth cylinder.[2] A prototype engine is on display at the RE Olds Museum in Lansing, Michigan.
Volkswagen Group
The only V5 automobile engine to reach production was the 2.3 L (140 cu in) "VR5" engine manufactured by Volkswagen from 1997 to 2006. Based on Volkswagen's VR6 engine, the VR5 was a narrow-angle engine with staggered cylinders (three cylinders on one bank and two on the other) sharing a single cylinder head.[3] As per the VR6 engine, the angle between the banks was 15 degrees. Initial versions used 2 valves per cylinder, however, an update in 2000 resulted in a total of 4 valves per cylinder and the addition of variable valve timing.
Motorcycles
Honda
The Honda RC211V, a MotoGP racing motorcycle which competed in the 2002–2006 seasons, used a V5 engine.[4] The transversely-mounted 990 cc (60 cu in) engine had three cylinders at the front, two cylinders at the rear and a V-angle of 75.5 degrees. The engine used 4 valves per cylinder.
See also
References
- "CC Weird Engines Outtake: Oldsmobile V5 Diesel–Grasping at Straws". www.curbsideclassic.com. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
- "Oldsmobile 2.5 Litre V5 Diesel". www.a350diesel.tripod.com. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
- Volkswagen Self-Study Programme. "The 2.3-ltr. V5 Engine – Design and Function" (PDF). www.volkspage.net. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 May 2018.
- "Exclusive – We Ride Honda's RC211V GP bike". www.motorcyclistonline.com. Retrieved 13 December 2019.