Home > General (L405) > 15MY Engines |
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Philip Member Since: 05 Jan 2010 Location: UK Posts: 2564 |
Some sort of AdBlue injection system, as per everyone else. |
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8th Dec 2013 9:34pm |
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5.0 Member Since: 25 Feb 2012 Location: Surrey Posts: 716 |
Are you sure the 5.0 s/c doesn't meet the standards? If it doesn't that means a change across the entire JLR range this year which seems unlikely especially as the Ftype has just been launched with this engine. |
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9th Dec 2013 7:45am |
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Philip Member Since: 05 Jan 2010 Location: UK Posts: 2564 |
It's a problem for the diesels. |
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9th Dec 2013 11:01am |
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KurtVerbose Member Since: 08 Aug 2010 Location: Les Arses Posts: 5848 |
To be competitive they really need to push the output of the V8 diesel. Porsche/Audi/BMW are all in the 380bhp league. Given the current V8 makes it's 335 at only 3500rpm and has parallel turbocharging I'd have thought there's plenty of room to bump that.
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11th Dec 2013 10:47am |
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Philip Member Since: 05 Jan 2010 Location: UK Posts: 2564 |
Suspect it's far more to do with economy and emissions than just turning the boost up and fitting a gearbox man enough. Germans clearly ahead in this respect. |
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11th Dec 2013 11:07am |
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KurtVerbose Member Since: 08 Aug 2010 Location: Les Arses Posts: 5848 |
I don't think 380bhp would require much, 550bhp clearly would. Drive ability would be the big issue, getting boost across the rev range.
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11th Dec 2013 12:18pm |
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Martin Site Admin Member Since: 24 Mar 2007 Location: Hook Norton Posts: 1665 |
bhp isn't the key, it's the torque |
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11th Dec 2013 12:26pm |
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Philip Member Since: 05 Jan 2010 Location: UK Posts: 2564 |
Low-down torque is what something heavy like a Range Rover needs for relaxed progress - the Cayenne S Diesel has 100 lb/ft more than the SDV8. |
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11th Dec 2013 12:33pm |
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KurtVerbose Member Since: 08 Aug 2010 Location: Les Arses Posts: 5848 |
Diesels will always produce a lot of torque, and actually that can be the problem. If you try and get power just with high boost you get a big slug of torque that starts late and dies early which isn't very driveable - that is the nature of turbochargers because they're aerodynamic devices rather than positive displacement. You also get problems with too much compression because you can't lower the geometric compression ratio or the engine won't start.
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11th Dec 2013 1:57pm |
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Philip Member Since: 05 Jan 2010 Location: UK Posts: 2564 |
Pretty much every diesel has a pegged torque line rather than a torque curve nowadays.
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11th Dec 2013 2:26pm |
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KurtVerbose Member Since: 08 Aug 2010 Location: Les Arses Posts: 5848 |
Yes, they peg the torque curve because otherwise you'd get a huge hump.
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11th Dec 2013 4:28pm |
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Philip Member Since: 05 Jan 2010 Location: UK Posts: 2564 |
Certainly not arguing, but the BMW does work like that - it's a Borg Warner system called Regulated Three-Stage Turbocharging. Each turbo comes into play successively as the engine speed increases - first a small high-pressure VNT one, then a larger lower-pressure non-VNT one and then the other small high-pressure VNT turbo joins in. There's a BMW video of how it works somewhere.
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11th Dec 2013 5:13pm |
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neo Member Since: 23 Aug 2009 Location: Trapped in the Matrix Posts: 87 |
From what I understand from a reliable source, the T/SDV8 will go soon, no direct replacement as such.
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3rd Jan 2014 2:26pm |
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5.0 Member Since: 25 Feb 2012 Location: Surrey Posts: 716 |
It does seem plausible that the 4.4 may bite the dust in favour of a developed V6 diesel and V6 diesel hybrid in order to meet Euro 6. |
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3rd Jan 2014 3:07pm |
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