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W16 engine
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A W16 engine is a sixteen-cylinder piston engine with four banks of four cylinders in a W configuration.
W16 engines are rarely produced, with the notable exception of the Volkswagen Group 8.0 WR16 engine, which has been used since 2005 in the Bugatti Veyron, Bugatti Chiron and their related models.
Volkswagen Group
[edit]The W16 engine that Volkswagen Group uses in its Bugatti Veyron and Chiron has a displacement of 8.0 L (488 cu in) and four turbochargers. It is effectively two narrow-angle VR8 engines (based on the VR6 design) mated at an included angle of 90 degrees on a common crankshaft.[1]
The most powerful version of this engine, installed in the Bugatti Bolide,[2] generates 1,361 kW (1,825 hp; 1,850 PS) at 7,000 rpm.[3][4]
At the 1999 Geneva Auto Salon, Bentley presented Hunaudières, a concept two-seated mid-engined car with an 8-litre W16 engine. The engine was the basis for the Bugatti Veyron.[5]
Another concept car from Volkswagen Group to have the W16 engine is the Audi Rosemeyer, introduced in 2000 and shown at various auto salons. The engine fitted to Rosemeyer is the only W16 variation to have five valves per cylinder.
Other manufacturers
[edit]
In 1916, a rotary valve W16 engine was built in France by Gaston Mougeotte.[6]
The Jimenez Novia, a one-off sports car built in 1995, used a W16 engine with two crankshafts.[2] Built by combining four Yamaha FZR1000 inline-four motorcycle engines, the engine has a displacement of 4.0 L (244 cu in), eight camshafts and five valves per cylinder, and produces 560 bhp (418 kW; 568 PS).[2][7]
References
[edit]- ^ "Photograph of the Bugatti W16 cylinder block" (jpg image). www.typepad.com. Retrieved 30 December 2009.
- ^ a b c D., Nick (24 February 2016). "1995 Jimenez Novia Concept". Supercars Net. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
- ^ "1825-HP Bolide Concept is Bugatti's Biggest Flex Yet". 8 December 2020.
- ^ "Bugatti Bolide Revealed with 1,825 HP and 311+ MPH Top Speed".
- ^ D., Nick. "1999 Bentley Hunaudieres Concept". Supercars Net. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
- ^ "Gaston Mougeotte engine W16 from 1916". All Andorra. 11 June 2017.
- ^ Dizono (25 April 2017). "Deze supercar met W16 en 80 kleppen ken je nog niet". Autoblog NL (in Dutch).
W16 engine
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Definition and configuration
A W16 engine is a sixteen-cylinder piston engine featuring four banks of four cylinders each, arranged in a W configuration that effectively combines two narrow-angle V8 units sharing a common crankshaft.[3] This layout positions the cylinders in four parallel rows, with two outer banks and two inner banks staggered to form the distinctive W shape when viewed from the end, enabling a narrower overall profile than traditional multi-cylinder designs.[4] The configuration allows for compact packaging of a high number of cylinders, reducing the engine's length and height compared to flat or opposed-piston layouts that would require greater width or separation for similar displacement.[4] The only production W16 engine is the Bugatti's 8.0-liter quad-turbocharged unit, while non-production examples exist in concept and experimental vehicles. In operation, the W16 follows the standard four-stroke cycle common to most piston engines: intake, compression, power, and exhaust strokes. Each piston reciprocates within its cylinder, connected via connecting rods to the shared crankshaft, which converts the linear motion into rotational torque across all sixteen cylinders firing in sequence. Valve timing in this arrangement typically employs dual overhead camshafts per bank to precisely control the opening and closing of intake and exhaust valves, ensuring efficient gas exchange despite the complex geometry of the staggered banks.[5] Visually, the W16 differs from a V16, which uses two broad banks of eight cylinders each at a wide angle, or an H16, which arranges two flat-eight engines in an opposed horizontal setup; instead, the W16's four closely spaced banks create a compact, zigzag profile resembling the letter "W," with the inner banks nestled between the outer ones for optimized space.[3] The W16 represents an extension of the broader W engine family, which includes configurations like the W8 and W12 as conceptual precursors using similar multi-bank principles.[4]Comparison to other multi-cylinder layouts
The W16 engine offers significant packaging advantages over other high-cylinder-count layouts, particularly in its narrower and shorter profile compared to a V16, which features two long banks of eight cylinders that result in greater overall length and width. This compact W configuration, formed by four banks of four cylinders arranged in a narrow-angle W shape sharing a single crankshaft, allows the W16 to achieve dimensions similar in length to a conventional V8 while providing the displacement of 16 cylinders, facilitating superior integration into low-slung hypercar chassis where space is at a premium.[6][7][8] In terms of balance and vibration, the W16's design provides inherent smoothness through its opposed bank arrangement, which helps cancel primary and secondary forces more effectively than an inline-16—whose extreme length would amplify torsional vibrations—or a flat-16, whose wide boxer layout increases lateral forces despite good opposition. While not perfectly self-balanced like a V12, the W16's 90-degree bank separation minimizes secondary imbalances, resulting in lower vibration levels suitable for high-revving applications without extensive counterbalance shafts.[6][9] The W16 introduces greater complexity than simpler V8 or V12 layouts, with a higher parts count—including four cylinder heads, multiple camshafts, and intricate valvetrain—leading to elevated manufacturing challenges and costs, though this is offset by superior power density from its efficient space utilization and larger total displacement. Compared to a V8, the W16's added cylinders enable higher specific output per liter, but the design demands precision engineering to manage thermal and structural stresses.[10][11] Despite these benefits, the W16 incurs drawbacks in fuel consumption and emissions relative to fewer-cylinder turbocharged engines like modern V8s, due to its larger displacement and weight, which increase pumping losses and thermal inefficiency; additionally, its broader frontal area in some installations can elevate aerodynamic drag, while the overall mass penalty hampers agility compared to lighter V12 alternatives.[10][9]| Engine Layout | Cylinders | Typical Length (mm) | Typical Width (mm) | Typical Height (mm) | Typical Dry Weight (kg) | Typical Power-to-Weight (hp/kg, engine) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| W16 | 16 | ~710 | ~889 | ~730 | 400 | ~3.8 |
| V16 | 16 | ~1200 | ~900 | ~700 | ~450 | ~2.2 |
| W12 | 12 | 513 | 710 | 715 | 245 | ~2.0 |
| V12 | 12 | 1108 | 1010 | 700 | 308 | ~1.6 |
