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TVR Speed Eight engine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TVR Speed Eight Engine
Overview
ManufacturerTVR
Also calledAJP8, AJP V8
Production1996 – 2003
Layout
Configuration75° flat-plane V8[1]
Displacement4,185 cc (255 cu in)
4,475 cc (273 cu in)
Cylinder bore88 mm (3.5 in)
91 mm (3.6 in)
Piston stroke86 mm (3.4 in)
Cylinder block materialAluminium alloy
Cylinder head materialAluminium alloy
ValvetrainSOHC 2 valves x cyl.
Compression ratio10:1,10.75:1
Combustion
Fuel systemPort fuel injection
Fuel typePetrol
Cooling systemWater-cooled
Chronology
SuccessorTVR Speed Six engine

The TVR Speed Eight is a naturally-aspirated V8 car engine designed by Alwyn Melling of the design consultancy MCD, and manufactured for road legal cars production (TVR Cerbera introduced the 1993 at the London Motor Show), from 1996 to 2003. The engine was intended to power the TVR Griffith and the TVR Chimaera, but delays in its production meant that it powered only the TVR Cerbera and, from the 1990 year, as strong performance and reliability testing development up to production, the TVR Tuscan Challenge race car in 4.5 litres version. [2] It was first engine offered by TVR that was both designed and built in-house.[3] The reason behind the engine's development and production was that Rover, after previous announcements, was bought by BMW in 1994, and Peter Wheeler, the owner of TVR at the time, feared that BMW would drop the Rover V8 engine used in TVRs since the early 80's.[2] Wheeler contracted Al Melling to design a brand-new V8 engine to power the TVR Cerbera that TVR could also sell to other car manufacturers. TVR ceased manufacturing the design when the Cerbera was discontinued in 2003.

The engine was develped by Melling, John Ravenscroft and Peter Wheeler. Its production code-name was "AJP8" (A=Al, J=John, P=Peter); this naming convention was subsequently used for the Speed Six engine's "AJP6" code-name. The Speed Eight featured many aspects found in a racing engine, such as a flat plane crankshaft, a 75-degree angle between the cylinder banks,[4] a SOHC arrangement operating two valves per cylinder, and sequential fuel injection.[citation needed]

Two versions of the Speed Eight engine were offered by TVR on the Cerbera Road car: one, displacing 4.2L and producing 360 bhp (270 kW; 360 PS), and the other displacing 4.5L and producing 420 bhp (310 kW; 430 PS).[4] A Red Rose conversion was made available that increased output to 440 bhp (330 kW; 450 PS) when using fuel with a minimum octane rating of 97 RON. The Red Rose upgrade included reshaped intake and exhaust ports, higher compression, and an ECU that can be switched between two sets of fueling and ignition maps (for 95 RON and 97 RON fuel, respectively).[5]

The Speed Eight engine had a high specific output for a normally aspirated engine at the time, with 83.3 bhp/L for the 4.2L,[2] 93.3 bhp/L for the 4.5L, and 97.7 bhp/L for the Red Rose-specification 4.5L engine. Another notable aspect is the weight of the engine, which is 121 kg (267 lb) dry.[6]

References

  1. ^ "The Official TVR Website". Archived from the original on 17 June 2000. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Wilcox, Adam (10 August 2022). "Its namesake guarded the underworld, but this TVR Cerbera is a ticket to paradise". Hagerty Media. Archived from the original on 26 November 2022. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  3. ^ King, Graham. "Why The Crazy TVR Cerbera Is A Proper 90s Hero Car". Car Throttle. Archived from the original on 26 November 2022. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  4. ^ a b Perkins, Chris (18 December 2018). "The TVR Cerbera Used a Truly Strange V8". Road and Track. US. Archived from the original on 25 November 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  5. ^ "TVR Car Club - TVR Cerbera Details". Archived from the original on 25 November 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  6. ^ Sena, Alvise Marco (1 March 2008). "TVR: The AJP8 engine". Archived from the original on 25 November 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
This page was last edited on 6 January 2024, at 18:19
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