Cadillac V16 engine explained

The Cadillac V16 engine is a term that applies to two different Cadillac-designed V-16 automobile engines, an overhead valve 45-degree 452CID model produced between 1930 and 1937, and a 135-degree side valve 4311NaN1 between 1938 and 1940. Both were used in its most luxurious model line, the Cadillac V-16.

Cadillac produced two of only four production gasoline-fueled V16 engines in history. The company has twice since attempted to build a new V16 engine, once in the 1980s and again in 2003 (the Cadillac Sixteen), neither making it into production.

Series 452

Cadillac Series 452
Manufacturer:Cadillac
Production:-
Successor:Cadillac Series 90
Configuration:45° V16 with 5-bearing crankshaft
Displacement:452cuin
Bore:3inches
Stroke:4inches
Valvetrain:OHV
Compression:5.3:1
Fuelsystem:2 single barrel carburetors
Fueltype:gasoline
Oilsystem:wet sump
Coolingsystem:water cooled
Power:165hp between 3200 and 3400 rpm (1930)
Specpower:22.3 bhp/liter[1]
Torque:271lb.ft[2]

With its chief competitor, Packard, already having sold a V12 engine against Cadillac's eight-cylinder cars, work began late in the 1920s under Hemmings to produce a car of real impact. Lawrence Fisher, Cadillac General Manager, leaked to the press that the company would also build a V12, hoping to keep the real engine secret.[3]

The original Cadillac V16 could be said to be two overhead valve Buick Straight-8 engine engines on a common crankshaft and crankcase, because each bank operated entirely independently of the other with no other shared components. It sported a narrow 45° bank angle for use in the new Cadillac chassis Cadillac Series 90 V-16 (which became the Fleetwood).[4] The engine was well engineered, with a counterweighted crankshaft (quite a mathematical challenge at the time), overhead valves,[5] and hydraulic tappets. It also had only two single barrel updraft Stromberg carburetors,[6] one for each bank.

The V16 had a 3inches bore and a 4inches stroke, giving an engine displacement of 4521NaN1 and occasional reference as the Series 452 engine. Cadillac initially rated the engine at 165bhp. It was capable of propelling the heavier models to speeds in excess of 80mph, and 100mph for some of the lighter.

In all, 3878 Series 452s were built.

This engine was used in the various V-16 models:

Series 90

Cadillac Series 90
Manufacturer:Cadillac
Production:-
Predecessor:Cadillac Series 452
Configuration:135° V16 with 9-bearing crankshaft
Displacement:431cuin
Bore:NaNsigfig=3NaNsigfig=3
Stroke:NaNsigfig=3NaNsigfig=3
Block:iron
Head:iron
Valvetrain:Side valve
Fuelsystem:2 single barrel carburetors
Fueltype:gasoline
Oilsystem:wet sump
Coolingsystem:water cooled
Power:185bhp

The second generation of V16 was known as the Series 90, as was the 1938-1940 Series 90 cars that used them. A sidevalve design, it used an unusually wide vee-angle of 135°, giving a wide but much lower engine to suit the ever-lowering automobile styling. The two carburetors, one on each bank, and air cleaners were mounted on top of the engine block. Bore and stroke were "square", both being NaNsigfig=3NaNsigfig=3, giving an overall displacement of 431CID. Power was rated at 185bhp, 20 more than the series 468 engine.

The "series 431" 1938-40 Cadillac V16 was one of the last new American auto engine designs prior to World War Two. As such, it incorporated some of the latest thinking. Nine main bearings provided a crankshaft main bearing support between each 135 degree opposing pair of cylinders. The square bore and stroke lowered piston speed and promoted crankshaft rigidity, no small matter for an engine with eight cylinders in line per cylinder bank. The side valve engine design was no handicap for the time because the era's typical top engine speed of 3400-3700 rpm provided little opportunity to exploit the high speed breathing efficiency of the more advanced overhead valve design. Hydraulic valve lifters promoted silent running and an absence of periodic adjustment. Unlike most cars of the era, an external oil filter safeguarded the precision valve lifters. Despite the use of side valves, the engine produced as much power as the prior 45 degree V16, and with much less complexity. The earliest engines produced featured an innovative friction wheel drive to the generator. This was soon replaced by a conventional V belt drive. Cadillac claimed that the 1938, 1939, and 1940 Series 90 Sixteen had the best performance of any production car in the world at the time and would accelerate 10-60 in high gear only in 16 seconds. The definitive engineering report on the 135 degree Cadillac V16 engine is "The Evolution of the Cadillac Sixteen engine," by E.W. Seaholm, in charge of Cadillac engine design. It was published by the industry journal "Automotive Industries," November 27, 1937.

V12

Cadillac V12
Manufacturer:Cadillac
Production:-
Configuration:45° V12 with 4-bearing crankshaft
Displacement:368cuin
Bore:3.125sigfig=3NaNsigfig=3
Stroke:4sigfig=3NaNsigfig=3
Block:iron
Head:iron
Valvetrain:Overhead valve
Fuelsystem:2 single barrel carburetors
Fueltype:gasoline
Oilsystem:wet sump
Coolingsystem:water cooled
Power:135bhp

Cadillac also built a Series 452 engine-derived V12 between 1930 and 1937. It was functionally the V-16, less four cylinders. It retained the V-16's 4inches stroke, but was bored out to 3.125inches, giving it a displacement of 368CID. Output was rated at 135hp with two carburetors. As with the V-16s, Cadillac V-12 cars were designed to make a statement, so all engine wiring and plumbing was hidden from view.

The V12 was used in the Fleetwood-bodied V-12 models:

Later developments

The Cadillac Sixteen concept debuted in 2003 utilized an all-aluminium pushrod V16 engine based on the same architecture as GM's then-current small-block V8 developments.[7] [8] A production version with a base V8 and the option of the V12 engine was planned, but was never approved for production and was ultimately shelved around 2008.[9]

References

  1. Book: Car — The definitive visual history of the automobile. 2011. 45. Dorling Kindersley. 978-0-7566-7167-9.
  2. Web site: Spicer Horsepower and Torque Calculator.
  3. Hemmings Classic Car. 17. December 2006. In the Halls of Power.
  4. Editors of Automobile Quarterly. General Motors: The First 75 Years. (New York: Crown Publishers, Inc, 1983), p.58.
  5. General Motors: The First 75 Years, p.58.
  6. Book: Rogliatti, Gianni. Cyril Posthumus. Cyril Posthumus. Period Cars. 1973. Hamlyn. Feltham, Middlesex, UK. 0-600-33401-5. 234–235.
  7. Web site: When You Want 16 Cylinders . AutoSpeed . 2011-10-27 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120403100843/http://autospeed.com/cms/title_When-You-Want-16-Cylinders/A_1783/article.html . 2012-04-03 . dead .
  8. Web site: Cadillac Sixteen Concept V-16 Engine . 2012-06-04.
  9. Web site: IL Insider: Cadillac Shelves the Twelve . Insideline.com . 2008-08-21 . 2011-10-27.

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