Renault 8G Explained

The Renault 8G was a family of French liquid-cooled V-8 aero engines of the World War I era that produced from 140hp to 190hp.

Design and development

Construction used separate cast iron blocks for each pair of cylinders, mounted on a light-alloy crankcase with an included vee angle of 50 degrees. Each bank had a single overhead camshaft, shaft-driven through bevel gears. It was equipped with a single dual-choke updraught Zenith carburettor, and twin spark ignition through four magnetos. The crankshaft was a flat plane with three bearings and four throws, each pair of cylinders sharing a master-slave connecting rod onto the same crankpin.

Variants

8G: 140hp
  • 8Ga: 150hp
  • 8Gb: 160hp
  • 8Gc: 175hp
  • 8Gd: 190hp
  • 8Gdy: 200hp
  • 8Ge: 200hp
  • Applications

    External links