V5 engine explained

A V5 engine is a five-cylinder piston engine where the cylinders share a common crankshaft and are arranged in a V configuration.

Even by contrast to the fairly rare straight-five engine, V5 engine designs are very uncommon. The first production V5 was the 1997–2007 Volkswagen Group VR5 engine. It is arguably not a true V5 engine, as all the cylinders share a single cylinder head. However, Honda produced a true V5 motorcycle racing engine, used in the RC211V.

Automobiles

General Motors

In the early 1980s, Oldsmobile developed a prototype 2.50NaN0 V5 diesel engine, however it never reached production stages and the project was subsequently abandoned.[1] The engine is based on the Oldsmobile V6 diesel engine with the fuel injection pump in the location of the "missing" sixth cylinder.[2] A prototype engine is on display at the RE Olds Museum in Lansing, Michigan.

Volkswagen Group

See main article: VR5 engine. The only V5 automobile engine to reach production was the 2.30NaN0 "VR5" engine manufactured by Volkswagen from 1997 to 2006. Based on Volkswagen's VR6 engine, the VR5 was a narrow-angle engine with staggered cylinders (three cylinders on one bank and two on the other) sharing a single cylinder head.[3] As per the VR6 engine, the angle between the banks was 15 degrees. Initial versions used 2 valves per cylinder, however, an update in 2000 resulted in a total of 4 valves per cylinder and the addition of variable valve timing.

Motorcycles

Honda

The Honda RC211V, a MotoGP racing motorcycle which competed in the 2002–2006 seasons, used a V5 engine.[4] The transversely-mounted 9900NaN0 engine had three cylinders at the front, two cylinders at the rear and a V-angle of 75.5 degrees. The engine used 4 valves per cylinder.

BSA

In the last days of the BSA motorcycle manufacturer, the factory design team produced plans for a modular range of four engines, all using a 200cc cylinder. (It was planned to increase the cylinder capacity to up to 250cc in due course). The range, which never went further than the drawing board, comprised:

(The company avoided the perhaps obvious 800cc straight-four option, to avoid direct competition with the major Japanese factories that already dominated the market with such machines).[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: CC Weird Engines Outtake: Oldsmobile V5 Diesel–Grasping at Straws . January 20, 2015 . www.curbsideclassic.com . 17 June 2018.
  2. Web site: Oldsmobile 2.5 Litre V5 Diesel . www.a350diesel.tripod.com . 13 December 2019.
  3. Web site: Volkswagen Self-Study Programme . The 2.3-ltr. V5 Engine – Design and Function . www.volkspage.net . https://web.archive.org/web/20180508130242/http://www.volkspage.net/technik/ssp/ssp/SSP_195.pdf . 8 May 2018 . dead.
  4. Web site: Exclusive – We Ride Honda's RC211V GP bike . February 24, 2009 . www.motorcyclistonline.com . 13 December 2019 . en.
  5. [Bike (magazine) |"Bike" magazine]