Engine Expo Best Engine of the Year
#1
Engine Expo Best Engine of the Year
BMW’s V10 named best engine for second year
BMW’s 5.0-liter V10 engine was crowned the “International Engine of the Year” at the Engine Expo in Stuttgart, Germany for the second year in a row. The engine is used in both the BMW M5 and M6, offering an impressive 500 horsepower. In total, BMW walked away with five awards, with honors going to the Z4 M’s 3.2 liter inline-six engine (from the BMW M3) and the automaker’s turbodiesel 3.0-liter.
International Engine of the Year:
BMW 5.0-liter V10 (BMW M5/M6)
Best New Engine:
Volkswagen 1.4-liter TSI Twincharger (Volkswagen Golf)
Best Fuel Economy:
Toyota 1.5-liter Hybrid (Toyota Prius)
Best Performance Engine:
BMW V10 (BMW M5/M6)
Sub 1.0-liter:
Honda 1-liter IMA (Honda Insight)
1-liter to 1.4-liter:
Volkswagen 1.4-liter TSI (Volkswagen Golf)
1.4-liter to 1.8-liter:
Toyota 1.5-liter Hybrid (Toyota Prius)
1.8-liter to 2.0-liter:
Volkswagen 2.0-liter Turbo (Volkswagen Golf, Audi A3, Audi A6)
2-liter to 2.5-liter:
Subaru 2.5-liter Turbo (Subaru Impreza, Subaru Forester, Saab 9-2X)
2.5-liter to 3.0-liter:
BMW 3.0-liter Twinturbo Diesel (BMW 535d)
3.0-liter to 4.0-liter:
BMW 3.2-liter (BMW M3, BMW Z4 M)
Best Over 4.0-liter:
BMW 5.0-liter V10 (BMW M5/M6)
source : leftlanenews
BMW’s 5.0-liter V10 engine was crowned the “International Engine of the Year” at the Engine Expo in Stuttgart, Germany for the second year in a row. The engine is used in both the BMW M5 and M6, offering an impressive 500 horsepower. In total, BMW walked away with five awards, with honors going to the Z4 M’s 3.2 liter inline-six engine (from the BMW M3) and the automaker’s turbodiesel 3.0-liter.
International Engine of the Year:
BMW 5.0-liter V10 (BMW M5/M6)
Best New Engine:
Volkswagen 1.4-liter TSI Twincharger (Volkswagen Golf)
Best Fuel Economy:
Toyota 1.5-liter Hybrid (Toyota Prius)
Best Performance Engine:
BMW V10 (BMW M5/M6)
Sub 1.0-liter:
Honda 1-liter IMA (Honda Insight)
1-liter to 1.4-liter:
Volkswagen 1.4-liter TSI (Volkswagen Golf)
1.4-liter to 1.8-liter:
Toyota 1.5-liter Hybrid (Toyota Prius)
1.8-liter to 2.0-liter:
Volkswagen 2.0-liter Turbo (Volkswagen Golf, Audi A3, Audi A6)
2-liter to 2.5-liter:
Subaru 2.5-liter Turbo (Subaru Impreza, Subaru Forester, Saab 9-2X)
2.5-liter to 3.0-liter:
BMW 3.0-liter Twinturbo Diesel (BMW 535d)
3.0-liter to 4.0-liter:
BMW 3.2-liter (BMW M3, BMW Z4 M)
Best Over 4.0-liter:
BMW 5.0-liter V10 (BMW M5/M6)
source : leftlanenews
Last edited by Gojirra99; 05-10-06 at 10:46 AM.
#4
If these awards were given by people with a slightest bit of common sense, M5 and especially M3 engines would be at the very bottom of the list, as they are worlds most unreliable engines.
If anything, Toyotas 3.5 V6 found in IS350 should've got some awards.
If anything, Toyotas 3.5 V6 found in IS350 should've got some awards.
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#8
Originally Posted by MGS4
I thought MB AMG 6.3 V8 should at least get one title, oh well
#9
Originally Posted by rominl
haha probably all areas it competes in the bmw v10 beat it? i am not surprised though, the 6.3l v8 is nice, but the 5l v10 with the kinda of rev capability and power? yummy
#13
Originally Posted by DASHOCKER
What other car can powerslide on the way to victory over a Lamborghini Gallardo, Skyline, Porshe 911? Seen the vid? The M5 is insane
#14
While the M5/M6 have excellent brakeing power, they are using single piston calipers versus I believe 8 piston calipers up front and 4 in the back for AMG vehicles. Which I assume would lead to excessive brake fade on the bimmers in track conditions. I'm no expert in brake engineering so I could be way off base.