What Are Variable Displacement Engines?

With hybrids and automated electric cars becoming more prominent, variable displacement may be the last safe haven for the petrolhead
What Are Variable Displacement Engines?

You’d think if one owned a V8 Bentley or Audi, fuel economy wouldn’t exactly be a priority. Having something like a Continental GT should mean that you’re cool with nothing much over 10mpg and stupendously expensive road tax. And yet a new wave of variable displacement engines has come to fruition, making gas-guzzling machines a more convenient proposition for those who wish to blend raw power with polar bear-sparing efficiency.

These engines work by deactivating half of the cylinders, leaving them dormant in slow driving, low-load situations like when crawling around a city centre. Like stop-start technology, the full engine will roar back into life once a certain throttle position is reached.

Who would rather have a hybrid over this?
Who would rather have a hybrid over this?

When driving slowly with little to no throttle, the pressure within a cylinder is decreased compared to when under heavy load. This incurs a pumping loss as the engine has to waste energy drawing air into the cylinders to keep it running, thereby decreasing its efficiency. The energy losses at low speeds from larger engines mean that for day-to-day driving, a city car with a small three or four-cylinder engine will have a much higher internal cylinder pressure, making them much more efficient.

A deactivation of cylinders will therefore lead to the air entering from the intake manifold being distributed to less cylinders, increasing the engine’s efficiency. This is specifically done by shutting the intake and exhaust valves of any given cylinder simultaneously, leaving the deactivated cylinder isolated from the engine’s usual functions.

Exhaust gases from the previous stroke are trapped in the cylinder once it is deactivated and are compressed and then decompressed as the piston continues its stroke. This rise and fall in pressure however is virtually equal meaning that no extra load is applied to the engine during deactivation.

An ECU can be programmed to cut the fuel supplied to a cylinder for the deactivation and the ignition timing modified to make the transition between the full engine and the smaller displacement smooth and safe for the powertrain. It is because of this simple electronic control that many companies have pursued variable displacement in light of the constant war on emissions.

Bentley's W12 has found a way to dodge the emissions police
Bentley's W12 has found a way to dodge the emissions police

The technology was pioneered by Cadillac (a surprisingly innovative company back in the day) and Alfa Romeo, with Cadillac pushing the boat out with a V8-6-4 engine. Alfa went for a simpler 4-cylinder that deactivated down to just two for town driving and were successful in their design but the technology was discontinued after 1983. The M152 engine from the CL63 AMG is a great example of a V8-4 variable displacement engine, along with Bentley’s W12 engine from the Continental GT which simplifies down to just six cylinders.

Honda patented a different angle of variable displacement by trying to control the stroke of the piston rather than a complete cylinder shut down. An innovative crankshaft design means that the cylinder capacity can be changed around at will, giving much more flexibility in comparison to a standard variable system. They have now gone one step further and designed an engine that has completely different stroke lengths for every cylinder, while keeping the cylinder bore identical in each. Despite the patents for these designs, Honda has yet to fully implement these systems in their road cars but they may start with their motorbike engines as guinea pigs for something more spectacular.

Honda's revolutionary engine and crankshaft design
Honda's revolutionary engine and crankshaft design

By reducing pumping losses and the amount of fuel entering the engine, even a burbling V8 can achieve some form of respectable efficiency. If hybridisation isn’t for you and the term ‘eco’ has no significance in your life, this technology may be for you. In a world full of downsizing and turbocharging, variable displacement still gives hope to those who see low full consumption as characterful rather than a scourge. Because, really, there’s still no replacement for displacement.

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Comments

Anonymous

The Thumbnail could ‘ve been part of the new Transformers

07/21/2016 - 06:12 |
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Drew Pera

I know Dodge uses this in the HEMI V8s, but haven’t heard of any other American V8 vehicles doing this. Our Honda Odyssey also has “VCM” which is quite seamless, enough so that I don’t even notice when it switches between 3 and 6 cylinders. For a minivan it gets amazing mileage.

07/21/2016 - 13:11 |
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K sarito

GM trucks have this standard on all v8 models where if you are just driving at about 30 mph it will switch to v4 and the second you speed up it jumps back into v8 mode

07/26/2016 - 15:21 |
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Range Rover (CTthegame tester)

Imagine if someone hacked the ecu..
Maybe Full-cylinder deactivation lol

08/13/2016 - 07:48 |
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Anonymous

this is dumb if u want to save fuel get a small car instead lol

08/26/2016 - 16:08 |
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DJ N

Rejoice! We (will probably) be saved!

09/04/2016 - 05:16 |
0 | 0