2017 Nissan Titan XD Nissan is killing off the Titans oil-burner in favour of a dramatically refreshed, next-generation gasoline-powered truck.At the end of the year, Nissan will stop selling Titan XD models with the 5.0-litre Cummins diesel engine. The engine made 310 horsepower and 555 lb.-ft. of torque, which was good enough for a maximum towing capacity of 12,830 pounds. The engine was marketed at buyers looking to switch from a half-ton to a three-quarter ton truck, or vice-versa. Now, diesel-powered trucks like the Ram HD produce over 1,000 lb.-ft. of torque.Production of the Titan XD Diesel will end in December 2019, Jennifer McCarthy, Nissan Canadas product communications manager, wrote in an email. This will help better position Nissan in the long term as we prepare for the launch of the new, dramatically refreshed 2020 Titan and Titan XD Gas later this year.Poor sales was another factor contributing to Nissans decision to axe the diesel. In the U.S., just 2,242 Titans left dealers last month, both diesel and gas-powered. For reference, Ford sells about that many F-150s per day.Apparently, Nissan knows what people want in a new truck and will offer it in the revised Titan, but theres no word on when or where it will be revealed, but we imagine itll be at a major event like the State Fair of Texas, as thats a fitting venue before autoshow season kicks off in the
Origin: Nissan killing off optional diesel engine for Titan XD
engine
New Vauxhall Corsa: full engine range details released
A GM-based Corsa was all but finished by that point and it could have been launched, but the ‘toolbox’ of newly available PSA technology, including access to BEV hardware, plus licensing costs that would have been payable to GM, meant starting again was “a no brainer”, according to Adams. “We hand-picked our most experienced designers and engineers,” said Adams. “This is not a committee car.” He added that Opel’s design and engineering team had learnt new methods on the way but that the company couldn’t work within such a timeframe with every new model. “You’d kill people with the intensity of the work,” he said. PSA sees Vauxhall and Opel as a good fit with its French brands, noting that their respective British and German heritage means they’ll achieve sales volumes in their home markets that Peugeot, Citroën and DS won’t be able to match. PSA CEO Carlos Tavares has overseen a surprising turnaround of fortunes in an extremely short space of time. Opel-Vauxhall returned a £750m profit last year, its first in two decades. That has come from a mix of cost reduction, extra buying power and a reduction in discounting rather than a notable sales increase. Both Adams and new Vauxhall CEO Steve Norman say Opel-Vauxhall has much more autonomy within the PSA Group than under GM, where it made products that sold not only in Europe but also, with Chevrolet, Holden or Buick badging, in other regions. “You can’t micromanage success”, says Adams, who added he was pleased to find that PSA CEO Carlos Tavares was “extremely focused on brand values”. That approach has allowed Opel-Vauxhall to deviate from other PSA brands and inject its own DNA into the Corsa’s design. Deliveries of the new Corsa start at the end of this year in internal combustion form, with the Corsa-e electric variant arriving a few weeks later. The new Corsa-e can be ordered from this week and will cost £26,490 including the government grant. QA with Steve Norman, Vauxhall CEO Is the Corsa representative what of we should now expect from Vauxhall? “It’s what the brand has needed for some years now, and this will be the precursor for the new Mokka, which will be much more radical still in terms of design.” Is it correct that the small platform means a pure-electric option, while large platforms can have a plug-in hybrid powertrain? “For the moment, yes. What’s interesting in the Corsa-e is that there won’t be an option with less than 136bhp. One of the things that concerns people is that Vauxhalls have become a bit staid, and we need to inject something back into it. This will be quite a fast car.” Do you think there’s a shift in how the business runs day to day? “I wasn’t there in the GM days but the people who work for me were – they think the change is total. They are given freedom to act, that’s the big difference.” “When Carlos Tavares entered into this, he was convinced Opel was undersold in Germany and that Vauxhall was undersold in the UK, and on that I think he was right.” Lawrence Allan and Matt
Origin: New Vauxhall Corsa: full engine range details released
New Mercedes-AMG four-cylinder engine makes over 100 horsepower per cylinder
Mercedes-AMG Produktion M139 2019Mercedes-AMG Mercedes-AMG have just released the most powerful four-cylinder engine to ever go into a road car — a wild, 416-horsepower 2.0-litre turbocharged engine set to be featured in the ’45’ series of vehicles. The outgoing engine was no slouch to begin with, making a healthy 376 horsepower. This means the company has managed to squeeze out an extra 61 horsepower out of the same displacement. Bravo, Mercedes. Along with the 416 horsepower and 369 lb.-ft. of torque in the S’ trims, there will also be a detuned version set for the standard 45s, making 382 horsepower and 354lb.-ft. That torque also comes in further along in the powerband, meaning you get a much steadier power delivery. To achieve all this, Mercedes-AMG have done some properly nerdy stuff, fitting the engine with electric wastegates, piezo-injectors, and relocating the turbo, etc. The engines will also be built more quickly thanks to Mercedes one man (or woman), one engine mantra, which includes tools that have already been computer-controlled to properly torque the bolts. According to plant manager Alexander Kurz, this cuts production time by 20 to 25 per cent, allowing 140 engines per day to be built. The M139 engine will be available in the upcoming A, CLA, and GLA 45
Origin: New Mercedes-AMG four-cylinder engine makes over 100 horsepower per cylinder
New Skyactiv-X engine hits Mazda3 order sheets in Europe
2019 Mazda3 Mazda’s new ground-breaking compression-spark-ignition gasoline engine has officially gone on sale in Europe, being recently made available in the compact Mazda3, where it achieves excellent fuel economy while offering some oomph for sporty car drivers, too. The gasoline-powered Skyactiv-X engine uses technology similar to a diesel’s, and can be switched from spark-ignition to compression-ignition to increase fuel economy. The engine has a compression ratio of 16.3:1. The revolutionary design is the first to be offered in the mass-market, and Mazda claims it helps the vehicle achieve a 4.3 L/100 km to 5.6 L/100 km rating in the European test cycle. Along with the huge gas savings, the engine also makes 178 horsepower and 165 lb.-ft. of torque, more than enough to have some fun. Yes, the current 2.5-litre four-cylinder makes more power – some 186 more horses, to be exact – but the combination of decent enough power with excellent fuel economy coupled with all-wheel-drive will make this a serious contender in many segments, and an excellent all-rounder. Mazda will also give something for the enthusiast to fawn over: a six-speed manual transmission that can be had with either front-wheel-drive or the more enticing all-wheel-drive option. For now though, only the hatchback will be available with AWD, not the sedan. Whether or not the manual transmission will make it to Canada remains to be seen; same goes for the mileage claims. But Mazda has been good to buyers in the past by offering most of the same options in North America that it does
Origin: New Skyactiv-X engine hits Mazda3 order sheets in Europe
Mercedes-AMG unveils most powerful four-cylinder engine ever
The world’s most powerful 2.0 litre, four-cylinder series production engine has been revealed by Mercedes-AMG, set to feature in its upcoming ’45’ model range. Developing 415bhp in its most potent ‘S’ form, this completely new 2.0 turbo replaces the engine in used in the previous A45 A-Class, CLA45 and GLA45. Despite the potency of the outgoing A45 355/376bhp AMG four, engine development boss Ralf Illenberger says that emission requirements, the desire for more power, less weight and the different packaging requirements of Mercedes’ latest generation of compact cars necessitated a complete redesign. “The only carryover parts are a few nuts and bolts.” The new M139 engine produces 382bhp in standard form and 415bhp in ’S’ form, and 354lb ft or 369lb ft of torque. Another major aim has been extracting a sportier driving experience from the engine by altering its torque delivery. While the previous, M133 four cylinder engine’s torque curve resembled a diesel’s, rising steeply to level off across a wide chunk of the rev range, the new M139 2.0 produces more of a crescendo of thrust. The aim is to produce the rising rush of acceleration characteristic of a revvy, normally aspirated engine. Rather than flat-lining, diesel-style, from around 2000rpm, AMG’s new engine generates peak torque at 5200rpm, while nevertheless producing more shove than the old between 1000-2000rpm, the strongest surge developing from 3000rpm. Overall, says Illenberger, “it produces a more sporty delivery.” More diesel-like are the 160 bar combustion pressures generated by the new unit, and a lighter yet more robust cylinder block developed to withstand them. It’s of the closed deck variety, creating a crankcase casting more like a part-closed box rather than a semi-open one, with deep, strengthening skirts around the cylinders. The new alloy block is as strong as a diesel engine’s, says Illenberger. The 16-valve cylinder head is also new, a key design challenge being the dispersal of the considerable heat generated. Larger exhaust valves and valve seats, a redesigned water jacket, oil, water and air chilling for the turbo and separate coolant plumbing for the cylinder head and cylinder block allow more efficient and protective control of under-bonnet temperatures, assisted by electrically controlled water pumps. The head itself features ‘Camtronic’ variable inlet and exhaust valve control and dual injectors per cylinder. A single piezo-injector per cylinder would be at the upper limit of its fuel volume delivery, says Illenberger, so a second quartet of injectors sits within the inlet manifold tracts to boost delivery under hard acceleration. The Camtronic system enables two camshaft profiles to provide a blend of good fuel economy and heightened throttle response. The vanes of a sizeable turbocharger run in low-friction roller bearings, an electric wastegate minimising the loss of boost when pressure modulation is required. The turbo now lives between the engine and the front bulkhead, the cylinder head having been turned through 180 degrees in order to fit the engine beneath the lower bonnet lines of the new models. The turbo’s new location requires extra cooling, some of this provided by and engine cover shaped to direct fan-generated airflow over it. Illenberger says that the electric water pumps may also function after the engine has been switched off, to cool the block, head and turbo. The more potent ‘S’ version sometimes harnesses the air conditioner for cooling too. Besides designing an all-new engine AMG has also developed a more streamlined way to make it. Each engine is still built under the ‘one man, one engine’ approach long used by the company – there are several women hand-assembling these engines too, incidentally – the methods of electronically recording the sequence of and torque applied to each power-tool-attached component streamlined to save time. The new arrangement also improves assembly ergonomics. The new methods cut the production time by 20 to 25%, says plant manager Alexander Kurz, enabling AMG’s four-cylinder manufacturing facility to produce 140 engines per day over two shifts. The first car to feature this unit will be the A 45 in July, the CLA 45 saloon appearing near-simultaneously, the GLA 45 a little later.
Origin: Mercedes-AMG unveils most powerful four-cylinder engine ever
Mustang from ‘Tokyo Drift’ for sale, but without Nissan RB26 engine
One of the 1967 Ford Mustangs used in the third instalment of the will-it-ever-end Fast Furious movie franchise is being offered for sale by RK Motors in Charlotte, complete with a thumping American V-8 underhood. Wait, wasn’t the Stang in Fast Furious: Tokyo Drift driven by a Nissan GT-R RB26? You’re right, it was—at least one of them, anyway. Apparently, three of the muscle cars were built for the film, two of which had V-8s displacing 430 cubes. Details are fuzzy, as they often are with Hollywood movies, but there may have been as many as six Mustangs on set at one point or another. This unit at RK is listed as having a 347-cubic-inch mill under its king-sized hood and being a gen-u-wine member of the cast. Billed as a restomod, the Mustang also has a Tremec TKO600 five-speed manual backing up the Roush crate engine. Original(-to-the-movie) 19-inch Volk Racing wheels bring a dose of screen-correct accuracy, and the rear end is a Moser 8.8 with a limited-slip diff and 3.73 gears. According to the seller, that Nissan-powered Mustang we all saw in the film was only used for stills and close-up shots, with the drifting duties left to the other V-8 Mustangs on set—of which this car is one. While it may not have the same engine used during its filming sequences, the car does have a heckuva story, one for which certain collectors will happily
Origin: Mustang from ‘Tokyo Drift’ for sale, but without Nissan RB26 engine
Ford designed the Shelby GT500’s stereo to help the engine sound perfect
2020 Ford Mustang GT500 Most gearheads enjoy a loud and raucous exhaust. Some of them are more pleasant to the ear than others. An Italian V12 at full trot is an aural delight with few equals, for example. Same goes for the traditional growl of an uncorked American V8 on this side of the pond. With its 700-plus horsepower and aggressive styling choices, Ford’s new GT500 is bound to check a lot of the correct boxes in terms of performance and looks. It also needs to sound right, which is a bigger task for engineers than most people realize. In a sit-down with top brass of the GT500 team, the crew at Road Track found out just how much goes into achieving that perfect exhaust note. At play is an active noise cancellation system, a gee-whiz piece of kit that deploys an armada of microphones and the car’s stereo system to eliminate unwanted noises. It won’t quell the whining noise from your passenger, but it will erase tones and pitches that could ruin the signature V8 bark. At play are something called secondary harmonics, a term which generally refers to the din created by the likes of moving belts or weird induction noises. Once the mics have picked up these offensive sounds, an opposing frequency is played through the Shelby’s speaker system get rid of it. Noise-cancelling is nothing new – in fact, you probably own a set of noise-cancelling headphones – but the way in which Ford is deploying the technology is unique. Instead of taking a blanket approach, the Blue Oval team is selecting very specific sounds to eliminate. This also beats the old-school approach of adding sound deadening, which also muffles the good stuff and adds weight. An interesting tidbit of this system is that it disables itself when someone opens a door. Those who’ve experienced the technology say the difference in sound is vast and much more pleasant with the doors closed. Winding down the windows doesn’t affect anything, though, so GT500 drivers should feel free to do so in every tunnel they
Origin: Ford designed the Shelby GT500’s stereo to help the engine sound perfect
GMC’s 2020 Sierra 1500 gets a new diesel engine, plus other options
2020 GMC Sierra Denali CarbonPro Edition GMC spilled the details on its 2020 Sierra 1500 late May, noting the truck will offer such new features as a diesel engine and a camera view that can make a trailer “disappear.” The updated truck adds features to the all-new 2019 Sierra, which introduced the available six-function MultiPro tailgate. For 2020, the Sierra can be ordered with a 3.0-litre Duramax turbodiesel engine and ten-speed automatic. That transmission will also be standard or available on specific trim levels with the 5.3-litre V8 engine; it was previously mated only to the 6.2-litre V8. Other available features include a “transparent trailer view,” introduced on the 2019 Sierra HD, with a total of 15 camera views that combine to give a view of what’s behind the trailer, as if it isn’t there; adaptive cruise control that uses a windshield-mounted camera and can bring the truck to a complete stop; and stand-alone optional trailer tow mirrors. 2020 GMC Sierra Available Transparent Trailer Rear Camera View A new trailering app lets drivers create and edit trailer profiles on a mobile device. Depending on the trailer’s configuration, owners could remotely turn on an RV’s air conditioning or water heater, check the water and holding tank levels, or monitor on-board generator fuel supplies from a phone. The app will also send trailer maintenance reminders to the driver. The CarbonPro carbon-fibre pickup box, introduced for 2019, is available on specific models. The company said it increases durability with dent, scratch and corrosion resistance. While the Sierra is sold on both sides of the border, it’s a far more important truck for Canada than for the U.S., where truck buyers overwhelmingly prefer Chevy. In 2018, Americans bought 585,581 Chevrolet Silverados to 219,554 GMC Sierras; but in Canada, the Sierra outsold its Silverado sibling by more than 1,100
Origin: GMC’s 2020 Sierra 1500 gets a new diesel engine, plus other options
YouTuber fits vintage Dodge pickup with 212-cc lawn mower engine
Carson Duba, a.k.a. EverythingWithWheels on YouTube, has a thing for Predator engines. It says so right on his YouTube About page: Let’s fix something or put a Predator in it! Words to live by, truly. For Duba, the most recent manifestation of this mantra is a vintage Dodge Ram that runs on a US$120 212-cc Predator motor, a power plant designed for vacuums, mowers and pressure washers. Designed for, perhaps, but not relegated to, because the motor moves this little truck just fine, forward and backward, at speeds up to 32 km/h. When Duba’s friend who’d had it kicking around the yard gave it to him, the early ’80s Dodge Ram 50 had a four-cylinder engine. That was scooped out clean to make room for Duba’s more-modest solution. The 6.5-horsepower motor sits on a custom-made platform with its throttle connected to the vehicle’s pedal. It took some negotiation to get the clutch, 60-tooth sprocket and chain to ship power to the five-speed manual transmission and lug the heavy truck around. But, well, take a look at the results! Possibly the best feature? The fact that it looks and drives like a truck, but still starts like a lawnmower, with a pull cord that’s fed through the body and pulled from under the front driver’s side wheel.
Origin: YouTuber fits vintage Dodge pickup with 212-cc lawn mower engine
Cadillac kills the four-cylinder engine option in the CT6
2019 Cadillac CT6 V-SportHandout Cadillac is set to cut the smallest engine from its CT6’s options list, leaving only the less fuel-efficient V6 and V8 engines for buyers of its flagship sedan to choose from. The 2.0-litre turbocharged engine is dead for the 2019 model year, according to Cadillac’s vehicle configurator, which doesn’t have the engine listed as an option for the CT6. With the smallest engine option off the table, the most efficient CT6 buyers can opt for is now the $57,995 3.6-litre V6 Luxury with all-wheel-drive; that’s nearly $10,000 more than the $48,295 CTS in a comparable trim with AWD. Luckily, the pricing makes a little bit more sense when you compare engines within the CT6 model range: a CT6 with the 2.0-litre engine used to cost $62,255 in Canada, and was available with rear-wheel-drive only. In the United States, the 2.0-litre turbo was instead an understandably cheaper option for the large sedan. In Canada, the pricing structure has changed to make the 3.6-litre Luxury AWD trim cost less in 2019 than the 2.0-litre option cost in 2018, dropping from $69,050 down to $57,995. That means this is pretty much good news for everybody, except those who are looking to save on their fuel bill. With the 2.0-litre you were looking at 11.0 L/100 km city, and 7.8 L/100 km on the highway; but the 3.6-litre bumps those numbers up to 13.0 L/100 km city and 8.8 L/100 km highway. The change is fairly significant, but you can use the money you saved on the new lower purchase price to pay for what you’re spending extra at the pumps. The gap between the CT6 and the CTS seems to make room for the upcoming CT5, so hopefully Cadillac prices it
Origin: Cadillac kills the four-cylinder engine option in the CT6