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Last post on Aug 29, 2007 at 5:41 PM
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Volvo V70, Automotive News, Wagon
#11 of 17 Re: Diesel Horse Power and Torque [jim314]
by jim314
Jun 30, 2007 (8:19 am)
If you compare the specs for the three available engines in the XC90 in the UK (http://www.volvocars.co.uk/models/xc90/techSpec.htm) you can see that the acceleration with the 185PS (182HP) diesel is much less than that with the gasoline engines even though the max torque of the diesel is greater than that of the I6. It is power, not torque, which determines the rate of work, measured either by acceleration or pulling power.
Amazingly, the 182 hp 2.4D diesel XC90 is cheaper than either of the gasoline engines! This would be the engine for me, if it were available in the US. But it must not meet the US emissions requirements, it probably fails for particulate matter and for NOx. If emissions controls were put on it, the cost would be increased and the fuel economy would drop, but how much I wouldn't know.
But the diesel is considerably more fuel efficient even than the 3.2L I6 (which is what my wife has in her 2007 XC90). The reason why the diesel is more efficient is that diesels are more efficient than gas engines, and this diesel is a smaller engine and so is being used higher in its operating curve. Internal combustion engines get their highest efficiency, the true measure of which is called brake specific horsepower BSHP, when operated high in the performance curve.
Take an example of an engine powered water pump which is required to steadily pump an amount of water requiring a constant 40 hp output of the engine. This job will be more efficiently done with an approximately 50 hp engine than with a 100 hp engine. This is a well known and accepted fact.
To push a moderately loaded XC90 down a highway at 65 mph takes maybe 40 hp (just a guess on my part). In general this would be accomplished more efficiently by a smaller engine than by a larger one. It's just that a small engine will not have the extra power needed to accelerate briskly to enter a freeway safely, to pass, or to climb steep grades at high speed.
A 182 hp engine would be plenty for me.
The true way to compare the efficiency of the engines is with the CO2 emissions
1. Diesel 136 kw (185 PS, 182 hp) 2.4L D 6M ..............219 g/km
2. Diesel 136 kw (185 PS, 182 hp) 2.4L D 6A ..............239 g/km, so 9.1% more fuel per unit distance with the 6 spd auto tranny
3. Gasoline 175 kw (238 PS, 235 hp) 3.2L I6 6A...............281 g/km, so 17.6% more fuel per unit distance than the diesel with auto and 28% more fuel than the diesel with 6M
4. Gasoline 232 kw (315 PS, 311 hp) 4.4L V8 6A ............322 g/km, so 14.6% more fuel per unit distance than the I6, 35% more fuel than the diesel with 6A and 47% more fuel than the diesel with 6M tranny.
#12 of 17 Re: 2007 Volvo V70 review [v70norway]
by jim314
Aug 01, 2007 (7:11 pm)
How has your "small" diesel been performing lately? Do you have the manual tranny?
In my opinion 126 hp should be plenty of hp for a V70 for restrained driving. It should take only about 20 to 25 hp to push a V70 down the highway at 65 mph.
My 168 hp 2.4L gasoline V70 5A got 34 to 35 mpg at 65 mph on a level interstate highway in the summer on two separate 350 mile legs (700 mi total).
Using the formula for gasoline engines
hp = (speed mph/fuel use in mpg) x 12hp/galUS/hr = (65 mph)/(34 mpg) x 12 = 23 hp.
The diesel powered V70 would require the same hp to go the same speed because it has the same aerodynamics, tires, and tranny efficiency, but the constant in the same type formula for a diesel engine wwill be different because diesel fuel has about 15% more energy per gal than gasoline and the efficiency of the diesel engine is higher than that of a gas engine. A rough estimate of the constant for a diesel might be 16 hp/galUS/hr.
So say that you get 45 mpgUS when driving the 126 hp diesel V70 at a constant 65 mph. The instantaneous power would be given by
hp = (speed mpg)/(fuel use in mpg) x 16 hp/galUS/hr
hp = 65/45 x 16 = 23 hp.
You could figure out a similiar formula using entirely metric units: speed in km/hr, fuel use in L/100km and power in kilowatts. The difference would be that it would be all multiplication because the European fuel use value is the reciprocal of the American mpg expression of fuel use .
So the formula would be
Power in kw = (speed in km/hr)x(fuel use in L/100km)x C, a constant. There would be one constant for gasoline engines and a different one (~33% larger) for diesels.
#13 of 17 European metric formula for instaneous power
by jim314
Aug 01, 2007 (8:53 pm)
In European units the formula for estimating the power in kilowatts being produced by the engine when the vehicle is going a given speed and the computer shows a given fuel use in L/100km is
Power in kW = (speed in km/hr)(fuel use in L/100km)(Constant)
For a gasoline engine the constant is about 0.0236 kW/L/hr, and for a diesel engine the power is about 0.0315 kW/L/hr. (If you'd rather deal with whole numbers then instead of multiplying by the constant you'd divide by 42 for the gas engine and divide by 32 for the diesel.)
Examples
1. A 2.4L 125 kW (168 hp) gasoline V70 is traveling a constant 105 km/hr and the computer (or calculations) shows the fuel use is 6.9 L/100km. What power is the engine developing?
Power = (105)(6.9)(0.0236) = 17 kW, or
Power = (105)(6.9)/42 = 17 kW
(Note 17 kW = 17 kW x 1.34hp/kW = 23 hp)
2. A 2.4L diesel V70 is traveling a constant 105 km/hr and the computer (or pump calculations) shows the fuel use is 5.2 L/100km. What power is the engine developing?
Power = (105)(5.2)(0.0315) = 17 kw, or
Power = (105)(5.2)/32 = 17 kW
#14 of 17 diesel facts
by bastanu
Aug 04, 2007 (4:32 am)
as some other guy was saying,fuel is sold in volumes. Consumer is interested in price per gallon and mileage, so the density of the fuel is irrelevant. the correct comparison will show the diesel being about 40% more efficient, dollars per mile.
in USA there are not so many people that had the experience of driving a modern diesel. The massive amount of torque at very low rpm makes for quick from stop acceleration and excellent in gear acceleration. The last one makes for a relaxing drive, as quite often there is no need to downshift with passing.
0-60 indeed has more to do with the engine power, however, on the street nobody-other than few lunatics- are driving '0-60 like' aka dropping the clutch at high rpm at every stop and shifting gears at redline.
I'll say that the majority keeps their engines below 3500 rpm in usual traffic and in that area range the diesels are faster that the similar horsepower gasser.
so far, the only car diesel in USA is the Mercedes 320 cdi. It has 210hp, 400 lbs of torque [more than the 55o v8!] and goes to 60 in 6.6s. the 350-gasser is just $ 1000 less and goes to 60 in 6.5. The mileage, though, is quite different:35/26 for the diesel vs 26/19.
in Europe, even where the diesel is not much cheaper than gasoline, diesel vehicles outsell the gassers...
#16 of 17 2007 V70 Odometer/Trip Computer Conflict
by henry69
Aug 29, 2007 (5:37 pm)
I saw two new 2007 Volvo V70 last night. Strangely, both car have single digit total odometer mileage and double digil trip mileage. In another word, the trip mileage is higher than total mileage. This made me think of crazy things......
The dealer said it probably was due to conversion between Europe and US. Called Volvo north America and was told the following: "The trip computer may show more mileage than the odometer if the trip computer is not reset after testing from the factory during production. This is not an indication of a fault with the vehicle. The trip computer and odometer should be reset before the vehicle is delivered.
The trip computer functions independently of the vehicle's main computer and can be reset to zero at any time."
Is this true or convincing? Did anybody else have similar experience? Thanks!
#17 of 17 Re: 2007 V70 Odometer/Trip Computer Conflict [henry69]
by henry69
Aug 29, 2007 (5:41 pm)
Of course I understand that trip computer can be reset to zero any time. However, I still don't understand how trip computer can register more miles than the odemeter.
Another question I have is, if somebody turns the odometer backward, will the trip computer follow......