Reciprocating internal combustion engine
The Nissan VRH engine family consists of several racing engines built by Nissan Motor Company beginning in the late 1980s. All VRH engines are in a V8 configuration, with either natural aspiration or forced induction . Some VRH engines are loosely based on Nissan's production V8 engine blocks , including the VH and VK engines, while others were designed from the ground up for racing and share no components with production blocks.
The name "VRH" comes from the engines' V configuration ("V"), their purpose as racing engines ("R"), and the fact that all of them have eight cylinders (with "H" being the eighth letter of the Latin alphabet ).[citation needed ]
History
In 1987, Nissan began work on an engine exclusively for race use; the result was the VEJ30 engine, developed by Yoshikazu Ishikawa. This engine was based on old technology, and was not a success. For 1988, the VEJ30 was improved by Yoshimasa Hayashi and renamed the VRH30. Changes included increasing the displacement to 3.4 L (3,396 cc).
This engine was, however, still based on the obsolete VEJ30, and development of the all-new VRH35[ 1] was started in parallel with the VRH30. In 1989, the VRH35 appeared as a new development engine and was used in the Nissan R89C .
A Nissan R390 GT1 that was powered by the VRH35L engine
A 3.0-litre variant of the VRH35Z was also used in the 1998 Courage -Nissan C51 at the 1998 24 Hours of Le Mans . Both C51s failed to finish .[ 2]
The design of the engine was later sold to McLaren , where it served as the basis of their M838T and M840T engines (which were used in all of McLaren's line-up since the McLaren MP4-12C ).[ 3] [ 4]
VRH30T
A Nissan R88C that was powered by the VRH30T engine The VRH30T was used in the R88C .
Cylinder Block: Aluminum 90° V8
Aspiration: Twin-Turbo (IHI )
Valvetrain: DOHC, 4 Valves per Cylinder
Displacement: 3.0 L (2,996 cc)
Bore x Stroke: 85 mm × 66 mm (3.35 in × 2.60 in)
Power: 750 PS (552 kW; 740 bhp) at 8000 rpm
Torque: 542 lb⋅ft (735 N⋅m) at 5500 rpm
VRH35Z
VRH35Z engine in a Nissan R90CK race car The VRH35Z first appeared in 1990 in the R90C .
Cylinder Block: Aluminum
Aspiration: Twin-Turbo (IHI )
Valvetrain: DOHC, 4 Valves per Cylinder
Displacement: 3.5 L (3,495 cc)
Bore x Stroke: 3.35 in × 3.03 in (85 mm × 77 mm)
Compression Ratio: 8.5:1
Power: 800 PS (588 kW; 789 bhp) at 7600 rpm
Torque: 578 lb⋅ft (784 N⋅m) at 5600 rpm
Engine Management: ECCS-R-NDIS
Weight: 185 kg (408 lb)
VRH35L
VRH35L engine from the R390 GT1 In 1997, Nissan, working in partnership with Tom Walkinshaw Racing , fielded a VRH35L in the R390 GT1 .
Cylinder Block: Aluminum
Aspiration: Twin-Turbo (IHI )
Valvetrain: DOHC, 4 Valves per Cylinder
Displacement: 3.5 L (3,495 cc)
Bore x Stroke: 85 mm × 77 mm (3.35 in × 3.03 in)
Compression Ratio: 9.0:1
Power: 650 PS (478 kW; 641 bhp) at 6800 rpm
Torque: 520 lb⋅ft (705 N⋅m) at 4400 rpm
Dry weight: 170 kg (370 lb)
VRH35ADE
The VRH35ADE was used by Infiniti in their Indy race car.[ 5] [ 6]
Cylinder Block: Aluminum-alloy block and heads; molybdenum -coated pistons
Aspiration: Naturally Aspirated
Valvetrain: DOHC, 4 Valves per Cylinder
Displacement: 3.5 L (3,499 cc)
Bore x Stroke: 93 mm × 64.39 mm (3.661 in × 2.535 in)
Compression Ratio: 13.8:1
Lubrication System: Multi-stage dry sump
Oil Capacity: 12 US qt (11 L)
Power: 650 PS (478 kW; 641 bhp) at 10700 rpm
Torque: 320 lb⋅ft (434 N⋅m) at 10400 rpm
VRH40ADE
The VRH40ADE was used by Infiniti in their Indy race car.[ 7]
Cylinder Block: Aluminum-alloy block and heads; molybdenum -coated pistons
Aspiration: Naturally Aspirated
Valvetrain: DOHC, 4 Valves per Cylinder
Displacement: 4.0 L (3,999 cc)
Bore x Stroke: 93 mm × 73.6 mm (3.66 in × 2.90 in)
Compression Ratio: 14.5:1
Lubrication System: Multi-stage dry sump
Oil Capacity: 12 US qt (11 L)
Power: 740 PS (544 kW; 730 bhp) at 10700 rpm
Torque: 385 lb⋅ft (522 N⋅m) at 8500 rpm
VRH34A
A VRH34A-powered Nissan GT-R that competed in the Super GT500 class The VRH34A is one of two engines used in Nissan's GT500 -spec GT-R .
Cylinder Block: Aluminum
Aspiration: Naturally Aspirated
Valvetrain: DOHC, 4 Valves per Cylinder
Displacement: 3.4 L (3,396 cc)
Bore x Stroke: 93 mm × 62.5 mm (3.66 in × 2.46 in)
Power: 450–500 PS (331–368 kW; 444–493 bhp)
Torque: Over 290 lb⋅ft (393 N⋅m)
Dry weight: 120 kg (260 lb) ?
VRH50A
Nissan VRH50A engine at the Nissan Engine Museum The VRH50A was used in the Nissan R391 .
Cylinder Block: Aluminum, Closed Deck
Aspiration: Naturally Aspirated
Valvetrain: DOHC, 4 Valves per Cylinder
Displacement: 5.0 L (4,997 cc)
Bore x Stroke: 96 mm × 86.3 mm (3.78 in × 3.40 in)
Compression ratio: 14.0:1 (estimated)
Redline: 8000 rpm
Power: 650 PS (478 kW; 641 bhp) at 7200 rpm
Torque: 470 lb⋅ft (637 N⋅m) at 6000 rpm
Engine Management: Nissan Electronics/Hitachi HN-1
Weight: 150 kg (330 lb)
Other VRH engines
The VRH34A and VRH34B are naturally aspirated engines used by Nissan in their GT-R Super GT race car from 2010.
The VRH34A is 3.4 L (3,396 cc) and produces 450–500 PS (331–368 kW; 444–493 bhp) and over 290 lb⋅ft (393 N⋅m) of torque.
The VRH34B is 3.4 L (3,396 cc) and produces 500–530 PS (368–390 kW; 493–523 bhp) and over 325 lb⋅ft (441 N⋅m) of torque.
See also
References
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