Everything about Engine Displacement totally explained
Engine displacement is defined as the total
volume of air/fuel mixture an
engine can draw in during one complete engine cycle; it's normally stated in
cubic centimetres,
litres or
cubic inches. In a
piston engine, this is the volume that's
swept as the
pistons are moved from
top dead centre to
bottom dead centre.
Governmental regulations
In many nations levels of
taxation on
automobiles have been based on engine displacement, rather than on power output. Displacement is easy to identify and difficult to modify whereas power output must be tested. This has encouraged the development of other methods to increase engine power.
There are four major regulatory constraints for automobiles: the European, the British, the Japanese, and the American. The method used in some European countries, and which predates the EU, has a level of taxation for engines over one (1.0)
litre and another at the level of about 100 cubic
inches, which is approximated to 1.6 litres. The British system of taxation depends upon vehicle emissions for cars registered after 1 March 2001 but for cars registered before this date it depends on engine size. Cars under 1549 cc qualify for a cheaper rate of tax
(External Link
).
The Japanese is similar to the European taxation by classes of displacement, plus a vehicle weight tax. In the American system, which includes
Canada,
Australia and
New Zealand, there isn't this sort of taxation per engine displacement. In
The Netherlands and
Sweden, road tax is based on vehicle weight.
Displacement is also used to distinguish categories of (heavier) motorbikes with respect to license requirements. In
France and some other EU countries,
mopeds, usually with a
two-stroke engine and less than 50 cm
3 displacement can be driven with minimum qualifications (previously, they could be driven by any person over 14). This led to all light motorbikes having a displacement of about 49.9 cm
3. Some people
tuned the engine by increasing the cylinder bore, increasing displacement; such mopeds can't be driven legally on public roads since they do no longer conform to the original specifications and may go faster than 45 km/h.
Wankel engines, due to the amount of power and emissions they create for their displacement, are generally taxed as 1.5 times their actual physical displacement (1.3 litres becomes 2.0, 2.0 becomes 3.0), although actual power outputs are far greater (the 1.3 litre 13B can produce power comparable to a 3.0 V6, and the 2.0 litre 20B can produce power comparable to a 4.0L V8). As such, racing regulations actually use a much higher conversion factor.
Increase and decrease of typical engine displacement in the US
Once
V8 engines became expected on large American cars in the late
1950s, and continuing to the
oil crisis in the
1970s, there was an engine displacement race in the industry. Firms would put badges on the fenders of cars giving the displacement in cubic inches. This was also a sort of trademark as well. The famous
Beach Boys song, "409" refers to any full-size Chevrolet which had an engine displacement (in cubic inches) of that amount, regardless of trim level. This number wasn't the
model number of the car.
In the mid-
1960s, Chrysler offered a V8 engine of 426 cubic inches (6981 cm³) on its
muscle cars and
pony cars. Soon Ford came out with one of similar size, which displaced 427 cubic inches (6997 cm³), and hence was named the '427.'
NASCAR had a maximum 7-litre engine limit during this time and most automakers complied by introducing stock engines with the needed displacement. 7 litres equates to approximately 429 cubic inches, so every major manufacturer had an engine of around this size.
Engine sizes eventually grew to
440 cubic inches (7210 cm³) in
Chryslers,
500 (8193 cm³) in
Cadillacs, 454 (7440 cm³) in Chevrolets, and
462 (7570 cm³) in
Lincolns.
In the 1970s, American firms started selling cars with smaller engines. The
Chevrolet Vega was initially touted as having an engine of 2300 "cc" (cubic centimetres), given in metric rather than the equivalent 140 cubic inches, which would have been considered laughable to declare in the American market. Since this differs from the European convention of two significant digits, American cars are now labeled in the European manner; engines like that of the Vega would now be called 2.3 (referring to litres).
Conversions
- 1 L ~ 61 cubic inches
- 1 cubic inch ~ 16 cm³
The big engines listed above are mostly 7.0 liters. The 3.5 liter engines listed on American cars today as being large are much smaller than the 350 cubic inch (5.7 L) engines that once were considered medium size.
The 3.5 liter engine is 213 cubic inches. The 1965 Mustang's smallest Ford V8 engine of 260 cubic inches is 4.5 liters.
However, modern engines are much more efficient, using such technologies as an
ECU, electronic
fuel injection, and
variable valve timing. Also, the engines and the total weight of cars they're fitted in are lighter, so the difference in performance isn't as great as might otherwise be supposed.
Further Information
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