giantfan10 wrote: ↑17 Nov 2017, 08:40
DiogoBrand wrote: ↑17 Nov 2017, 03:05
roon wrote: ↑17 Nov 2017, 01:10
Perhaps my satire is poor; we're not in disagreement. Regardless, these OHV vs OHC fanboy battles are but the skirmishes of children wading upon the shallow shores of the Powertrain Pelago. I look down up on all of you from the apex of Mt. Wankel and laugh.
It's funny how you say it's
2017, but later say you're a
rotary fan.
Those two things don't seem two friendly.
Anyway, I think the one thing to be impressed with on american engines is power to cost ratio. If you look at specific output, economy, or any other technical figure they'll be laughable. There's no win/win in engineering, and I don't think there's a way to achieve those massive power figures for that cheap other than using stone age pushrod engines.
I think what created a bit of a discussion is GM trying to showcase their engine as an engineering feat when it's anything but.
I think engineering feats where the internal combustion engine is concerned is pretty much a dead issue...its all about profit and loss. If i can make an engine that is durable and cheap to manufacture, why in gods name would i build an exotic engine that is a nighmare to manufacture and maintain??
What you are doing is confusing marketing with reality...
BMW is not the ultimate driving machine.
There is no relentless pursuit of perfection at Lexus
Mercedes..the best or nothing? Nonsense...lol
I lump chevy and their marketing into that group.
Well, in my opinion, balancing profit and loss is an engineering feat on itself. Building an engine is relatively easy, building an engine that meets all regulations, has acceptable performance, all of this while generating the biggest possible profit, not so much. It takes a lot of engineering to make a profitable engine
But to be honest I always questioned why engines are getting more and more complex. Emissions are just a joke, you get a fraction of the freight ships in the world and they pollute more than all cars combined. Ok you get more fuel mileage, but you also pay a lot of money for your car just because it has an engine capable of saving 5% more fuel, not to mention maintenance, which becomes three times as expensive just because they had to make your engine as complex as a space ship to save that 5% of fuel.