The VW groep W8, W12 and W16 engines actually aren’t really ‘W’ engines. They’re ‘VV’ engines as they have two V-shaped cylinder banks. VW group’s marketing department decided to ‘glue’ the V’s in the naming together, making it look like a ‘W’
Edit: NO.. sorry, was thinking and writing at the same time, mistakes happen. Original BS comment: Actually it is exactly what they marketed the engine before the "W" "VR" (in english "VI" I suppose), if it were "VV" a normal V-engine should be "II" since the V is essentially two inline engines stuck together. I heard that the name was changed because VR wasn't as marketing as W but what do I know..
@@NoahSupermoto you’re right, they are. However VW stopped using ‘VR’ for the successors of the VR6 and instead started calling them ‘V6’. With this in mind two of these V6’s combined make the VV12. But again, strictly speaking, you’re absolutely right
Great to see you know the very rare Jimenez Novia. Mr Jimenez makes also 2 liters with 2 bikes motors for Schlesser's buggys on the Paris Dakar. The Novia was full carbon built and very innovative.
In tuning W engines has probably best capability. W8 with turbos has potential of over 1000hp at factory crankshaft. Obviously conrods and pistons custom made. There is company in the UK that specialize in W engines and they got racing passat W8 modified to 1470hp.
Are these not a nightmare to work on? With performance like that I would expect more tinkerers to mess with these engines but I never see them even at carshows.
@@Anthonest1 they are more difficult yes. But if you good mechanic it makes no difference. Just consume more time that's all. In fact there is lack of service informations like torque settings for bottom end or most parts not available anymore so must be made by CNC technology. Same related to W1w and W16 motors as W8 is precursor of them 2. W8 was testing engine to discover basic issues before making W12 then W16.
VW brought the W configuration to perfection, this was proven in the Pheton W12 and 6000 ccm model, with this engine the W engine configuration was brought to perfection, from quiet operation to max revs, power in everything that is required from an engine. The Audi Sestra company also uses VW - W engines in its models, especially sports models.
The "W" engines with 3 individual banks are really a different category from the modern VW range of "W" engines, which are more accurately described as "double V", being a V engine with 2 banks of staggered cylinders
@@tigerpjm No. A radial 3 engine has 3 pistons placed so that when the cylinder heads are at their outermost positions, they form a triangle. A radial 4 is the same, but they form a square, which makes it no different than an X4 engine.
@@UltramanMebiusBraveI don't think you can have a 4 cylinder radial engine. As I understand it, the layout only works with an odd number of cylinders (or multiple banks of odd numbers, as on some aero engines)
There are a lot of technical and graphical errors in this presentation. It needs a redo and clean up. Here is some added information. For the record, I have 2 W8 2003 Passat wagen's and I love them. Beautiful and smooth, lots of pulling power and torque, I can easily pull 3,500 lb. trailer over long distances. Gas economy is reasonable (10-11 l/100km - about 24-30 Imp mpg.). Car has 365,000 on it and runs like new. It cannot be faulted. I would not trade this for a VR 6 any day. The entire concept of W engines was to put in as many cylinders in the shortest front to rear space but adding only marginal width. They put a 4l. W8 in the Passat into an engine bay made for a 2l. 4 cylinder engine! That is an accomplishment. The reason it failed in the market place was due to marketing, pure and simple. No one could distinguish the W8 from a V6 from a TDI or 4 unless you knew Volkswagen. Had they made cosmetic changes that were so different and made it stand apart, it is mehhh, whats so special about that car? But get in and drive it, then the differences become noticeable. And it can tow a heavy load too, governed out at 250. I have seen 225 5 years ago and that is FAST. The W-12 is the same as the W8 but with 4 more plugs, 2l. and 2 turbochargers and a hell of a lot more power 275 to 525. It is used today in the Bentley and Audi as a luxury car and you pay a hefty price for it, but many of the parts are interchangeable - at a price. They are butter smooth and definitely better engines they displaced. If one could put on 2 turbos on the W8 - you would see 400 hp. But there is literally no space to add them no matter what unless you put in an electric supercharger and that is a tight fit if not impossible. The Chrysler W5 is simply 5 inline 6 motors that Chrysler was already making onto a common block used for an immediate war motor - high speed development when time was critical. The Bugatti W16 is essentially the same as the W8 but has a 90 degree V instead of a 72 degree V since space width was no longer a consideration, 4 turbocharges, intercoolers, everything tweaked for power - and at 500,000 a pop, you pay for it. The regular maintenance on it is absurdly expensive - like $40,000 for new tires after some 15,000 km, $20,000 for oil changes that only their mechanics will allow - that kind of nonsense. All this for what? Bragging rights? The car doesn't exactly appeal cosmetically not to me anyway. And recently Koenisegg's V8 has exceeded the latest w-16 using smart technology.
@@samueljesse2179 actually you can,it was called the Chrysler A57 multi bank,it was five six cylinder gasoline engines bolted to housing with a central output shaft .
@@samueljesse2179 You don't realize the extent to which desperation can change what's possible. Several tanks in WW2 effectively used multiple engines configured around a common shaft. Some even used multiple shafts. They were notoriously finnicky and painful to repair.
I know I know genius Einstein level genius I'm also the first man who ever dipped onion rings into ketchup is he everybody was thinking of french fries only but I'm a bit of a trendsetter you see
@@vernlochtefeld1626 @vernlochtefeld1626 Always has been. If you continue adding cylinders, you'll get a circular arrangement of cylinders that are all in a line, not staggered if you were to keep adding cylinders, as would be the case with a V engine.
@@vernlochtefeld1626 Also, because all cylinders share the same crank pin (and therefore the same lobe), they fire in sequence. That's why Harley's sound the way they do. They fire in quick succession and then go silent for the remainder of the crank rotation. It's a completely different arrangement.
At 14'57, you speak about an engine which is constituted of three banks of 8 cylinders, but as you go on with this engine, at 15', you show a w18 engine with two vr 9 blocks...
Lancia patented the narrow v engines in 1915 for aeronautical use, the firsts cars were the Lancia Lamba (NV4) and Trikappa (NV8) in 1922. The Fulvia was one of the last Lancia with narrow v engine before Fiat, which had bought Lancia a few years earlier, decided to rationalise production by using the same engines for both companies.
Tbf the VR6 configuration should start to get more attractive. I know VW still uses it but in the Altas and others I might've forgot, but still Also, what video editor do you use?
Wow! I just learned something new! Strange I had seen star type engines in old planes but never took notice of W arrangements? Over-engineering pure. Open a flap of a huge motor coach and what do you see? An inline 6 cylinder! How come even container ships dropping the 96cm pistons for a 46cm MAN setup? They go inline and just add pistons and usually stop at 14. Now Bugatti still goes fast but the Tesla Model S Plaid maxed out the bottom end. Koenigsegg is going to be the only one to show the world what a fast luxury car will be. Combustion engines are going to be as relevant to road transport as the dial was to telephones!
0:45 Ur wrong, actually W30 engine has used in german super-heavy tank Maus. But the Maus tank was a fail, it was too slow, and sink on the ground almost everywhere. Sherman tank uses W16 engine.
I think a small airplane engine with p[pistons all the way around could be used in a vehicle, but it would have to be put in crank shaft pointing up and down and an elbow piece attached to power the gear box and then the drive shaft.
Napier Sabre was 2 V12 engines with 180 degrees between them. A flat V24 ... They were used in Hawker Tempest and Hawker .... I forgot - with some success, and a lot of problems 🙂
Excuse me but I think that the image shown at 5 '05 is a V6 and not a W6...If you count the rockers, you will see three groups of two on each bank, which means... 6 cylinders.
I have a W3 air compressor,and i want to build the cylinders to 2Takt or 4Takt petrol engiene, sized like a motorcycle or little buggy framed and thinking on the compact shiftgear 😅
It's funny how a V engine is a V, an inline is inline, a flat is flat and the W isn't even close to a W unless it has 2 cranks which they don't unless home made.
I made my own W3 that I welded together from an I4, could never figure out 2 things 1) Could never get the fucker to idle 2) Piston wouldn't stop making love to the intake valve specifically
@EOWS812 Ok, well you can write a letter telling the Royal Society of Automotive Engineers that they're wrong. I'm sure they'll take you very seriously. "A radial engine has cylinders arranged in a circle around a central crankshaft, like spokes on a wheel, while a W engine has cylinders arranged in a "W" shape with multiple banks of cylinders angled at different positions, essentially creating a more complex V-shaped engine configuration"
"W" type configuration is considered as the most compact arrangement. Overall video is awesome 👍😎
Thanks! 👍
Yeah but there’s always a single cylinder
@@Echocompany2-7 or inline 3
The VW groep W8, W12 and W16 engines actually aren’t really ‘W’ engines. They’re ‘VV’ engines as they have two V-shaped cylinder banks. VW group’s marketing department decided to ‘glue’ the V’s in the naming together, making it look like a ‘W’
Edit: NO.. sorry, was thinking and writing at the same time, mistakes happen.
Original BS comment:
Actually it is exactly what they marketed the engine before the "W"
"VR" (in english "VI" I suppose), if it were "VV" a normal V-engine should be "II" since the V is essentially two inline engines stuck together.
I heard that the name was changed because VR wasn't as marketing as W but what do I know..
Isnt it VVR
@@NoahSupermoto you’re right, they are. However VW stopped using ‘VR’ for the successors of the VR6 and instead started calling them ‘V6’. With this in mind two of these V6’s combined make the VV12. But again, strictly speaking, you’re absolutely right
W is also correct depending of the languages which spelt "double V".
Ya so it comes out like a vw
Great to see you know the very rare Jimenez Novia.
Mr Jimenez makes also 2 liters with 2 bikes motors for Schlesser's buggys on the Paris Dakar.
The Novia was full carbon built and very innovative.
In tuning W engines has probably best capability. W8 with turbos has potential of over 1000hp at factory crankshaft. Obviously conrods and pistons custom made. There is company in the UK that specialize in W engines and they got racing passat W8 modified to 1470hp.
That's interesting, makes me wonder why they didn't have a lot of power from factory
@@afoxwithahat7846 power is always a trade off with reliability
@@Alucard-gt1zf hard to say when they weren't fucking reliable from the factory
Are these not a nightmare to work on? With performance like that I would expect more tinkerers to mess with these engines but I never see them even at carshows.
@@Anthonest1 they are more difficult yes. But if you good mechanic it makes no difference. Just consume more time that's all.
In fact there is lack of service informations like torque settings for bottom end or most parts not available anymore so must be made by CNC technology.
Same related to W1w and W16 motors as W8 is precursor of them 2.
W8 was testing engine to discover basic issues before making W12 then W16.
Thanks for this content of quality 👏
Glad you enjoy it!
This is a good knowledge about type of engine!
Glad you liked it!
VW brought the W configuration to perfection, this was proven in the Pheton W12 and 6000 ccm model, with this engine the W engine configuration was brought to perfection, from quiet operation to max revs, power in everything that is required from an engine. The Audi Sestra company also uses VW - W engines in its models, especially sports models.
Great video. Thank you for making a video of W configuration engines.
Glad you liked it!
The "W" engines with 3 individual banks are really a different category from the modern VW range of "W" engines, which are more accurately described as "double V", being a V engine with 2 banks of staggered cylinders
The "W3" and "W4" engines in this video are not W engines, they're radial engines.
@@tigerpjm No. A radial 3 engine has 3 pistons placed so that when the cylinder heads are at their outermost positions, they form a triangle. A radial 4 is the same, but they form a square, which makes it no different than an X4 engine.
@@UltramanMebiusBrave
No.
A radial engine has all conrods on the same crank lobe.
@UltramanMebiusBrave
When you say four cylinder radial, are you referring to a four stroke engine?
@@UltramanMebiusBraveI don't think you can have a 4 cylinder radial engine. As I understand it, the layout only works with an odd number of cylinders (or multiple banks of odd numbers, as on some aero engines)
Your videos are very informative..thank you
You are welcome!
Thanks. I've been looking for this video
Thanks 👍 Happy Christmas 🎄
the W engine seems like a nightmare for mechanics and a blessing to the parts dealers
11:52 Only for the prototype version. Tbh, the production version has speed limiter to around 270 mph.
That W30 engine is the sickest looking engine I have ever seen😧
Search for the sound of the W8 Passat. You won't be disappointed!
Sir please make a video on all sensors of the vehicle please .. your explanation is truly excitant .. and easy to understand by animation .
nice information about w type
Helpful video with the all is well 🤗
I caught a tiny mistake when detailing W18 engine. 3 banks of 6 cylinders, but the image shows a 4 bank 6 cylinder engine (W24) @12:55
My bad, Thanks for pointing out.
Interesting video
There are a lot of technical and graphical errors in this presentation. It needs a redo and clean up. Here is some added information.
For the record, I have 2 W8 2003 Passat wagen's and I love them. Beautiful and smooth, lots of pulling power and torque, I can easily pull 3,500 lb. trailer over long distances. Gas economy is reasonable (10-11 l/100km - about 24-30 Imp mpg.). Car has 365,000 on it and runs like new. It cannot be faulted. I would not trade this for a VR 6 any day.
The entire concept of W engines was to put in as many cylinders in the shortest front to rear space but adding only marginal width. They put a 4l. W8 in the Passat into an engine bay made for a 2l. 4 cylinder engine! That is an accomplishment.
The reason it failed in the market place was due to marketing, pure and simple. No one could distinguish the W8 from a V6 from a TDI or 4 unless you knew Volkswagen. Had they made cosmetic changes that were so different and made it stand apart, it is mehhh, whats so special about that car? But get in and drive it, then the differences become noticeable. And it can tow a heavy load too, governed out at 250. I have seen 225 5 years ago and that is FAST.
The W-12 is the same as the W8 but with 4 more plugs, 2l. and 2 turbochargers and a hell of a lot more power 275 to 525. It is used today in the Bentley and Audi as a luxury car and you pay a hefty price for it, but many of the parts are interchangeable - at a price. They are butter smooth and definitely better engines they displaced.
If one could put on 2 turbos on the W8 - you would see 400 hp. But there is literally no space to add them no matter what unless you put in an electric supercharger and that is a tight fit if not impossible.
The Chrysler W5 is simply 5 inline 6 motors that Chrysler was already making onto a common block used for an immediate war motor - high speed development when time was critical.
The Bugatti W16 is essentially the same as the W8 but has a 90 degree V instead of a 72 degree V since space width was no longer a consideration, 4 turbocharges, intercoolers, everything tweaked for power - and at 500,000 a pop, you pay for it. The regular maintenance on it is absurdly expensive - like $40,000 for new tires after some 15,000 km, $20,000 for oil changes that only their mechanics will allow - that kind of nonsense. All this for what? Bragging rights? The car doesn't exactly appeal cosmetically not to me anyway. And recently Koenisegg's V8 has exceeded the latest w-16 using smart technology.
I do the oil change on my Bugatti myself. Big savings!
The Sherman engine wasn't really a"w"configuration,it was simply five six cylinder inlines bolted together.
You can't just simply bolt engines together
@@samueljesse2179 actually you can,it was called the Chrysler A57 multi bank,it was five six cylinder gasoline engines bolted to housing with a central output shaft .
@@samueljesse2179 You don't realize the extent to which desperation can change what's possible.
Several tanks in WW2 effectively used multiple engines configured around a common shaft. Some even used multiple shafts. They were notoriously finnicky and painful to repair.
You really should post something relevant to this century
Good
It would be interesting to see a flat V/Boxer with R arrangement.
Yes Yes Perfecto Extraordinario 👍👉💪❤️
The last one I'd call a radial engine not a W!!
I'm learning English with your videos thanks and like y subscribiros
0:49 That picture was taken in Holland, Ede it’s next to a pancake restaurant. It looks so familiar I had to looked it up. Arnhemseweg 120.
Timing one of those W engines must be a nightmare
Facts
Thanks.
You're welcome
why am i watching this at 2am? nobody knows but its very interesting
Thanks for Watching!
We should be revisiting a close ratio W3.
W12 and w16 are the best engines for cars
No
Bugatti is the one that use the W16 engine with 4 turbos. I love the sound it makes.
0:19 me and bois snickering
Do different K engine configurations
W engine is actually 2 VR engines
My god I've just had the best idea ever let's take two w3's make them together so that is a circular 6 and use it to power aircraft
I know I know genius Einstein level genius I'm also the first man who ever dipped onion rings into ketchup is he everybody was thinking of french fries only but I'm a bit of a trendsetter you see
My favorite part was the Macpaint 1.0 illustrations ;)
I was impressed with the VW VR6. The W 3 air cooled Harley had to be difficult to keep cool.
It's not a W3, it's a radial.
Same as the "V twin" that Harley uses. It isn't a V2 but radial as it shares the same crank pin for both cylinders.
@@tigerpjm Fair. When did shared crank pin engines get defined as radial engines?
@@vernlochtefeld1626 @vernlochtefeld1626
Always has been.
If you continue adding cylinders, you'll get a circular arrangement of cylinders that are all in a line, not staggered if you were to keep adding cylinders, as would be the case with a V engine.
@@vernlochtefeld1626
Also, because all cylinders share the same crank pin (and therefore the same lobe), they fire in sequence.
That's why Harley's sound the way they do. They fire in quick succession and then go silent for the remainder of the crank rotation.
It's a completely different arrangement.
@@tigerpjmnot a radial
At 14'57, you speak about an engine which is constituted of three banks of 8 cylinders, but as you go on with this engine, at 15', you show a w18 engine with two vr 9 blocks...
Next video how about flat engine
pls
Goid information
Go and see Lancia Fulvia 1600, from here the design of the narrow v of 15 degrees started
Lancia patented the narrow v engines in 1915 for aeronautical use, the firsts cars were the Lancia Lamba (NV4) and Trikappa (NV8) in 1922. The Fulvia was one of the last Lancia with narrow v engine before Fiat, which had bought Lancia a few years earlier, decided to rationalise production by using the same engines for both companies.
Excellent synthesis. 12:54 : illustration of W18 is not correct : this is a W24 with 4 banks of 6 cylinders.
10:35 “ “W’R’16” .. the R eh..
bro got the big W engine
now I'm curious of the big L engine
3,000cc W6 Engine
2 × _ I _ Cylinder Arrangement
* Flat Engine
Why don't they make a W9 engine?
Yes
Engines with an odd number of cylinders tend to be very unbalanced.
Why do some W engines look like a wierd type of V engine but others like the W3 they look like a W?
It would be incredible if we ear them
11:50 bro called a Bugati a 'Sports Car'
At 8'41, the name of the French brand is Lorraine, with an "E"
Tbf the VR6 configuration should start to get more attractive. I know VW still uses it but in the Altas and others I might've forgot, but still
Also, what video editor do you use?
10:24 the worst VW 1.4 BMY engine 😬
At 7'31, you show the VAG w12, which is constituted of two vr 6 and NOT three banks of four cylinders;
Good vid but why the robot voice it kinda kills it
Narrator set a new record for the most words mispronounced in the least amount of time.
It’s fucking AI
Put me down for a W16
Can you imagine the sound of W9?
Wow! I just learned something new! Strange I had seen star type engines in old planes but never took notice of W arrangements? Over-engineering pure. Open a flap of a huge motor coach and what do you see? An inline 6 cylinder! How come even container ships dropping the 96cm pistons for a 46cm MAN setup? They go inline and just add pistons and usually stop at 14. Now Bugatti still goes fast but the Tesla Model S Plaid maxed out the bottom end. Koenigsegg is going to be the only one to show the world what a fast luxury car will be. Combustion engines are going to be as relevant to road transport as the dial was to telephones!
If a better battery chemistry than lithium ion is discovered, I would agree that you. But it's still better than lead-acid.
I am surprise why pickup trucks are not made or SUV
can i share this video to my facebook ?I will tag the youtube
link.
the sherman was fitted with a continental engine wright R 975 9 cylinders
W5 ?
Yes it is unique but i can say that this type of engine make the maintenance pain in the butt
Motors are electrical. Engines use fuels...whether in liquid or gaseous form. The terms need to be used correctly. Good video though.
I always think why engines platforms only v or inline.....then this blow my mind
0:45
Ur wrong, actually W30 engine has used in german super-heavy tank Maus. But the Maus tank was a fail, it was too slow, and sink on the ground almost everywhere.
Sherman tank uses W16 engine.
i like the W16
Sir what is er collets? Why it's used in milling machine... Please replay to this iam a student I want to know about it..... Plz
I think a small airplane engine with p[pistons all the way around could be used in a vehicle, but it would have to be put in crank shaft pointing up and down and an elbow piece attached to power the gear box and then the drive shaft.
A radial would be too big to fit in a car. You also can’t rotate the engine like that
W16 engine is also used in Koenigsegg Jesko!! (What a beast…)
You mean the Bugatti Chiron?
Napier Sabre was 2 V12 engines with 180 degrees between them. A flat V24 ...
They were used in Hawker Tempest and Hawker .... I forgot - with some success, and a lot of problems 🙂
Excuse me but I think that the image shown at 5 '05 is a V6 and not a W6...If you count the rockers, you will see three groups of two on each bank, which means... 6 cylinders.
You forgot about the Naiper lion engine
Có kênh nào phiên bản việt như này không mn
There also w10 engines. Only 3 prototypes were build . They were made in 1999 and one Of them is in a bmw e39 from one of vw's ceo's.
do-sen-berg is the pronunciation of that auto manufacturer
I have a W3 air compressor,and i want to build the cylinders to 2Takt or 4Takt petrol engiene, sized like a motorcycle or little buggy framed and thinking on the compact shiftgear 😅
W 16 is best
Yeah it is.
@@TheEngineersPost plz pin my comment
According to you, 3 W16 engines are the most powerful W16 engines in the world.
why are no W10 engines 10 cylinders in an W configuration
in a real W there are always 3 banks in 3 heads.
in a double VR are always 4 banks in 2 heads.
try to divide 10 by 3 or 4.
@@Coolgamer400 what if you combine 2 VR5 engines
@@seancallahanch.8639 good point. didn't thought of these :)
I love motor
11:23 5 valve per cylinder 😳
w16 engine but v-shaped. if it says w should have 3 cylinder blocks then it can only be called w if only 2 cylinder blocks still call it v
imagine adjusting the timing
The world didn't wait the car builders to develop engines.
In fact, car engines are aong the most underdevelopped...
It's funny how a V engine is a V, an inline is inline, a flat is flat and the W isn't even close to a W unless it has 2 cranks which they don't unless home made.
Why aren't there any W9 engines? We've got to know about W10's existence, but nothing about W9.
And VR6
Waiting for the worlds first W64 cilinder engine downsized to fit any normal car.
W6 scematics was a V6
W8,W12 and W16 are double V
if 3 cylinder form a W ,how can you have a W8?
engineer my foot
W engine is an 3 bank 1 crank engine, a duel v is a 3/4 bank engine w 2 cranks, and why does it say w6 and show a v6?
and W40?
I want a small w8 in a compact or a w 12 in a pony car.
Why do we call it double U if it’s obviously two V’s
I made my own W3 that I welded together from an I4, could never figure out 2 things
1) Could never get the fucker to idle
2) Piston wouldn't stop making love to the intake valve specifically
No.
The "W3" and "W4" engines in this video are not W engines, they're radial engines.
There are numerous other errors in this video.
you r wrong.
@EOWS812
Ok, well you can write a letter telling the Royal Society of Automotive Engineers that they're wrong.
I'm sure they'll take you very seriously.
"A radial engine has cylinders arranged in a circle around a central crankshaft, like spokes on a wheel, while a W engine has cylinders arranged in a "W" shape with multiple banks of cylinders angled at different positions, essentially creating a more complex V-shaped engine configuration"