Alfa Romeo Car Engines, Used Giulietta, Spyder, GTV and other
The
Alfa Romeo Twin
Cam engine series was a inline-4 cylinder engine, used, secondhand or reconditioned
are produced by Alfa Romeo from 1954 to 1994, models includes 2000, GT Junior,
Sprint GT, and many more. See also some amazing deals on our
BMW Engines.
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Alfa Romeo Engines
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The features of the Giulietta engine include
- Aluminium alloy engine block with cast-iron cylinder
liners
- Aluminium alloy cylinder head with hemispherical combustion
chambers
- Forged steel crankshaft running in five main bearings
- Double overhead camshafts driven by a double row timing
chain
- Camshafts directly actuate valves via bucket tappets
- Two inclined valves per cylinder with near central located
spark plug
- Inlet and exhaust valves separated by an angle of 80
degrees
This
made the Alfa Romeo Twin Cam engine an advanced design for a production car of the
mid 1950s. These design features, with minor variations, would form the basis of
all future versions of the engine. The capacity increased to 1570 cc with the introduction
of the Giulia in 1962. Racing versions of the Giulia engine include
the twin plug engine used in the GTA, which featured a cylinder head with two spark
plugs per cylinder. A turbocharged version of the 1779 cc single plug engine was fitted to
the Alfa Romeo 75, providing 155 bhp in standard form and a potential
for a power output of 300 bhp in Group A touring car racing form. The 75 was fitted
with a twin spark plug per cylinder head design, which provides improved fuel ignition
and allows an improved combustion chamber shape with narrower angle between intake
and exhaust valve. This combined with variable valve timing and electronic fuel
injection to give a power output of 148 bhp. Production of the Alfa Romeo Twin Cam
ended in 1994, by which time it had been superseded by the newer 16 valve Twin Spark
engine.
Find more information on some Alfa Romeo Models here:
Alfa Romeo 147 Engine
Alfa Romeo 159 Engine
Alfa Romeo Brera Engine
Alfa Romeo GT Engine
Alfa Romeo Spider Engine
Alfa Romeo Twin Spark (TS) technology
engine was used first time
in Alfa Romeo racing cars in 1923. In the early 1960’s TS was used in their racing
cars (GTA, TZ, Spider, 2600) to enable it to achieve a higher power
output from its engines. In the early and middle 1980s, Alfa Romeo incorporated
this technology into their road cars to enhance their performance and to comply
with stricter emission controls. Twin Spark name refers usually to engines made
after 1986 when the 164 Twin Spark were introduced. The TS series engines are all
'4 cylinder inline' with twin cam (DOHC) shafts,
and are developed first with 8 valves (an all alloy wet-liner engine) and later
with 16 valves (a modern iron block engine with alloy head). All cars featuring
the Twin Spark engines since the
Alfa Romeo 155
(which originally also came with the 8V unit) use the 16 valve
models over the 8V ones. The Twin Spark name comes from the fact that there are
two spark plugs per cylinder. The two sparks on the early Alfa twin spark engines
fired on the power stroke to help create a larger flame front ensuring less unburnt
fuel in the exhaust as well as a higher thermodynamic efficiency. The 8V units have
8 identical spark plugs, while the 16V ones have a larger and a smaller plug in
each cylinder. On the later 16v TS engines the smaller plug ignites on the exhaust
stroke to reduce emissions. The common TS 16V engines, 1.6, 1.8 and 2.0, all use
a 10 mm diameter and a 14 mm diameter plug per cylinder. The engines also incorporate
two devices to improve the performance under normal operation, the Camshaft Phase Variator and the air intake Variable
Inlet Control on the 1.8 and 2.0 litre versions.
The engines also incorporate two devices to improve the performance under normal
operation, the Camshaft
Phase Variator and the air intake Variable Inlet Control on the 1.8 and
2.0 litre versions. Alfa Romeo's in-house V6 engine debuted in 1979 with the
Alfa 6, and became famous in the later 164. The first
engine introduced was the 2.5 L version. With modifications, it is possibile to
increase the capacity to 3.8 L.
GM High Feature engines,
the
3600 LY7, 159, Brera and some more (and derivative LP1) are members
of General Motors' new High Feature (or HFV6) engine family of modern DOHC V6s.
This new family of engines was introduced in 2004 with the Cadillac CTS. Holden
sells the HFV6 under the name, Alloytec. The block was designed to be expandable
from 2.8 L to 4.0 L.
It is a 60° 24-valve design with aluminum block and heads and Sequential Electronic
Fuel Injection. Most versions feature continuously-variable cam phasing on both
intake and exhaust valves and electronic throttle control. Other features include
piston oil-jet capability, forged crankshaft and connecting rods, variable intake,
and electronic throttle control. It was developed by the same international team
responsible for the Ecotec, including the Opel engineers responsible for the 54°
V6, with involvement with design and development engineering from Ricardo PLC of
England.