Apollo 1st Gear June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 June 13, 2007 at 3:28 am ↡ Advertisement Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Quantum 5th Gear June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 WOW! so good more impressive sentance 'an improvement of 5% to 10% can be seen with fuel efficiency' 'an improvement of 10% with the power output on a similiar engine displacement comparison' 'as well as improved acceleration responsiveness' if really like that, VVT-i will win over Honda Vtec liao Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Carlover76 Neutral Newbie June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 Guess Toyota R&D is sleeping all this while cos the company concentrating on expanding the company and reducing cost on manufacturing their parts. Only Honda is working hard and putting efforts on their engine technology and design for their cars! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Imuya Clutched June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 This Valvematic is similar to the upcoming Honda's Advance VTEC, A-VTEC. Just have to see how the mechanism they employ for the variable lift works for Valvematic. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Imuya Clutched June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 What is so impressive with the numbers No wonder you have such a hard time choosing your next car Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Carlover76 Neutral Newbie June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 Will wait and see how effective it is cos it does not mean new technology, it is good. You must be aware that all Toyota engine parts are all made in China including items like valve, cylinders, pistons. Take a look at the new technology for gear box like CVT, the Japanese are having a major problem now on the maintenance on their CVT gearbox and all CVT gearboxes have to send back to Japan to repair. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
User12343 Clutched June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 WOW! so good more impressive sentance 'an improvement of 5% to 10% can be seen with fuel efficiency' 'an improvement of 10% with the power output on a similiar engine displacement comparison' 'as well as improved acceleration responsiveness' if really like that, VVT-i will win over Honda Vtec liao i would be very cautious with all these claims. why? here's an example: a particular car maker depicts its fuel-economy claims as 25% improvement in FC every year since 2001. year 2000 FC is say 1x. year 2001 it's 1x + 0.25x = 1.25x year 2002 it's 1x + (1.25x * 0.25) = 1.3125x year 2003 it's 1x + (1.3125x * 0.25) = 1.328125x year 2004 it's 1x + (1.328125x * 0.25) = 1.33203125x year 2005 it's 1x + (1.33203125x * 0.25) = 1.333007813x year 2006 it's 1x + (1.333007813x * 0.25) = 1.333251953x so u can see, they are not wrong in making such claims. it follows a geometric progression that gives marginal gains that tapers off as the years go by. this is based on the improvement in FC compared to the previous year's FC. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Silveratenza Neutral Newbie June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 Hmmm, seems to read this from some publication...isn't that what Hxndx has claimed? Anyway, whatever FC improvement they so call claimed...my friend's 1.8FD is doing just over 10km/l for 70/30 highway/city usage and he is those super miser kind that seldom ram his car... So where is the claim of "FC similar to 1.5L engine" ??? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
EventH 1st Gear June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 your calc seem flawed. lets say a base car model consume 10L/100km and the company improves FC by 10% for each new model compared to the previous one. Model 1 use 10.0L/100km Model 2 10*0.9 9.0L/100km Model 3 9*0.9 8.1L/100km Model 4 8.10.9 7.3L/100km yes the gains in FC is diminishing from model to model, but the gains are hardly insignificant. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
User12343 Clutched June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 tat's y all take all these values with a pinch of salt. seldom ram does not 100% equate to better FC. u have to see what is the optimal engine rpm at what speed, and in the process of reaching that optimal savings, is it slowly reaching there or aggressively reaching that desired speed. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Passion 5th Gear June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 Are you sure?a civic FD can easily goes up to 12km/l for mine.i accelerate until 2.5 or 3rpm.think he didnt send for servicing? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
User12343 Clutched June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 then for the subsequent releases, can we expect up to 3L/100km for a gasoline (non-hybrid) engine? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sturtles 6th Gear June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 (edited) WOW! so good more impressive sentance 'an improvement of 5% to 10% can be seen with fuel efficiency' 'an improvement of 10% with the power output on a similiar engine displacement comparison' 'as well as improved acceleration responsiveness' if really like that, VVT-i will win over Honda Vtec liao -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- i would be very cautious with all these claims. why? here's an example: a particular car maker depicts its fuel-economy claims as 25% improvement in FC every year since 2001. year 2000 FC is say 1x. year 2001 it's 1x + 0.25x = 1.25x year 2002 it's 1x + (1.25x * 0.25) = 1.3125x year 2003 it's 1x + (1.3125x * 0.25) = 1.328125x year 2004 it's 1x + (1.328125x * 0.25) = 1.33203125x year 2005 it's 1x + (1.33203125x * 0.25) = 1.333007813x year 2006 it's 1x + (1.333007813x * 0.25) = 1.333251953x so u can see, they are not wrong in making such claims. it follows a geometric progression that gives marginal gains that tapers off as the years go by. this is based on the improvement in FC compared to the previous year's FC. hmm.. isn't 25% improvement in FC 1.25 x the previous claimed economy figure? Regardless of how I interprete it, 25% improvement every year for 5 years is not as small as your sums have shown. Edited June 15, 2007 by Sturtles Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
User12343 Clutched June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 i would not know in time to come how efficient are these engines are, but up til now, it's still a fact that gasoline engines are still very inefficient despite radical technological improvements. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
W2K_83 1st Gear June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 (edited) Hmmm, seems to read this from some publication...isn't that what Hxndx has claimed? Anyway, whatever FC improvement they so call claimed...my friend's 1.8FD is doing just over 10km/l for 70/30 highway/city usage and he is those super miser kind that seldom ram his car... So where is the claim of "FC similar to 1.5L engine" ??? I'm doing 11km/l for 50/50 highway/city usage with average rpm of 2.5, so was my previous 323. Thus I am having no complaint, same FC but more power. Edited June 15, 2007 by W2K_83 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Elfenstar 3rd Gear June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 Hmmm, seems to read this from some publication...isn't that what Hxndx has claimed? Anyway, whatever FC improvement they so call claimed...my friend's 1.8FD is doing just over 10km/l for 70/30 highway/city usage and he is those super miser kind that seldom ram his car... So where is the claim of "FC similar to 1.5L engine" ??? Got lah... same as my 1990 1.5l toyota To be frank though, if you look at the FC for the 1.5 vs 1.8 in the civic, lancer, corolla etc class (the 1.5 petrol versions can be found in the commercial versions of these vehicles), the FC for the 1.8 is better simply because it has to work less hard to maintain normal drivability. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
EventH 1st Gear June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 (edited) I didn't say that. I am just saying that your calculation might be off. 3L/100km ... can on a gasoline radio control car. On a more serious note, http://ruby.inquirer.net/roadtrip/display....t=0426news4.php They achieve 22.1km/L for a Golf 1.6 FSI (manufacturer spec 14.3km/L). http://paultan.org/archives/2007/06/11/hon...nomy-challenge/ The winner hit 26.2km/L on 1.3L Honda City.(manufacturer spec 16km/L) Moral of the story, with the right driver/journey/car combination, 33.3km/L might just be possible today for gasoline car. Edited June 15, 2007 by EventH Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shull Turbocharged June 15, 2007 Share June 15, 2007 Guess Toyota R&D is sleeping all this while cos the company concentrating on expanding the company and reducing cost on manufacturing their parts. Only Honda is working hard and putting efforts on their engine technology and design for their cars! ya lor..tot honda has this technology in their agenda long time back? just the question as to when they are going to release it in their car.. ↡ Advertisement Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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