The Bugatti V16 Engine Has A Metre-Long Crankshaft
At the end of February, we saw (and heard) the engine that will power Bugattiās next all-new model: a V16, paired with a hybrid setup of some sort. Now, thanks to Mate Rimac, CEO of the Bugatti Rimac joint venture, weāre able to glean a bit more information about the mighty new engine, including that its crankshaft isĀ a metreĀ long.
The information came on Rimacās social media channels, where he shared some behind-the-scenes images of the engineās development. Turns out that two parallel banks of eight cylinders need a seriously long crankshaft to move them ā whoād have thunk it. Rimac also gave us a look at the engineās 16 pistons, deconstructed and laid out next to one another.
Bugattiās first hybrid, itās basically a foregone conclusion that the electric element will be developed by Rimac, but right now, the core drivetrain configuration is about all the info we have on the car. Whether itāll be another mid-engined super-coupe in the image of Veyron and Chiron, or if itāll take another form, remains to be seen. We donāt even have any idea what itāll be called, but weāll find out when it gets a full reveal in June.
Things like power, engine capacity and performance are equally up in the air, but we do know what the engine looks like, and what it sounds like. What it looks like is, quite frankly, a piece of sculpture; all carbon fibre, beautifully curving pipework and intricately crafted cam covers.
What it sounds like isā¦ something different to any Bugatti thatās come before it. It sounds rawer, more aggressive, more eager to rev ā perhaps even naturally aspirated? This could suggest a new approach for Bugatti, something different to the goal of outright velocity that itās tended to pursue in the past.
It joins aĀ tiny handful of V16-powered road cars, the last of which was 1991ās vanishingly rare Cizeta-Moroder V16T.Ā Now, finally, this fleetingly rare engine layout is making a comeback. We canāt wait to see the sort of machine itās powering.
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