means it’s almost certainly true that every manufacturer has already created an engine larger than any it will produce in future.
Here we take a look at examples from 40 automotive brands, listed in ascending order of capacity. To clarify, we’re concentrating on engines used in vehicles, so competition cars, record breakers, dump trucks and so on don’t count. Let’s take a look: The first on this list, Citroën’s entry is also one of the only ones powered by diesel.
A later model of the same name was powered by smaller, four-cylinder engines. In September 2023, Honda announced its first commercially available V8 of its own design, which has a capacity of Volvo used to be a wider group that combined car and heavy goods vehicle production, and the latter division made ginned as large asAlthough it has produced many high-performance cars, Lancia is not known for its large-capacity engines.
Cadillac later made the 8.2 available across its model range, only to delete it when producing such thirsty engines became unsupportable. To this day, General Motors has never used a bigger motor in any of its production cars, and it probably never will.five years after that. When the model was discontinued in 2017, the V10 was the largest engine fitted to any production car., it was “too big for Plymouth, too outrageous for the Chrysler brand”.