HI all,
does anyone knows what was the Porsche implication in the develpment of the R engine 850, T5- R or R engines !?
This is very hard to get precise informations on this even in Europe.
thanks for great help.
Porsche implication in the development of the R engine 850
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IVIUSTANG
- Posts: 562
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- Year and Model: 2006 XC70
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Check out this thread:
https://www.matthewsvolvosite.com/forums ... =1&t=25012
In short it would seem Porsche was involved in the intake and exhaust manifolds on certain Volvo's.
- Jesse
https://www.matthewsvolvosite.com/forums ... =1&t=25012
In short it would seem Porsche was involved in the intake and exhaust manifolds on certain Volvo's.
- Jesse
1998 S70 T5 SE 290,000 KM sideswiped total loss(Sweet ride!)
2007 S60 2.5T loaded 63,000 KM SOLD!
2006 XC70 350,000 KM, 2" BadSwede lift kit, steel skidplate, Hilton Stage 1 tune, big burly tires
2008 S80 V8 245,000 KM SOLD!
2015 V60 T5 Premier+ 98,000KM
2007 S60 2.5T loaded 63,000 KM SOLD!
2006 XC70 350,000 KM, 2" BadSwede lift kit, steel skidplate, Hilton Stage 1 tune, big burly tires
2008 S80 V8 245,000 KM SOLD!
2015 V60 T5 Premier+ 98,000KM
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cn90
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During the development years of the 850 model, it took Volvo engineers some 10 years to introduce the first ever FWD car: the 850.
Volvo wanted more than 4 cylinders but less than 6 cylinders, so Porsche engineers helped them with B52xx (B5254 etc.) engine development in the early 1990s.
Search old Car and Driver magazine articles.
Volvo wanted more than 4 cylinders but less than 6 cylinders, so Porsche engineers helped them with B52xx (B5254 etc.) engine development in the early 1990s.
Search old Car and Driver magazine articles.
2004 V70 2.5T 100K+
2005 XC90 2.5T 110K+
2005 XC90 2.5T 110K+
cn90 wrote:During the development years of the 850 model, it took Volvo engineers some 10 years to introduce the first ever FWD car: the 850.
Volvo wanted more than 4 cylinders but less than 6 cylinders, so Porsche engineers helped them with B52xx (B5254 etc.) engine development in the early 1990s.
Search old Car and Driver magazine articles.
This could explain how Volvo extracted more power out of their N/A I5 than GM could out of the 60 degree 3.1L V6 they shoehorned into a goe-zillion cars (it falls a measly 2hp short of the power of the 3.4L 60deg V6 too)
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