Did You Know Ferrari Once Built A Supercharged Three-Cylinder?

Started by cawimmer430, July 02, 2020, 07:15:19 AM

cawimmer430

Did You Know Ferrari Once Built A Supercharged Three-Cylinder?

If you've ever been to Ferrari's Museum in Maranello, you may have come across an engine unlike any other from Ferrari's history; a tiny, 1.3-liter three-cylinder two-stroke engine that is supercharged. Yes, a three-cylinder, nothing like the V8s and V12s which Ferrari builds exclusively nowadays for its road cars.

In this video from Drive Tribe, we discover that Ferrari built this compact three-cylinder back in the early 1990s as a test bed for a two-stroke six-cylinder. It figured that if it successfully developed a three-cylinder, it could essentially join two together to make a supercharged two-stroke V6.


www.youtube.com/watch?v=enW9ajxi0lE


Although two-stroke engines have largely fallen out of favor due to their inefficiency and narrow powerband, Ferrari's was a little different. It used twin-port fuel injection rather than a carburetor like a normal two-stroke, as well as exhaust valves controlled by a camshaft. As for the supercharger, it helped to overcome some of the pitfalls of a two-stroke by pumping more air into the cylinders while also helping to flush out the exhaust gasses, increasing the efficiency of combustion.

It remains unclear just why this Ferrari engine never made it to production. The presenter believes that at the time, there wasn't the right technology to ensure such an engine would be clean enough. It also wouldn't have had enough power for a Ferrari as, in three-cylinder form, reportedly produced just 130 hp. However, it is claimed the Italian automaker did consider turbocharging it so it could deliver upwards of 216 hp, which would double to 432 hp as a six-cylinder.


Link: https://www.carscoops.com/2020/07/did-you-know-ferrari-once-built-a-supercharged-three-cylinder/
-2018 Mercedes-Benz A250 AMG Line (W177)



WIMMER FOTOGRAFIE - Professional Automotive Photography based in Munich, Germany
www.wimmerfotografie.de
www.facebook.com/wimmerfotografie

MX793

Only 100 hp/l out of a supercharged, fuel injected, liquid cooled 2-stroke in the 90s?  Pretty poor showing.  The Japanese were getting that out of air-cooled, carbureted, naturally aspirated triples on street bikes back in the 70s.  Mazda was getting more than that out of their naturally aspirated 1.3l Wankel in the 90s, and Wankels have about the same volumetric efficiency potential as 2 strokes.
Needs more Jiggawatts

2016 Ford Mustang GTPP / 2011 Toyota Rav4 Base AWD / 2014 Kawasaki Ninja 1000 ABS
1992 Nissan 240SX Fastback / 2004 Mazda Mazda3s / 2011 Ford Mustang V6 Premium / 2007 Suzuki GSF1250SA Bandit / 2006 VW Jetta 2.5

cawimmer430

Quote from: MX793 on July 02, 2020, 07:55:18 AM
Only 100 hp/l out of a supercharged, fuel injected, liquid cooled 2-stroke in the 90s?  Pretty poor showing.  The Japanese were getting that out of air-cooled, carbureted, naturally aspirated triples on street bikes back in the 70s.  Mazda was getting more than that out of their naturally aspirated 1.3l Wankel in the 90s, and Wankels have about the same volumetric efficiency potential as 2 strokes.

Italian engine. The other 100-horses were probably napping. :lol:
-2018 Mercedes-Benz A250 AMG Line (W177)



WIMMER FOTOGRAFIE - Professional Automotive Photography based in Munich, Germany
www.wimmerfotografie.de
www.facebook.com/wimmerfotografie

Soup DeVille

Regardless of performance; nobody would ever buy a 3-cylinder Ferrari.
Maybe we need to start off small. I mean, they don't let you fuck the glumpers at Glumpees without a level 4 FuckPass, do they?

1975 Honda CB750, 1986 Rebel Rascal (sailing dinghy), 2015 Mini Cooper, 2020 Winnebago 31H (E450), 2021 Toyota 4Runner, 2022 Lincoln Aviator

CaminoRacer

Quote from: Soup DeVille on July 02, 2020, 09:40:38 AM
Regardless of performance; nobody would ever buy a 3-cylinder Ferrari.


But would they buy FOUR 3-cylinder Ferrari's?
2020 BMW 330i, 1969 El Camino, 2017 Bolt EV

MX793

Quote from: Soup DeVille on July 02, 2020, 09:40:38 AM
Regardless of performance; nobody would ever buy a 3-cylinder Ferrari.


Sounds like the idea was to ultimately make a V6, and this was a smaller scale proof of concept.  And Ferrari has definitely done V6s.  They did some 4-cylinder cars once upon a time, but I think those were track-only cars.
Needs more Jiggawatts

2016 Ford Mustang GTPP / 2011 Toyota Rav4 Base AWD / 2014 Kawasaki Ninja 1000 ABS
1992 Nissan 240SX Fastback / 2004 Mazda Mazda3s / 2011 Ford Mustang V6 Premium / 2007 Suzuki GSF1250SA Bandit / 2006 VW Jetta 2.5

Eye of the Tiger

Quote from: Soup DeVille on July 02, 2020, 09:40:38 AM
Regardless of performance; nobody would ever buy a 3-cylinder Ferrari.

Who are you calling nobody?
2008 TUNDRA (Truck Ultra-wideband Never-say-die Daddy Rottweiler Awesome)