Submitted by Daftworks t3_11ce6mt in explainlikeimfive
Some American muscle cars and Italian supercars will both have a V8 but they make wildly different noises. Same goes for Harley Davidsons vs regular motorbikes. Why is that?
Submitted by Daftworks t3_11ce6mt in explainlikeimfive
Some American muscle cars and Italian supercars will both have a V8 but they make wildly different noises. Same goes for Harley Davidsons vs regular motorbikes. Why is that?
bal00 t1_ja2qlbn wrote
Ferrari V8s fire their cylinder like this:
O-O-O-O
Most American V8s fire their cylinders like this:
OO-O--O
Longer explanation:
There are two different types of V8, one with a cross-plane crankshaft and one with a flat-plane crankshaft. This refers to how the crankshaft of the engine would look when viewed head on: + vs. |.
Flat-plane V8s are basically two inline-4 engines glued together, and that's why they sound a bit like a 4-cylinder. That's the type you'd find in most Ferraris or McLarens for example. They're lighter, can rev higher, but they vibrate more.
What determines the sound of the engine are the gaps between firing events of the cylinders of one bank (one side). In a flat-plane V8, if you only look at say the driver side bank of the engine, one cylinder fires every 180°.
With a cross-plane crankshaft, these gaps are uneven, specifically 90-180-270-180. Sometimes two cylinders fire in quick succession, sometimes there's a longer pause, so you get the characteristic rumble.