Ford boosting Honeywell turbocharger sales with EcoBoost engines
Ford is planning to make a huge push for turbocharged engines starting in April 2009 with the introduction of the first in its line of EcoBoost engines. Honeywell Turbo Technologies will be supplying Ford with turbochargers for the 3.5L V6 and the followup four cylinder EcoBoost engines. Honeywell is estimating that turbocharged engines will go from 30 percent of global vehicle installations to 38 percent over the next five years. Ford and other manufacturers are adding direct injection and turbocharging to smaller displacement engines to allow them to be substituted for larger engines in a variety applications. The 3.5L EcoBoost V6 will be used in place of larger V8s in a vehicles ranging from the Ford Flex and Lincoln MKS to the F-150. Smaller cars like the Fusion will use a 4 cylinder EcoBoost engine where they would have used a V6 before. Honeywell is not the only manufacturer to be banking on turbos. In recent months Continental and Bosch have both announced plans to start manufacturing turbochargers.[Source: Ford]
TURBO SALES ON THE RISE; FORD'S ECOBOOST LEADS THE CHARGE
Turbos are the secret behind the downsizing, allowing for smaller displacement without performance loss.
DEARBORN, Mich., July 30, 2008 – Honeywell Turbo Technologies, a technology leader in engine boosting and modern turbo technologies, estimates that the global turbocharger segment will grow from 30 percent of the overall automotive market to more than 38 percent by 2013 as automakers look to boost engines to help increase fuel efficiency and reduce emissions without hampering the fun-to-drive factor.
Ford is at the forefront of this spiking trend with its EcoBoost engine strategy, applying modern turbocharging and direct injection technologies to smaller displacement engines that offer improved fuel economy and fewer emissions, yet deliver performance feel of larger displacement engines.
What separates Ford from the automotive pack using turbo technology today: Ford will apply the technology in significantly higher volumes, featuring turbocharged EcoBoost I-4 and V-6 applications in half a million vehicles annually within the next five years – across multiple product lines globally.
Turbos are the secret behind the downsizing, allowing for smaller displacement without performance loss. Unlike a supercharger, today's turbocharger uses the waste energy from the exhaust gas to drive the turbine – energy that would have otherwise been lost. The result is increased torque and better performance, without increasing engine displacement.
EcoBoost engines will be powered by turbochargers that leverage the latest advances in turbine design and materials. These aren't the turbos of the 1980s that delivered great amounts of torque yet frequently were plagued by short time gaps between stepping on the pedal and feeling the power – turbo lag. They are smaller, spin faster, offer variable flow solutions and are fully interconnected with the engine management system for peak performance.
EcoBoost debuts on the Lincoln MKS with a twin-turbocharged 3.5-liter V-6. This engine will deliver upwards of 340-plus lb.-ft. of torque across a wide engine range – 2,000 to 5,000 rpm – versus 270 to 310 lb.-ft. of torque for a conventional naturally aspirated 4.6-liter V-8 over the same speed range.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Killroy 10:21AM (8/02/2008)
Wow, you apply the same tricks that you do to diesel to make it efficient, direct injection turbo charging and what do you get? You get efficiency that rivals a diesel, less expensive fuel, less expensive exhaust after treatment, no problems with NOx. Yet if one does not downsize that cars and make them lighter, then there is little to gain by Eco Boost. The ford flex will still consume a lot of fuel. The heat engine if flawed and its theoretically perfect efficiency is still VERY wasteful. That is why if you want efficiency that is double, triple or quadruple, then you need electric motors.
Reply
BillySharps 1:54PM (8/01/2008)
Ummm, yeah? We know that. Electric motors were never the problem in electric cars. It's the expensive batteries. This blog entry is about downsizing and turbocharging to get better fuel economy while retaining power output. The 2wd Flex is rated at 24hwy, so the 3.5 Ecoboost should get close to 29 hwy, or an increase of about 20%. I'd say that's fairly impressive given that it can carry seven people. The VW Rabbit 2.5 is rated at 29hwy, so if Ford can deliver, I will be impressed.