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This is shamlessly lifted from wiki
Original link here - it does make some fascinating reading. One particular one that stands out. First Digital climate control in 1975 on a roller and another is first drive by wire throttle on the 1988 750i. Amazing really!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_automotive_superlatives#Engine_technologies
Engine capacity/displacement
1 L = 1,000 cubic centimeters = 61.0237 cubic inches
1 in³ = 16.3871 cubic centimeters
[edit] Engine output
Power
1 horsepower (hp) = 1 brake hp (bhp) = 1.0139 metric hp (PS) = 0.7457 kilowatts (kW)
1 metric hp = 0.9863 hp = 0.7355 kilowatts
1 kilowatt = 1.3410 hp = 1.3596 metric hp
Torque
1 foot-pound force of torque ( ft•lbff) = 1.3558 newton-meter (N•m)
1 newton-meter = 0.7376 foot-pound force
[edit] Fuel economy
1 mile per US gallon = 1.2009 miles per imperial gallon = 0.4252 kilometers per L = 235.208 liters per 100 kilometers
1 mile per imperial gallon = 0.8327 miles per US gallon = 0.3540 kilometers per L = 282.4731 liters per 100 kilometers
1 kilometer per L = 2.3521 miles per US gallon = 2.8247 miles per imperial gallon
1 L per 100 kilometers = 235.208 miles per US gallon = 282.4731 miles per imperial gallon
[edit] Power to weight or weight to power
(See also: weight-to-power ratio)
1 hp per short ton = 1.12 hp per long ton = 0.82199 kilowatt per metric ton
1 hp per long ton = 0.89286 hp per short ton = 0.76890 kilowatt per metric ton
1 kilowatt per metric ton = 1.2166 hp per short ton = 1.3625 hp per long ton
1 pound per hp = 0.60828 kilogram per kilowatt
[edit] Engine capacity
[edit] Flat-twin
Smallest flat-twin engine (gasoline) - 0.38 L (375 cc/23 in³) - 1948 Citroën 2CV
Largest flat-twin engine (gasoline) - 4.83 L (4838 cc/295 in³) - 1904 Lanchester 18 [1]
[edit] Straight-3 (I3)
Smallest I3 engine (gasoline) - 0.36 L (357 cc/22 in³) - 1967 Suzuki Fronte
Smallest I3 engine (Diesel) - 0.8 L (799 cc/48.8 in³) - 2000 Smart Fortwo cdi
Largest I3 engine (gasoline) - 1.2 L (1198 cc/73 in³) - 2002 Volkswagen Polo/SEAT Ibiza/Škoda Fabia
Largest I3 engine (Diesel) - 1.8 L (1779 cc/109 in³) - 1984 Alfa Romeo 33 1.8 TD
[edit] Straight-4 (I4)
Smallest I4 engine (gasoline) - 0.36 L (356 cc/21.7 in³) - 1963 Honda T360 AS250E
Smallest I4 engine (Diesel) - 1.25 L (1248 cc/65 in³) - 2003 Fiat Nuova Panda MultiJet
Largest I4 engine (gasoline) - 3.2 L (3202 cc/195.45 in³) - 1965 IHC Scout
Largest I4 engine (Diesel) - 4.1 L (4100 cc/250.2 in³) - Toyota Mega Cruiser 15B-FTE Diesel
[edit] V4 engine
Smallest V4 engine - 0.7 L (746 cc/46 in³) - 1960 ZAZ 965 V4
Largest V4 engine - 2.6 L (2568 cc/157 in³) - 1930 Lancia Lambda V4
[edit] Flat-4
Smallest Flat 4 engine - 0.9 L (897 cc) - Lloyd Arabella
Largest Flat 4 engine - 2.5 L (2484 cc) - Lancia Gamma
[edit] Straight-5 (I5)
Smallest I5 engine (gasoline) - 1.9 L (1921 cc/117 in³) - 1981 Audi 100 1.9 E
Smallest I5 engine (Diesel) - 2.0 L (1986 cc/121 in³) - 1978 Audi 100 2.0 D
Largest I5 engine (gasoline) - 3.7 L (3653 cc/223 in³) - 2007 GM Atlas L5R 3700
Largest I5 engine (Diesel) - 3.5 L (3469 cc/212 in³) - 1990 Toyota Land Cruiser 1PZ Diesel
[edit] Straight-6 (I6)
Smallest I6 engine (gasoline) - 1.1 L (1087 cc/68 in³) - 1933 MG K-Type
Smallest I6 engine (Diesel) - 2.4 L (2383 cc/145 in³) - 1979 Volvo 240 D24 engine
Largest I6 engine (gasoline) - 8 L (7983 cc/487 in³) - Bentley 8 Litre
Largest I6 engine (Diesel) - 6.7 L (6690 cc/408 in³) - 2007 Dodge Ram 2500/3500 Cummins B series turbodiesel
[edit] V6 engine
Smallest V6 engine (gasoline) - 1.6 L (1597 cc/97 in³) - 1992 Mitsubishi Lancer 6A1
Honorable mention: - 1.0 L - 1960s DKW F102 (a two-stroke V6) (about 100 produced for testing, 13 fitted to road cars)[2]
Honorable mention: - 1.4 L (1396cc) Smart V6 consisting of two combined 3-cyl Smart Roadster engines. This twin turbocharged gasoline engine develops 225 bhp (168 kW/228 PS) at 5500 rpm with 162 ft·lbf (220 N·m) of torque from 2250-4500 rpm). Only 10 prototype Smart Coupé Brabus were fitted in 2003 with this engine made by Mercedes-Benz.
Smallest V6 engine (Diesel) - 2.5 L (2496 cc/152 in³) - 1996 Audi/VW 2.5 TDI (in multiple cars)
Largest V6 engine (gasoline) - 7.8 L (7800 cc/478 in³) - 1966 GMC 1000-3500 series 478E 60° V6
Largest V6 engine (Diesel automobiles) - 4.3 L (4304 cc/262 in³) - 1982 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme, Supreme Brougham, Calais GM LT6
[edit] Flat-6
Smallest Flat 6 engine - 2.0 L (1991 cc) - Porsche 911
Largest Flat 6 engine - 5.5 L (5490 cc) - Tucker Torpedo
Honorable mention - 9.7 L (9651 cc) - Tucker Torpedo prototype, never saw production
[edit] V8 engine
Smallest road car V8 engine (gasoline) - 2.0 L (1990 cc/121 in³) - 1975 Ferrari 208 GT4
Smallest V8 engine (Diesel) - 3.3 L (3328 cc/203 in³) - 2000 Audi A8 3.3 TDI
Largest V8 engine (gasoline) - 8.2 L (8194 cc/500 in³) - 1970 Cadillac Eldorado 500
Honorable mention: 12.8 L (12782 cc/780 in³) - 2006 Weineck Cobra 780 (limited edition tuner car)
Largest V8 engine (Diesel) - 7.3 L (7275 cc/444 in³) - 1997 Ford F250 Power Stroke
[edit] W8 engine
Honourable mention: 4.0 L - 2002-2004 Volkswagen Passat W8 4 Motion
[edit] V10 engine
Smallest V10 engine - 4.9 L (4921 cc/301 in³) - Volkswagen Touareg V10 TDI
Largest V10 engine - 8.4 L (8381 cc/511 in³) - 2008 Dodge Viper
[edit] Flat-12
Smallest road car Flat 12 engine - 4.45 L - Ferrari 365 GT4 Berlinetta Boxer
Largest Flat 12 engine - 5.0 L - Ferrari 512 Berlinetta Boxer
[edit] V12 engine
Smallest road car V12 engine - 2.0 L (1995 cc/122 in³) - 1948 Ferrari 166 Inter Colombo
Honorable mention: - 1.5 L (1497 cc/91 in³) - 1947 Ferrari 125 S Colombo (Not a production road car).
Largest V12 engine - 11.5 L (11,508c cc/702 in³) - 1960 to 1965 GMC Twin-Six "702" for commercial trucks
Honorable mention: - 7.5 L (7467c cc/456 in³) - 1934 Packard Twelve Victoria (pre-WWII)
Honorable mention: - 7.7 L (7730 cc/471 in³) - TVR Cerbera Speed 12 (Vehicle never reached production).
[edit] W12 engine
Largest W12 engine - 6.0 L (5999 cc/366 cu in³) 2005 Audi A8 Quattro
[edit] V16 engine
Largest V16 engine - 8.0 L (8046 cc/491 in³) - Marmon Sixteen
Honorable mention: 13.6 L (13600 cc/829 in³) 2003 Cadillac Sixteen (concept car)
Smallest road car V16 engine - 7.1 L (7062 cc/431 in³) - Cadillac Series 90
Honorable mention: 1.5 L (1488 cc/91 in³) BRM British Racing Motors V16 (not a production engine)
[edit] W16 engine
Smallest W16 engine - 8.0 L (7993 cc) - 2005 Bugatti Veyron
Largest W16 engine - 8.0 L (7993 cc) - 2005 Bugatti Veyron
[edit] Dimensions
[edit] Overall
Longest - 6650 mm (261.8 in) - 2006 Ford F-350 Super Duty Crew Cab Long Bed
Passenger car - 6426 mm (253 in) - 1975 Cadillac Fleetwood Seventy-Five [3]
Honorable mention - 6400 mm (252 in) - 1932 Bugatti Royale (Few produced)
Commercial - 6852 mm (269.8 in) - Checker Aerocar
Honorable mention - 6680 mm (263.0 in) - 2005 Mercedes-Benz (in US Dodge) Sprinter High Roof
Widest - 2474 mm - 2002 Unimog U5000
Highest - 1632 mm (64.3 in) - 2006 Rolls Royce Phantom ("Highest passenger car")
Shortest - 1340 mm (52.8 in) - 1962 Peel P50 (3 wheels)
Honorable mention - 2286 mm (90 in) - 1956 Isetta (4 wheels)
Lowest - 39 in (991 mm) - 1967 Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale (18 produced)
Honorable mention - 37 in (940 mm) - Concept Centaur GT (Not a production car)
Honorable mention - 32 in (813 mm) - Adams Brothers Probe 16 (Only 3 produced)
[edit] Wheelbase
Longest wheelbase - 4475 mm (176.2 in) - 2006 Ford F-350 Super Duty Chassis Crew Cab (truck)
Honorable mention - 3900 mm (153.3 in) - 1964 Mercedes-Benz 600 - longest wheelbase car
Honorable mention - 4800 mm (189 in) - Checker Aerocar (Not a consumer vehicle)
Shortest wheelbase - 1270 mm (50 in) - 1962 Peel P50
Honorable mention - 1500 mm (59.1 in) - 1956 Isetta
Honorable mention - 1800 mm (70.9 in) - 2003 Suzuki Twin
[edit] Track
Widest Front - 1,920 mm (75.6 in) - 2002 Unimog U5000
Widest Rear - 1,920 mm (75.6 in) - 2002 Unimog U5000
Narrowest Front - 990 mm (39 in) - Peel P50
Narrowest Rear - 521 mm (20.5 in) - Isetta
[edit] Weight
Heaviest - 3681 kg (8114 lb) curb weight - 2006 Hummer H1 Alpha Wagon
Lightest - 59 kg (132 lb) DIN - 1962 Peel P50 (3 wheels)
Honorable mention - 350 kg (770 lb) DIN - 1956 Isetta (4 wheels)
[edit] Other
Largest iron brake disc - 405 mm (16 in) - 2004 Bentley Continental GT
Largest carbon ceramic brake disc - 420 mm (16.5 in) - 2006 Bentley Continental GT Diamond Series, 2007 Bentley Continental GT Speed
Largest fuel tank - 290 L (76.6 US gal/63.8 imp gal) - 1986 Lamborghini LM002
Largest tires (height) - 1041.4 mm (41 in) - 2006 International CXT
Largest tires (weight) - 90.71 kg (200 lb) - 2006 International CXT
[edit] Power
[edit] Most power
Petrol/Gasoline - (naturally-aspirated) - 485 kW (660 PS/651 hp) - 2003 Enzo Ferrari V12 engine
Honorable mention: 820 kW (1115 PS/1100 hp) - 2006 Weineck Cobra 780 (limited edition tuner car)
Front-wheel drive: 226 kW (307 PS/303 hp) - GM LS4, 2005 Chevrolet Impala SS and Monte Carlo SS
Honorable mention: 298 kW (400 hp) 1970 Cadillac Eldorado (400hp and 550ft/lbs measured at the crank)
Petrol/Gasoline - (forced-induction) - 736 kW (1001 PS/987 hp) - 2005 Bugatti Veyron (quad-turbocharged W16 engine)
Honorable mention: 879.9 kW (1196 PS/1180 hp) - 2007 SSC Ultimate Aero TT (appears that less than 20 will be produced)
Diesel - 368 kW (500 PS/493 hp) - Audi V12 TDI in the Audi Q7
[edit] Most torque
Petrol (naturally-aspirated) - 775 N·m (572 ft·lbf), 1997 Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR 6.9 L (5987 cc/365 in³) M120 V12 engine.
Honorable Mention: 1760 N·m (1298.1 ft·lbf), 2006 Weineck Cobra 780 cui Limited Edition (12782 cc/780 in³) V8 engine. (Production car status is debatable.)
Petrol (forced-induction) - 1250 N·m (922 ft·lbf), 2005 Bugatti Veyron 8.0 L (7993 cc/488 in³) quad-turbocharged W16 engine.
Honorable Mention: 1303 N·m (961 ft·lbf), 2007 SSC Ultimate Aero TT (6345 cc/387.2 in³) twin-turbo V8 engine. (limited production of 25)
Diesel - 1000 N·m (738 ft·lbf), Audi Q7 V12 TDI 6.0 L (5934 cc/362 in³) Twin Turbo V12
[edit] Most specific power (power to weight ratio)
100–200 hp — 288.75 hp/metric ton (7.64 lb/hp) — Lotus 340R, 190 hp (142 kW) and 658 kg (1451 lb)
200–300 hp — 657 hp/metric ton (3.35 lb/hp) — Ariel Atom 2 supercharged 300 hp (224 kW) and 456 kg (1005 lb)
300–400 hp — 381 hp/metric ton (5.79 lb/hp) — 2003 TVR Tuscan S 400 hp (298 kW) and 1050 kg (2315 lb)
400+ hp — 1045 hp/metric ton (1.91 lb/hp) - 2007 Caparo T1 V8 engine 575 hp (429 kW) and 470 kg (1036 lb)
400+ category previously listed as 949 hp/metric ton (2.33 lb/hp) — 2007 SSC Ultimate Aero TT V8 engine 1180 hp (880 kW) and 1247 kg (2750 lb).
[edit] Most specific engine output (power per unit displacement)
Petrol/Gasoline (naturally-aspirated) piston engine - 92.1 kW (125.2 PS/123.7 hp)/litre - 2000 JDM Honda S2000 F20C (184 kW (250 PS/247 hp) JIS 2.0 L I4)
Honorable Mention 126.49hp/litre - Ascari A10 (625hp/466kW/634PS 4941cc V8) (Limited production, only 50 to be produced)
Honorable mention: 125.3 kW (168 hp)/litre - 2002 Radical Sportscars SR3 (252 hp (184 kW) 1.5 L I4 engine) - (Note: The Radical's status as a production car is disputed, and numbers refer to the competition version, there are no official data for the road version)
Petrol/Gasoline (forced-induction) piston engine - 149 kW (203 PS/200 hp)/litre 400 hp - 2005 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VIII FQ400 (298 kW (405 PS/400 hp) 2.0 L I4 (The FQ400's status as a "production car" is disputed)
Diesel (naturally-aspirated) - 33.4 kW (45.4 PS/44.7 hp)/litre (100 kW (136 PS/134 hp) DIN 3.0 L I6) - 1995 Mercedes E 300 D
Diesel (forced-induction) - 75.2 kW (102,2 PS)/litre (150 kW (204 PS) 2.0 L I4 twin-turbo) - 2007 BMW new 2L engines
Honorable Mention: 81.6 kW (111 PS/109.5 hp)/litre (156 kW (212 PS/209 hp) 1.9 L I4 twin-turbo) - 2003 Opel Vectra OPC Concept (Not a production vehicle)
Naturally-aspirated pistonless rotary engine - 140.5 kW (191.1 PS/188.8 hp) /litre - Mazda RX-8 Renesis (184 kW (250 PS/247 hp) JIS 1.3 L)
Forced-induction pistonless rotary engine - 157.4 kW (214.1 PS/212.3 hp)/litre - 2003 Mazda RX-7 13B-REW (206 kW (280 PS/276 hp JIS 1.3 L)( Numbers based on insurance claims for lower premiums, all Japanese supercars of that era (1988 to 2003) were rated at 276hp)
[edit] Most specific torque (torque per unit displacement)
The mean effective pressure (MEP) is a useful comparison tool, giving the average cylinder pressure exerted on the piston.
Petrol (naturally-aspirated) - MEP 14.3 bar, 114 N•m (84 ft•lbf)/litre (370 N•m (273 ft•lbf)) - 2003 BMW M3 CSL
Petrol (forced-induction) - MEP 30.3 bar, 241.4 N•m (177.7 ft•lbf)/litre (482.1 N•m (355 ft•lbf)) - 2004 Mitsubishi Evo VIII MR FQ-400
Honorable mention: MEP unknown, 157 N•m (115.8 ft•lbf)/litre - 156 N•m/115 ft•lbf Suzuki Forsa (Turbocharged L3 Sohc 993cc)
Petrol (naturally-aspirated pistonless rotary engine) - MEP 21.5 bar, 170.8 N•m (126.0 ft•lbf)/litre (222 N•m (164 ft•lbf)) - 2005 Mazda RX-8
Petrol (forced-induction pistonless rotary engine) - MEP 28.4 bar, 226.3 N•m (166.9 ft•lbf)/litre (294 N•m (217 ft•lbf)) - 1995 Mazda RX-7 Turbo
Diesel - MEP unknown, 209 N•m (154.1 ft•lbf)/litre (400 N•m (294 ft•lbf)) - 2007 Fiat new 1.9 JTD Twin Stage Turbo engine (also used on 2007 Saab 9-3 1.9 TTiD)
Honorable mention: MEP 26.5 bar, 210.5 N•m (154.8 ft•lbf)/litre (400 N•m (294 ft•lbf)) - 2003 Opel Vectra OPC Concept (Not a production vehicle)
[edit] Economy
Highest USA EPA mileage - 48 mpg (US) (4.9 L/100 km/58 mpg imp)/60 mpg (US) (3.9 L/100 km/72 mpg imp) - 2001 Honda Insight 5-speed
Note: in 2007 the EPA changed its measurement standards, changing the rating to 48 mpg (US) (4.9 L/100 km/58 mpg imp)/58 mpg (US) (4.1 L/100 km/70 mpg imp)
Lowest USA EPA mileage - 8 mpg (US) (29 L/100 km/9.6 mpg imp)/12 mpg (US) (20 L/100 km/14 mpg imp) - 2008 Hummer H2
Lowest EU fuel consumption - 2.99 L/100 km (94.5 mpg imp/78.7 mpg US) - 2002 VW Lupo 1.2 TDI 5-speed
Honorable mention: 0.89 L/100 km (320 mpg imp/260 mpg US) - 2002 Volkswagen 1-litre car (Not a production car) [4]
Highest EU fuel consumption - 24.1 L/100 km (11.7 mpg imp/9.76 mpg US) combined city/hwy 2008 Bugatti Veyron 16.4
Longest 90% range - 1500 km (932 mi) - 2005 Mercedes E220 CDI with 6-speed manual and optional 80 L (21 US gal/18 imp gal) fuel tank, calculated by using extra-urban Euro cycle mileage of 4.8 L/100 km (59 mpg imp/49 mpg US)
[edit] Price
Most expensive - $1,600,000 - 2006 Bugatti Veyron
Most inexpensive - $125 - 1922 Briggs & Stratton Flyer ($1,364.22 in 2006, inflation adjusted) Note that this would be the factory price. The car is probably worth more due to its collector's value.
Most inexpensive (currently in production) - $2500 Tata Nano
[edit] Performance
It has been suggested that Fastest production car be merged into this article or section. (Discuss)
Quickest 0-60 mph (roughly equal to 0-100 km/h):
2.46 seconds - 2006 Bugatti Veyron[citation needed]
4 seater - 3.5 seconds - 2009 Nissan GT-R[1]
4-door car - 3.5 seconds - 2005 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VIII FQ400 2.0 L[citation needed]
Pickup truck - 4.9 seconds - 2004 Dodge Ram SRT-10[citation needed]
Honorable mention: 1991 GMC Syclone - Car & Driver got 0-60 in 4.6 Seconds (Nov '90) and later 5.3 Seconds (Sep '91), Sport Truck (Jan '91) got 4.8 seconds, Off Road magazine (Feb '91) got 4.3 Seconds (Feb '91), and Autoweek got 5.2 seconds but quoted GMC's estimate of 4.6 seconds and cited unfavorable temperature and track conditions.
Sport Utility Vehicle - 4.5 seconds - 2007 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT8[citation needed]
Quickest 0-200 km/h (124 mph) - 7.4 seconds - Auto Motor und Sport - 2006 Bugatti Veyron 16.4[citation needed]
Quickest 0-300 km/h time (185 mph) - 18.2 seconds, Auto Motor Und Sport - 2006 Bugatti Veyron 16.4
Quickest 0-400 km/h time (248 mph) - 55 seconds - 2006 Bugatti Veyron 16.4[citation needed]
Quickest 0-100-0 mph: sports car: Caparo T1 it goes 0-100 MPH in under 5 seconds
Sports car (2 seat) - 9.9 sec - 2006 Bugatti Veyron[citation needed]
Honorable mention: 9.4 seconds - 2006 Ultima GTR-720[5] - (Note: production numbers for GTR-720 are not available and the GTR's status as a "production car" is disputed.)
Highest top speed:
Sports car - 411 km/h (255 mph) - 2007 SSC Ultimate Aero TT[citation needed]
Honorable Mention: 407 km/h (253 mph) - Bugatti Veyron 16.4[citation needed]
4-door car - 366 km/h (227 mph) - Brabus Rocket[6]
Pickup truck/Utility - 271.44 km/h (168.66 mph) - 2006 HSV Maloo R8[citation needed]
Honorable mention: 360.9 km/h (225.609 mph) Estate Car - MG ZT-T (One-off modified for land speed record use)
[edit] Sales
See also List of bestselling vehicle nameplates
Best-selling models:
Best-selling car nameplate - Toyota Corolla (more than 32,000,000 sold in nine generations since 1966)
Best-selling vehicle nameplate - Toyota Corolla (more than 32,000,000 sold in nine generations since 1966)
Best-selling single model - Volkswagen Beetle (21,529,464 of the same basic design sold worldwide between 1938 and 2003)
Best single-year sales - 1.36 million - 2005 Toyota Corolla.
Best single-month sales - 126,905 - July 2005 Ford F-Series [7]
Best-selling coupe - Ford Mustang (1964–present) — over 8,000,000 in five generations.
Best-selling 2-seat car - Chevrolet Corvette (1,302,401 sold between 1953 and 2003 (1,407,858 between 1953 and 2006, not including 2006 Z06)) [8]
Best Selling Minivan - Dodge Caravan, over 11,000,000 sold.
Lowest-production models: (excluding limited-production vehicles)
Pickup truck - avg. 223 per month, Lincoln Blackwood (3,356 sold in 15 months)
Sports car - avg. 6 per month, Toyota 2000GT (337 sold in 5 years)
SUV - avg. 4 per month, Lamborghini LM002 (301 sold in 6 years)
Supercar - avg. 2 per month, MG XPower SV (64 sold in 2 years)
[edit] Firsts
Full-production vehicles are listed here. Many were preceded by racing-only cars.
[edit] Industry
First automobile manufacturer - Benz (1871), Panhard et Levassor (1889) (followed by Peugeot in 1891)
First standardized automobile - Benz Velo (1894) or Duryea Motor Wagon (1893)
First mass-produced automobile - Oldsmobile Curved Dash (1901)[citation needed]
Honorable Mention - Ford Model T, first car produced on a moving assembly line.
First auto company technical institute - General Motors Institute (now Kettering University)
First automotive proving ground - General Motors Milford Proving Grounds