Ford Yamaha V8 engine

Ford Yamaha V8 engine

Infobox Automobile engine
name=Ford 3.4 L SHO V8


manufacturer=Ford Motor Company
production=1996–1999
2005–
class=DOHC 60° V8
predecessor=SHO V6
similar=Jaguar AJ-V8
Ford Modular V8
GM Premium V
Mercedes-Benz M113/M115
BMW M62/S62
BMW N62
Toyota UZ
Nissan VH
Nissan VK

Ford Motor Company had worked with Yamaha Motor Corporation to develop the compact DOHC V6 Ford SHO V6 engine for the 1989 Ford Taurus "SHO" "Super High Output". When the time came to replace that engine, the company again worked with Yamaha to build a new V8 based on the successful Ford Duratec engine. This partnership created the 3.4 L V8 for the 1996 Taurus "SHO". That engine went out of production after 1999, but was resurrected and modified by Ford's Volvo marque for use in the Volvo XC90 SUV in 2005.

The current 4.4 L V-8 Volvo engine, made by Yamaha in Japan, is unique in Volvo/Ford's wide range of V8 engines in that it is designed for transverse use and has a V6-like 60° bank angle.

HO 3.4 L V8

The V8 "SHO" appeared in spring of 1996. It was at 3.4 L and continued many of the traits of the SHO V6, including the aluminum cylinder heads (the V8 SHO engine has an aluminum block, V6 SHO engine has an iron block), 4-valve per cylinder DOHC design, but no variable length intake manifold. The V8 SHO has a split port style intake valve setup. The primary valve is exposed all the time and has the fuel injector spraying on it and the secondary valve is only exposed when the Intake Runner Manifold Control opens the secondary plates at 3400 rpm. Power was similar too, at 235 hp (175 kW) and 230 ft·lbf (312 N·m) of torque. This version was retired in 1999 because of changes to the base Taurus it was based upon for the 2000 model year, and the lack of a manual transmission as was available with the prior generation SHO.

Bore and stroke were identical to the Duratec 25 at 82.4 mm and 79.5 mm, respectively. The engines shared other traits as well, and insiders report that the designs are related, though not closely. One sign of such similarity is that the two engines share the same bell housing pattern.

Manufacturing was also a shared process. Ford manufactured the aluminum engine blocks, using a patented Cosworth process, at their Windsor, Ontario plant, then shipped them to Japan for finishing by Yamaha. The finished engines were shipped back to the Taurus plant in Atlanta, Georgia for installation.

Unlike the SHO V6, the SHO V8's valve train was an "interference" design, one that is shared by many engines built today, meaning that the piston will collide with the valves if the camshaft or timing chain fails. Due to some cam sprocket failures, the engine acquired a reputation for potentially catastrophic failure.

Cam trouble

Soon after the introduction of the SHO V8, widespread problems with the cam sprockets began to surface. Ford had used a relatively unusual method, called "swaging", of affixing the cam sprockets to the camshafts. The cam sprockets were fastened to the hollow camshafts by forcing a metal ball which was slightly larger than the interior diameter of the camshaft through the center of the camshaft, thus expanding the metal slightly and creating a mechanical bond between the cam sprocket and the camshaft. This method proved to be inadequate, and thus on some engines, the cam sprocket could break loose from the camshaft and spin independently from the camshaft (or "walk"). This would result in the camshaft stopping and thus not activating the valves, allowing the pistons to hit the valves, ruining the engine. The preventive measure of welding the cam sprocket to the camshaft soon proved to be a fix for engines that had not suffered such a fate yet [http://fordspecialists.com/camweld.htm] . Another such fix is "pinning" the cam sprocket, or inserting a pin in the sprocket to keep it aligned on the camshaft. There were calls for Ford to provide a recall, though none ever happened, potentially because it was a limited-production vehicle.

Volvo 4.4 L V8

Volvo began offering a 4.4 L V8 engine in its large P2 platform automobiles in 2005. The engine is currently made by Yamaha in Japan. It was initially offered in the Volvo XC90 SUV. It is available on the Volvo S80 and possibly a future Lincoln all wheel drive luxury car.

The engine is a 4.4 L aluminum DOHC V8 which produces 311 hp (232 kW) and 325 ft·lbf (441 N·m). Officials of all three companies involved insist that the Volvo V8 is not related to the SHO engine.

ee also

* Ford SHO V6 engine
* List of Ford engines
*List of Ford bellhousing patterns

External links

* [http://www.v8sho.com/SHO/KirkBufordonPinning.htm Pinning versus welding]
* [http://www.v8sho.com/SHO/ConsensusRecommendation.htm Discussion of the cam sprocket problem]
* [http://www.v8sho.com/SHO/CamFailureLinks.htm More cam failure links]
* [http://www.v8sho.com/SHO/CamFailureClassActionSuitFiled.htm Class action lawsuit]
* [http://www.v8sho.com/SHO/WhatWeKnow.htm Who is responsible for the poor camshaft design]
* [http://www.shotimes.com/php-bin/ SHO Times, with tech tips for the SHO]
* [http://www.shoclub.com SHO Club]

References


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