Re: (TheWolfsburg)
Quote, originally posted by TheWolfsburg » |
So am I to understand that everyone here is vehemently against the W8 motor and would discourage someone from getting into one who was a DIY kinda person? |
Depends on what you are talking about. Looking to get more power out of your W8 Passat, or...have a W8 in a crate that needs minor repair and want to stuff it into some other car for the heck of it, like I am?
I'm probably the biggest fan of the VR design that I know of. Let's put it this way, my family had a custom shirt made for me that says: "It would be better with a VR6" because I used to say that about everything, even things that were not cars.
My idea of the ultimate engine would be a V8, but somehow based on the VR
narrow angle engine design...and also use a
flat-plane crankshaft like a Ferrari (like F1) engine uses as opposed to a
cross-plane crankshaft like a domestic V8 uses. This is the primary thing responsible for a V8 having either the Ferrari buzz/howl sound that they make, or a gurgle like a Camaro would have. Exhaust length and design play the other factor, along with firing order. The W8 engine fits that description perfectly which is why I bought mine for a future project of shoe-horning it into something lightweight.
If you're simply wanting a little more power from your Passat W8, I would contact any and all the chip tuners out there to see if they have a program for the W8. You could try want the spammer who started this thread (note that its also the ONLY post that they ever wrote) and get the stuff that they are talking about, play around with VAG-COM and some resisters inline of your IAT sensor until you see it show a value under 30°F which should trigger the different fuel map and give you a bit of a boost in performance. You will NOT get 50hp out of this engine by doing so.
MAYBE if the cam phasing, fuel/ignition maps were optimized heavily by a very good tuner, you MIGHT get 25hp out of the W8. I would suspect that they optimized this engine with camshaft profiles that are designed to allow the W8 to produce good torque at low and mid-range RPM, which is what you would want in a heavy vehicle like the Passat. If the W8 had been intended to be installed into a supercar, they most certainly would have optimized the cams to make power much higher and produce the 50 horsepower more that another poster suspected it should put out.
Modified by KingVR at 9:38 AM 7-3-2009