I find the technical aspects of engines, especially car engines, fascinating, but don’t know much about them. I know the basic principles of an internal combustion engine and that’s about it.
But when I listen to different cars, there seem to be typical sounds for different engines: V8 cars, like the Boss 429 Mustang or Alfa Romeo Montreal, tend to have this deep thundering sound with the cool “stutter” while idling. Cars with V6 engines, like the AMG C43 or Audi S4 (to me) have a more aggressive humming sound, while cars with V10 (e.g. the Huracan) seem to have a more high-pitched screeching sound. Is the cylinder architecture the reason for that or is it something else that affects the sound? Or is my perception just off and the engine type has no correlation to sound?
In: 14
Of course the cylinder architecture affects the sound. Most of the sound comes from the ignition and the exhaust stroke of the engine. Each cylinder have an exhaust stroke and an ignition every two cycles. So in an 8 cylinder engine you have 4 exhaust strokes per rotation and 4 ignitions while in a 10 cylinder engine you have 5.
But it is not as simple as that because the pistons are not spaced equally to each other as they need to be balanced. So you tend to have pairs of cylinders opposite sides of the engine move together. The “worst” configuration comes from a V8, or an I4. In these engines the outside two cylinders move together with one exhausting as the other is igniting, and then the two centre cylinders will be exhausting and igniting. So for each engine cycle you get 4 distinct sounds in a V8. Compare this with a V6 where the three cylinders in each bank can balance themselves and therefore give a nice humming sound. Or the V10 where the cylinders are more equally spaced again so you end up with 10 distinct exhaust and ignition events per cycle. This is what creates the nice high pitch sound as the events all blend together. It also helps that more cylinders mean smaller cylinders to get the same volume which means you can run the engine at higher speeds.
Latest Answers