2008 International Engine of the Year nominees chosen
December 31st, 1969
There are many publications, organizations and companies that hand out awards to the automotive industry for its various technical and design achievements, but few are so lauded as the winner of the International Engine of the Year competition. Judged by a panel of 62 of the world's top automotive journalists from around the globe, the engine that comes out on top - or tops in its class - can lay claim to being the best there is. For a year, at least.
The reigning International Engine of the Year is BMW's 3.0L twin-turbo, found in cars like the 335i and more recently the 135i. Clinching the victory over Volkswagen's 1.4L TFSI and Porsche's legendary Boxer in 3.6L trim, the BMW unit won with its combination of six-cylinder size and weight and V8-like performance.
This year's nominees include the new Mitsubishi Evolution X's 2.0L twin-scroll turbo mill, Subaru's first boxer diesel and Nissan's 3.8L twin-turbo monster from the GT-R. Others up for awards include the 5.0L V10 from Audi, Fiat's 1.4L turbo, and Volvo's 3.0L turbo from the V70. General Motors' supercharged 6.2L from the ZR-1 and Cadillac CTS-V are up for top honors, while the 1.8L child of a Chrysler-Mitsubishi-Hyundai joint effort is also on the list.
A pair of new contenders from BMW is also among the nominees: the 4.0L V8 from the new M3 and the 2.0L diesel from the 123d in the running.
In addition to the grand-champion International Engine of the Year winner, awards are given in 11 different categories, with Best New Engine of the Year, Best Fuel Economy and Best Performance Engine being the overal winners, and the remaining eight categories the class competition for engines ranging in size from below 1L to above 4L in roughly half liter increments.
There are many publications, organizations and companies that hand out awards to the automotive industry for its various technical and design achievements, but few are so lauded as the winner of the International Engine of the Year competition. Judged by a panel of 62 of the world's top automotive journalists from around the globe, the engine that comes out on top - or tops in its class - can lay claim to being the best there is. For a year, at least.
The reigning International Engine of the Year is BMW's 3.0L twin-turbo, found in cars like the 335i and more recently the 135i. Clinching the victory over Volkswagen's 1.4L TFSI and Porsche's legendary Boxer in 3.6L trim, the BMW unit won with its combination of six-cylinder size and weight and V8-like performance.
This year's nominees include the new Mitsubishi Evolution X's 2.0L twin-scroll turbo mill, Subaru's first boxer diesel and Nissan's 3.8L twin-turbo monster from the GT-R. Others up for awards include the 5.0L V10 from Audi, Fiat's 1.4L turbo, and Volvo's 3.0L turbo from the V70. General Motors' supercharged 6.2L from the ZR-1 and Cadillac CTS-V are up for top honors, while the 1.8L child of a Chrysler-Mitsubishi-Hyundai joint effort is also on the list.
A pair of new contenders from BMW is also among the nominees: the 4.0L V8 from the new M3 and the 2.0L diesel from the 123d in the running.
In addition to the grand-champion International Engine of the Year winner, awards are given in 11 different categories, with Best New Engine of the Year, Best Fuel Economy and Best Performance Engine being the overal winners, and the remaining eight categories the class competition for engines ranging in size from below 1L to above 4L in roughly half liter increments.
The reigning International Engine of the Year is BMW's 3.0L twin-turbo, found in cars like the 335i and more recently the 135i. Clinching the victory over Volkswagen's 1.4L TFSI and Porsche's legendary Boxer in 3.6L trim, the BMW unit won with its combination of six-cylinder size and weight and V8-like performance.
This year's nominees include the new Mitsubishi Evolution X's 2.0L twin-scroll turbo mill, Subaru's first boxer diesel and Nissan's 3.8L twin-turbo monster from the GT-R. Others up for awards include the 5.0L V10 from Audi, Fiat's 1.4L turbo, and Volvo's 3.0L turbo from the V70. General Motors' supercharged 6.2L from the ZR-1 and Cadillac CTS-V are up for top honors, while the 1.8L child of a Chrysler-Mitsubishi-Hyundai joint effort is also on the list.
A pair of new contenders from BMW is also among the nominees: the 4.0L V8 from the new M3 and the 2.0L diesel from the 123d in the running.
In addition to the grand-champion International Engine of the Year winner, awards are given in 11 different categories, with Best New Engine of the Year, Best Fuel Economy and Best Performance Engine being the overal winners, and the remaining eight categories the class competition for engines ranging in size from below 1L to above 4L in roughly half liter increments.
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Comments (6 total)
Meet the top commenters on the LeaderboardBy Austin Douglas #1, Posted: 4/18/2008
Sound. My bid is for the Torque tough Turbocharged VR38DETT By Nissan. and of course that Strong as Ever Revamped BMW V8 M series. but the GT/R is not a specialized Nissan unlike the M Tuned V8!
Yeah.
By STIG #2, Posted: 4/18/2008
Iam sure that porsche must win the best engine in the world
and Best Fuel Economy and Best Performance Engine
By Layne #3, Posted: 4/22/2008
Haha. The GT-R not a specialized Nissan? Say what?
By monk #4, Posted: 4/26/2008
why is GM's 6.2L being nominated?
if so, AMG's should be too!
By andrew #5, Posted: 4/30/2008
the GM 6.2Lt is totally new and got more things then the other engines it has had in the past, like cylinder shut down and more things to it. yeah me too think the AMG engine should have something about it, it revs so far and power out of it is amazing
bet the BMW 4Lt V8 wins or comes close to it due to the fact its a cut down of the V10, the best engine out of all is the VW 5Lt V10 Twin turbo diesel, that is wicked in my eyes
By 160 #6, Posted: 5/6/2008
Rover k Series engine definatly lol
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