Zenmervolt
Elite member
- Oct 22, 2000
- 24,514
- 44
- 91
Someone told you wrong. The second order forces are not canceled out in an I4. First order forces are, but not the second order. Small I4's, because of their lesser mass, can get away without balance shafts, but the vibrations are amplified in large I4 engines and they will destroy themselves very quickly without balance shafts. A 90 degree V8 can be set up to cancel both First Order foces and one of the Second order forces, but only an I6 and a V12 balance all forces without balance shafts.Originally posted by: ElFenix
i was under the impression that I4 did not need a balance shaft. also that v8 doesn't.Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
You're kidding about the balance shafts, right? An I4 will shake itself apart _right now_ without balance shafts. Especially a big I4. It's an I6 that's perfectly palanced without the need for balance shafts.Originally posted by: ElFenix
couple of things i'm assuming here
1) I4 doesn't waste power with balance shafts, etc
2) crankshafts for I4s don't need to be any stronger than a V8 of twice the size, and probably don't need to be any stronger
3) the V6 is only superior in that its shorter in 1 direction
so if you take all that you should be able to get more power out of a 3 liter I4 than a 3 liter V6... so why doesn't it happen?
ZV
EDIT: Also, the 3.0 litre I4 from Porsche was in the 968, not the 944. The 944 had a 2.5 litre I4 initially, and it was bumpped to a 2.7 litre I4 near the end of 944 production.
ZV
