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Saab Reveals Engine Concept That Offers Performance And Low Fuel Consumption        

1 March 2000

Saab Reveals Unique Engine Concept That Offers High Performance And Low Fuel Consumption        
    GENEVA, Feb. 29 -- At the Geneva Motor Show, Saab Automobile
AB unveils the Saab Variable Compression (SVC) engine, a new engine concept
that enables fuel consumption to be radically cut while increasing engine
performance per liter of engine displacement.  The combination of reduced
engine displacement, high supercharging pressure and a unique system for
varying the compression ratio enables the SVC engine to use energy in fuel far
more efficiently than today's conventional automotive engines.  SVC offers an
entirely new concept for combining high performance with low fuel consumption
and low exhaust emissions.
       (Photo:  http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20000229/ATTU027 )
      (Photo:  http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20000229/ATTU027-b )
    Fuel consumption 30 percent lower
    The SVC concept reduces the fuel consumption of a conventional naturally
aspirated engine by up to 30 percent while at the same time providing
impressive performance.  The five-cylinder SVC engine developed by Saab has a
displacement of 1.6 liters and is as fuel-efficient under normal conditions as
a conventional 1.6-liter engine, but can deliver power comparable to a highly
tuned 3.0-liter engine when needed.  The carbon dioxide (CO2)  emissions are
reduced proportionately to the fuel consumption, while the CO, HC and NOx
emissions will enable the SVC engine to meet all current and proposed future
emissions regulations.
    The unique feature of the SVC engine -- and the key to its high efficiency
-- is that the engine has a variable compression ratio.  The fixed compression
ratio of a conventional engine is a compromise between a wide variety of
operating conditions -- stop and go city traffic, highway motoring at constant
speed, or high-speed freeway driving.  The compression ratio of the SVC engine
is continually adjusted to provide the optimum value for varying driving
conditions.

    Variable combustion chamber volume for variable compression ratio
    The SVC engine is comprised of a cylinder head with integrated cylinders,
which is known as the monohead, and a lower portion consisting of the engine
block, crankshaft and pistons.  The compression ratio is varied by adjusting
the slope of the monohead in relation to the engine block and internal
reciprocating components.  This alters the volume of the combustion chamber
with the piston at top dead center (highest position of the piston in the
cylinder), which, in turn, changes the compression ratio.
    The combination of reduced engine displacement, high supercharging
pressure and a variable compression ratio enables the SVC concept to provide
engines with tremendous power output capabilities.  The 1.6 liter, 5-cylinder
engine produces 147 lb.-ft. of torque and 150 horsepower per liter of engine
displacement!  The SVC concept opens the door to the development of both
small, extremely fuel-efficient engines with good performance, and larger
engines delivering sports car performance with high fuel-efficiency.

    Alternative fuels
    The variable compression ratio also gives the engine excellent fuel
flexibility.  Since the compression ratio can be varied and adjusted to suit
the properties of fuel, the engine will always run at the compression ratio
that is best suited to the fuel being used.

    Three cornerstones of the SVC concept
    Although a variable compression ratio is what makes the SVC engine unique,
the fuel efficiency of a conventional naturally aspirated engine would only
improve 4 - 5 percent if it were equipped with a variable compression system.
The full potential of variable compression can only be realized when it's used
in combination with reduced engine displacement and high supercharging
pressure.

    1. Reducing the engine displacement -- size does matter
    A conventional four-stroke gasoline engine is most efficient (maximizing
the energy in the fuel) when it is running at a high load.  A small engine
must work harder and run closer to full load if it is to perform the same work
as a bigger engine, which utilizes only part of its maximum capacity.  The
small engine often extracts more energy from every drop of fuel.
    One reason for this is because the pumping losses are lower in a small
engine.  Pumping losses arise when the engine is running at low load and when
its fuel consumption is relatively low.  In order to maintain the ideal air-
to-fuel ratio (14.7:1), the air supply must be restricted by reducing the
opening of the butterfly valve in the air intake.
    However, this means that the piston in the cylinder is under a slight
vacuum during the suction stroke, when it is drawing air into the cylinder.
The effect is roughly the same when you cover the air hole of a bicycle tire
pump with your thumb while trying to pull out the pump handle.  The extra
energy needed for pulling the piston down is known as the pumping loss.  Since
a small engine frequently runs at full load and the throttle is therefore more
often fully open, the pumping losses in the small engine are usually lower
than they are in a big engine.
    Additionally, a small engine is lighter, has lighter internal
reciprocating mass and has lower frictional losses.  Therefore, a small engine
is generally more efficient than a big engine.

    2. Supercharging -- power on tap
    Although a small engine is efficient, it is not powerful enough to be used
for anything other than powering small, lightweight cars.  By supercharging
the intake air and forcing more air into the engine, more fuel can be injected
and burned efficiently.  The engine then delivers more power for every piston
stroke, which results in higher torque and horsepower output.  By
supercharging the engine only at greater throttle openings when extra power is
really needed, the fuel economy of a small engine can be combined with the
greater performance of a big engine.
    Small displacement engines and supercharging have long been well-known
concepts at Saab.  Saab launched the turbo concept back in 1976 as a way of
boosting the performance of an engine by raising the intake air pressure, but
without making the engine bigger and heavier, and therefore less fuel
efficient.
    Over the last 25 years, Saab has developed a number of innovative turbo-
enhanced engine systems, all of which have resulted in boosting performance,
lowering fuel consumption and reducing exhaust emissions.  However, engine
development has now reached the stage at which a new parameter of the
combustion process must be optimized to meet future demands for reducing the
carbon dioxide emissions and enabling alternative fuels to be used.  Varying
the compression ratio is the ideal parameter to optimize.

    3.Variable compression -- pearl of wisdom
    The compression ratio of an engine is the piston displacement volume plus
the volume of the combustion chamber divided by the volume of the combustion
chamber -- in other words, the amount by which the fuel/air mixture is
compressed in the cylinder before it is ignited.  The compression ratio is one
of the most important factors that determine how efficiently the engine can
utilize the energy in the fuel.
    The energy in the fuel will be better utilized if the compression ratio is
as high as possible.  But if the compression ratio is too high, the fuel will
pre-ignite, causing "knocking," which could damage the engine.  In a
conventional engine, the maximum compression ratio that the engine can
withstand is therefore set by the conditions in the cylinder at high load,
when the fuel and air consumptions are at maximum levels.  The compression
ratio remains the same when the engine is running at low load, such as when
the car is travelling on the highway at constant speed.
    Due to its variable compression ratio, the SVC engine can be run at the
optimum compression ratio of 14:1 at low load in order to maximize the use of
the energy in the fuel, and the compression ratio can then be lowered to 8:1
at high load to enable the engine performance to be enhanced by supercharging
without inducing "knocking."

    New ways of using known engine components
    An objective in the development of the SVC concept was to retain as many
of the basic components of a conventional engine as possible.  The crankshaft,
connecting rods, pistons and valves are all of the same type as those of
today's engines.  What distinguishes the SVC engine is the way it is split
into upper and lower portions.  Compared to a conventional engine, the joint
face between the two is about 20 centimeters (almost eight inches) lower.  The
upper part, known as the monohead, consists of the cylinder head with
integrated cylinders, whereas the lower part -- the crankcase -- consists of
the engine block,  crankshaft, connecting rods and pistons.
    The monohead is pivoted at the crankcase.  The compression ratio is
altered by tilting the monohead in relation to the crankcase by means of a
hydraulic actuator.  The volume of the combustion chamber will then increase
and therefore lower the compression.
    To increase the compression, the slope of the monohead is reduced. The
volume of the combustion chamber will then decrease and the compression will
be higher.  The monohead is sealed at the crankcase by a rubber bellows.
    The monohead can be sloped by up to 4 degrees.  The optimum compression
ratio is calculated by the Saab Trionic engine management system based on the
engine's speed, engine load and fuel quality.  The compression ratio is
continuously variable.

    Efficient four-valve combustion chambers
    An important benefit of the SVC concept is that the variable compression
can be achieved without modifying the design of the efficient four-valve
combustion chamber.  The combustion chamber design is of vital importance to
the combustion process, and therefore directly affects the exhaust emissions,
fuel consumption and engine performance.  One of the essential conditions in
the work of developing the SVC concept was that the new technique should not
impair the existing design.
    Since the monohead is made as one unit, it is also possible to enhance the
design of the coolant passages.  This is essential for being able to
supercharge the engine sufficiently to achieve high performance.

    Mechanical compressor for maximum boost pressure and fast response
    The mechanical compressor used for supercharging is engaged and disengaged
by the Saab Trionic engine management system.  The compressor is equipped with
an intercooler and delivers a maximum boost pressure of 2.8 bar (40 psi),
which is double the boost pressure delivered by today's Saab 9-3 Viggen and
9-5 Aero high output turbo engines.  Saab engine designers chose to use a
compressor instead of a turbocharger for the SVC engine because today's
turbochargers are not able to deliver the high boost pressure and fast
response needed by the SVC engine.

    A platform for continued development
    The SVC concept and the 1.6-liter, five-cylinder engine represent a leap
forward in engine technology and provide a completely new platform for further
engine development.  The fact that the compression ratio parameter can now be
controlled enables more accurate engine operation, and therefore, higher
efficiency.  SVC can be combined with other engine technologies to further
improve performance, lower fuel consumption and reduce exhaust emissions.
    The SVC engine represents a decisive step in the long-term development
work aimed at combining the benefits of the Otto engine and the diesel engine.
This trend is already visible in engine development.  Direct injection will be
used on the Otto engine just as it is on the diesel engine, while the diesel
engine will have much more electronics.  Variable compression has thus far
been the missing link between the two.

    Engine innovators
    The importance of the compression ratio to the efficiency of an engine has
long been known, and there are many imaginative patents for different designs
of variable compression engines.  What Saab engine designers were first to
achieve -- just as they were with turbocharging in the 1970s -- was to combine
innovative new thinking with a known technique and proven theories in order to
develop a system that is usable.
    Saab engine designers began thinking about developing a variable
compression engine in the early 1980s, but it was not until the end of the
1980s that more concrete development work was started, albeit on a modest
scale.  The first patent application was lodged in 1990. The first usable
experimental engine had a displacement of 2.0 liters, and delivered higher
torque and power output than was necessary.  But the engine did prove that the
theory performed well.
    Actual testing began when the second generation prototype engine -- a 1.4
liter in-line six -- was ready in the mid-1990s.  The objective was that an
SVC engine of that design would have the performance and power output of a
naturally aspirated 3.0-liter V6 engine, but with 30 percent lower fuel
consumption.  In order to have the potential of the SVC engine assessed by
independent experts, Saab approached the renowned German engine development
company FEV Motorentechnik in Aachen.  They submitted a thorough evaluation to
confirm that the engine met the desired targets, and that it was also possible
to make further advances by continued development work.
    However, the six-cylinder, 1.4-liter in-line engine was not appropriate to
the performance level needed by the projected Saab range of cars.  The engine
also entailed packaging disadvantages.  So it was dropped in favor of the
current five-cylinder, 1.6-liter engine concept.
    The SVC concept would have been impossible to develop without an advanced
engine management system. The addition of variable compression as another
control parameter in the already complex control system of today's automotive
engines creates high demands on the engine management system.  The engine
management system for the SVC engine is a special version of the Saab Trionic
system -- developed in-house by Saab and in use on Saab turbocharged engines
since 1991.  Further development of the Saab Trionic system and the in-depth
knowledge of the system accumulated by Saab engineers have been key elements
in the development of the SVC concept.
    However, even in its latest version, the Saab five-cylinder, 1.6-liter SVC
engine is still at the prototype stage and further development work is needed
before the engine can be used in regular production.  The final design and
size, and also the performance and fuel consumption properties of the ultimate
production engine are dependent on many factors, including meeting the future
demands of customers.

    Technical data
    The figures below relate to the 1.6-liter test engines currently used in
Saab's ongoing technical development work.  The exact technical specifications
of future regular production engines will be dependent on this development
work, future customer demands for performance and fuel-efficiency and Saab's
overall product plans.

    Engine displacement           1.598 liter
    Number of cylinders           5
    Cylinder bore                 68 mm
    Piston stroke                 88 mm
    Compression ratio             8:1 to 14:1, depending on engine load
    Max. compressor boost
     pressure                     2.8 bar (40 psi)
    Max. monohead tilt angle      4 degrees
    Peak engine torque            224 lb.-ft.
    Engine rating                 225 hp