Volvo Car Group Starts Production Of A New Engine Family
LONDON – May 13, 2013: Volvo Car Group is now starting production of the first engine variants in the new, high-efficiency four-cylinder engine family. The development and production take place in-house at Volvo Car Group and form a vital part of the company's strategy for independence.
The strategy of four-cylinder petrol and diesel engines and driveline electrification is the path that Volvo Cars has chosen for the future. With total control over the development and production of engines and drivelines and by reducing the number of engine variants, the result is increased flexibility.
"This marks a milestone in Volvo Cars' history. With our new engine family we are focusing on two additional vital properties - driving pleasure and fuel efficiency," says Derek Crabb, Vice President Powertrain Engineering.
Modern production plant with efficient assembly
In Volvo Car
Group's engine plant in Skövde, preparations for the production start of
the new Volvo Engine Architecture (VEA) engines have been under way for
about two years. One of the highlights is a brand-new, state-of-the-art
addition to the plant for assembly of the new engines. All versions are
built on the same line, which runs through the new part of the plant and
makes for very efficient production.
"One of the biggest challenges was the remodelling of the line for cylinder block processing. 30 machining cells were replaced or converted at a cost of about half a billion kronor," says Oskar Falk, Vice President Global Engine Production.
Billions invested in a competitive engine family
Development
and investment in the new engine family is part of a comprehensive
expansion plan at Volvo Cars. About two billion kronor was invested in the
Skövde plant. This secures operations there and a large number of jobs for
a long time to come. The investment is the most important in the engine
plant's history.
Developed at Volvo Cars
The new VEA engines were developed by
a Swedish team of engineers. The new, smaller engines are optimised and
deliver higher performance than today's six-cylinder units, while offering
lower fuel consumption than the current generation of four-cylinder
units.
"During the development of VEA, the starting point was our customers and what we wanted to offer them in regard to good fuel economy, low environmental impact and immense driving pleasure at an attractive price. At the same time, however, it's also about the fact that Volvo Cars gets a sound basis for developing future-generation technologies featuring fuel economy of absolute world class," says Derek Crabb.
Launched this autumn
VEA consists of four-cylinder petrol and
diesel engines. Together with driveline electrification, VEA replaces the
previous eight engine architectures on three different platforms. The new
engines will be introduced between 2013 and 2015. Almost 20,000 engines
will be produced in 2013, and by the end of the year the production pace
will be 2000 units a week. The first variants will be fitted to the Volvo
S60, V60, XC60, V70, XC70 and S80 in autumn 2013.