Off-road vehicle, 5 Doors, 9 Seats
344 Hp @ 4200 rpm.
42.3 Hp/l
156 km/h 96.93 mph
8128 cm3
496 cu. in.
8, V-engine
Rear wheel drive,
5570 mm
219.29 in.
2027 mm
79.8 in.
2590 kg
5709.97 lbs.
Brand | Chevrolet |
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Model | Suburban (SUV) |
Version | Suburban (GMT800) |
Engine version | 8.1 i V8 2500 (344 Hp) |
Year production start | 2001 |
Year production end | 2004 |
Vehicle type | Off-road vehicle |
Horsepower RPM | 344 Hp @ 4200 rpm. |
Curb weight kg -lbs total |
2590 kg5709.97 lbs. |
Overall length mm - inch |
5570 mm219.29 in. |
Doors | 5 |
Top Speed | 156 km/h 96.93 mph |
Engine position and orientation | Front, Longitudinal |
---|---|
Cylinders | 8 |
Position of cylinders | V-engine |
Displacement (liters) |
8128 cm3496 cu. in. |
Eng. horsepower RPM | 344 Hp @ 4200 rpm. |
Horsepower per litre | 42.3 Hp/l |
Weight / horsepower kg/hp - hp/tons |
7.5 kg/Hp132.8 Hp/tonne |
Weight / torque kg/Nm - Nm/tons | 4.2 kg/Nm, 238.2 Nm/tonne
4.2 kg/Nm238.2 Nm/tonne |
Torque Nm RPM lb-ft RPM |
617 Nm @ 3200 rpm.455.08 lb.-ft. @ 3200 rpm. |
Bore (mm in) |
108 mm4.25 in. |
Stroke (mm in) |
111 mm4.37 in. |
Compression ratio | 9.1 |
Fuel delivery system | Multi-point indirect injection |
Fuel type | Petrol (Gasoline) |
Valvetrain | 2 |
Engine aspiration | Naturally aspirated engine |
Powertrain architecture | Internal Combustion engine |
Engine location | Front, Longitudinal |
Drive configuration | Rear wheel drive |
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Front brakes | Ventilated discs |
---|---|
Rear brakes | Disc |
Anti-lock brake system | ABS (Anti-lock braking system) |
Front suspension | Double wishbone |
---|---|
Rear suspension | Coil spring |
Wheels size | 245/75 R16 |
---|
Passengers seats | 9 |
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Trunk space min liter | cu. Ft. |
1294 l45.7 cu. ft. |
Trunk space max liter | cu. Ft. |
3726 l131.58 cu. ft. |
Overall length mm - inch |
5570 mm219.29 in. |
---|---|
Overall width mm -inch |
2027 mm79.8 in. |
Overall height mm -inch |
1951 mm76.81 in. |
Wheelbase mm - inch |
3302 mm130 in. |
Track width front mm - inch |
1651 mm65 in. |
Track width rear mm - inch |
1657 mm65.24 in. |
Curb weight kg -lbs total |
2590 kg5709.97 lbs. |
---|---|
Gross weight kg -lbs total |
3900 kg8598.03 lbs. |
Capacities kg - lbs |
1310 kg2888.06 lbs. |
Fuel tank liters | gallons |
142 l37.51 US gal | 31.24 UK gal |
8 CYLINDER V-Engine
It's an engine with eight cylinder piston where the cylinders share a common crankshaft and are arranged in a V configuration.
What is the 8 cylinder V-engine displacement: it is in a range between 2926 cc and 8135 cc in recent model line up powertrain.
How much is the power of the 8 cylinder V-engine: the power of the 8 cylinder V-engine is in a range from 125 bhp to 1160 bhp.
Which cars use 8 cylinder V-engine: in recent years several manufactures have been used the V8 engine for 3 main applications: premium, sport cars and lightweight trucks. 8 V engine is the American preferred engine for iconic giant pick-up.
What is the eight cylinder V angle: the majority of V8 engines use a V-angle of 90 degrees. This angle results in good engine balance and low vibrations. The downside is a larger powertrain body that makes the use of this configuration suitable only for longitudinal position and rear drive wheels traction.
V8 engines with a 60 degree V-angle were used in the 1996-1999 by Ford and in 2005-2011 by Volvo. The Ford engine used a 60 degree V-angle because it was based on a V6 engine with a 60 degree V-angle. Both the Ford and Volvo engines were used in transverse engine chassis, which were designed for a front-wheel-drive layout. To reduce the vibrations caused by the unbalanced 60 degree V-angle, Volvo's used a balance shaft and offset split crankpins.
The Rolls-Royce Meteorite tank engine also used a 60 degree V-angle, since it was derived from the 60 degree V12 Rolls-Royce Meteor which in turn was based on the famous Rolls-Royce Merlin V12 engine.
Most V8 engines fitted to road cars use a cross-plane crankshaft, since this configuration produces less vibration due to the perfect primary balance and secondary balance.
The rumbling exhaust sound produced by a typical cross-plane V8 engine is partly due to the uneven firing order within each of the two banks of four cylinders and with separate exhaust systems for each bank of cylinders, this uneven pulsing creates the legendary rumbling sound that is typically of V8 engines.
edited by arrabbiata