What is the equivalent displacement of 360thp?
2 Answers
360thp is equivalent to a 1.6T displacement, compliant with China VI emission standards. Relevant information about engine displacement is introduced as follows: 1. Introduction one: Engine displacement refers to the volume of gas swept by the piston from top dead center to bottom dead center, also known as single-cylinder displacement, which depends on the cylinder bore and piston stroke. 2. Introduction two: If an engine has multiple cylinders, the sum of the working volumes of all cylinders is called the engine displacement, usually expressed in liters. Engine displacement is one of the most important structural parameters, more representative of engine size than cylinder bore and number of cylinders. Many engine performance indicators are closely related to displacement.
I heard a friend ask a similar question before. The number after THP refers to the horsepower value, so 360 means 360 horsepower. We veteran drivers all know that back in the naturally aspirated era, a 1.6-liter displacement engine produced just over 100 horsepower, and a 2.0-liter was around 150 horsepower. Forced to make a rough comparison, 360 horsepower is roughly equivalent to the output of a 4.0-liter large-displacement naturally aspirated engine. However, turbocharging is much more powerful now—my 2.0T car can squeeze out 360 horsepower. Actually, displacement and horsepower can't be directly converted; it all depends on engine technology. If we're just comparing acceleration feel, many current 3.0T luxury cars are at this power level.