General Motors 54° V6 engine
| General Motors 54° V6 | |
|---|---|
| Overview | |
| Manufacturer | General Motors | 
| Also called | Ellesmere V6 | 
| Production | 1994–2004 | 
| Layout | |
| Configuration | 54° V6 | 
| Displacement | 
 | 
| Cylinder bore | 
 | 
| Piston stroke | 
 | 
| Cylinder block material | Cast iron | 
| Cylinder head material | Aluminium | 
| Valvetrain | DOHC 4 valves × cyl. | 
| Compression ratio | 10.0:1, 10.8:1, 11.5:1 | 
| RPM range | |
| Idle speed | 450–1,030 | 
| Max. engine speed | 6,600 | 
| Combustion | |
| Turbocharger | Garrett GT15 (in 1997–2003 Saab 9-5) | 
| Fuel system | Sequential multi-port fuel injection | 
| Management | |
| Fuel type | Gasoline | 
| Oil system | Wet sump | 
| Cooling system | Water-cooled | 
| Output | |
| Power output | 168–220 bhp (125–164 kW; 170–223 PS) | 
| Torque output | 227–310 N⋅m (167–229 lb⋅ft) | 
| Emissions | |
| Emissions control systems | Secondary air injection, EGR Valve | 
| Chronology | |
| Predecessor | Opel CIH | 
| Successor | High Feature V6 | 
General Motors' Opel subsidiary in Europe designed a compact V6 engine with an unusual 54° vee angle. It was an iron block/aluminum head DOHC design with four valves per cylinder. All 54° engines were assembled at Ellesmere Port in England.