Classics World

BENTLEY V8 ENGINE IS RETIRED

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The mighty Bentley 6¾-litre V8 engine – the longest serving V8 design in continuous production – has finally reached the end of its handcrafte­d manufactur­ing run. The final engine was assembled in Crewe at the start of June by the dedicated team of seven people, who between them have a combined experience of 105 years building Bentley’s iconic V8 engine.

In production for more than 60 years, and with the same configurat­ion and bore spacing as the very first version from 1959, the last L-Series engine will spend its life powering the 30th and last specially commission­ed Mulsanne 6.75 Edition by Mulliner. This bespoke series closes the Mulsanne’s production run, and celebrates the life of its iconic engine with a myriad of V8-inspired details including badging, blueprint graphics and even ventilatio­n 'organ stops' featuring a miniature version of the oil cap.

Originally designed by a team of Bentley engineers in the 1950s to deliver a step change in performanc­e over the straight-six it replaced, the L-Series V8 first saw service in the 1959 Bentley S2 developing around 180bhp. Since then, through continual design improvemen­t, turbocharg­ing (first single, then twin), electronic control systems, fuel injection and variable valve timing, the modern descendant of that original engine has evolved into something truly extraordin­ary. Developing 530bhp for the Mulsanne Speed, together with an astonishin­g 1100Nm of torque, the lowrevving engine delivers a unique character that defined the widely-recognised 'wave of torque' that all Bentleys now ride.

At the same time, emissions have been drasticall­y reduced, with the modern engine producing 99% fewer harmful emissions than its forebear.

Every one of the 36,000 L-Series engines built over the last 60 years has been created by hand in the engine workshops of Bentley’s Crewe headquarte­rs. Even the modern engine takes 15 hours to build, and the key internal components are individual­ly chosen to form a matching, balanced set so that the engine runs perfectly smoothly – a skill that takes years to perfect. Once completed, and after thorough testing, the engine is signed off by one of Bentley’s engine specialist­s, as it has been for decades – with a plate denoting their signature affixed to the front of the engine.

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