The Prince George Citizen

Detroit went green and accidental­ly got faster

- Citizen news service

Sometime in the next year or so, the U.S. auto industry will cross a once-unimaginab­le threshold: Average horsepower for the entire fleet will reach 300. (At the moment, it is tuned up to 296.)

It is an absurd number – the stuff of drag-racing dreams. It’s also, almost entirely, a happy accident. The engineers tuning up the industry’s average sedans and dad-jeans SUVs have spent the past decade trying to lower emissions; speed was an unintended byproduct.

The average miles per gallon for the American fleet has climbed by 24 per cent since 2008, according to data analysis by Edmunds.com. Those cars posted a 14 per cent boost in power over the same period. In the past year alone, that number jumped by three per cent.

“We’re in the golden age of horsepower,” said Ivan Drury, senior manager of data strategy at Edmunds. “The only thing I’m nostalgic about – that I know is going to die – is the manual transmissi­on.”

As global regulators progressiv­ely tightened emissions standards, automakers were forced to do more with less. They built a mountain of relatively small, super-efficient four-cylinder engines to swap out hulking, thirsty V-8s. At the same time, they increasing­ly boosted those furious little powerplant­s with turbocharg­ers and electric motors.

These modern engines run like a pack of Australian shepherds – efficient, quiet and even drowsy, until something needs to be chased.

“You can get the best of both worlds,” Drury said. “If you really want it, the power is there.”

Volvo is the best example of this modern approach to power. The Swedish automaker, owned by China’s Geely Holding Group, fits most of its vehicles with the same four-cylinder engine and then tweaks it slightly, depending on the model.

It’s the internal-combustion version of an Ikea shelf: simple, pragmatic and abundantly hackable. In its most docile form, the tidy engine makes 260 horsepower, but when fitted with a turbocharg­er, a supercharg­er and a pair of electric motors, Volvo increases the output to 400 horsepower.

On the brand’s XC60, that an- gry engineerin­g equation makes for Porsche-style speed in an SUV designed for soccer practice carpools. The rig will even go 18 miles solely on its electric motors. Not surprising­ly, Volvo plans to put the package in almost all of its seven models.

Half of all U.S. vehicles now have a turbo or supercharg­er, up from 27 per cent a decade ago. The share of cars and trucks with an electric motor climbed from 2.5 per cent to 10 per cent in that time.

Big, thirsty V-8 engines are fading like the dinosaurs they run on; only 16 per cent of U.S. vehicles available this year come with one.Smaller engines are even finding their way into the iconic ponies of the past. Ford Motor Co.’s Mustang comes kitted with a four-cylinder that is less than half the size of the car’s traditiona­l V-8.

The Ford executive who gave this strategy a green light is both courageous and prescient. To the car nuts who make up the Mustang ranks, this would have been seen as sacrilege just a few years ago, said Bill Visnic, editorial director at the Society of Automotive Engineers.

But car buyers no longer pay much attention to the physical size of what’s under the hood. Generally, they look for horsepower and mileage.

Big rigs are even getting the tiny engine treatment. General Motors Co. recently said it would offer a four-cylinder in the 2019 version of its Chevrolet Silverado. The truck will be more powerful than it was five years ago, when it was mated to a V-8.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada