The base of the 90 degr. was the Lancia Thema V6 engine which was based on the RPV cooperation. Except V90 angle and bore distances there were no common parts with the RPV engine, but was a completely new constructions of the Lancia race department. So it was really an Italian race engine.
@@GitonIcon The block would have been a specialised cast or billet racing block with no PRV parts. The homologation is just a piece of paper with the cylinder bore spacing written on it, nothing more.
@@alexjenner1108Using your anallogy, this PRV-Alfa was more Alfa than Alfa V8 without two cylinders. There is no shame here being put on Alfa, besides Alfa was manufacturing under licence several Renault models including Dauphine, 8 and 4. If they didn't feel bad about it why should any Alfa fan? You'll never hear fan of Renault or Volvo saying "No Peugeot WM P88 with 900HP reaching 407 kph wasn't PRV, it was just angle.
What a beast ❤242 lbs. 420 hp, 11800 rpm in 94, what a design, great sound in real life, vids don’t do a slice of justice to there screaming valve-train😊
Sorry Man, but the 1996 Alfa Engine was not French. In the same interview you say, Sergio Limone says that the technical aspects to respect for the new regulamentation were the angle of the V for V6 engine and the the distance from the centers of the cylindres. So, on the documents were released the Montreal V6, but it has too short distances between cylindres, and thanks to a society in the last years of the 80s, Lancia and Alfa were the same Brand, and the PRV equipped the Lancia Thema 6V and the Lancia Thema Limousine, so it was addicted to have the technician values to can be used as shield... the V6 1996 Alfa engine was in experimentation from 1994, and Nannini tested it after the initial develop of Giorgio Francia...
It was not, but that’s not as important. The base was a Swedo-French developed engine that was turned upside down into a full race engine. The “French” is there just to catch attention. You see, making a viewer click on the video is harder these years, don’t get too excited about a single title word, just enjoy the full length video which is made without assumptions, only with pure facts. Peace
@@VisioRacer I come in peace and sorry if my words seems "violent", I know perfectly it's hard to get clicks, but with a click bait title you have should expect comment like mine... Nice video anyway! have a nice day ^^
This is what the F1 V6 engines should sound like, they could rev up to 15k rpm, be sized up to 2 liters and remove the hybrid system, or make it smaller and lighter. Boom, more power, more sound, more fans, more revenue but they're caring about "environment"
Great video. DTM was certainly a "rough and tumble" racing series, in a way that open wheeled formula cars can never be. It was great to watch, and have a favorite team/driver to follow.
@@HerrZenki I agree with your analogy. I live in the U.S., and these DTM drivers seem as if they mash up their machinery at least as much or more than NASCAR drivers. The NASCAR "bull rings" like Bristol are small, and where they usually beat up the cars pretty good! Also, on a road course like Sonoma or Watkins Glen. I really do like the DTM racing though!
@@hugejohnson5011 if you saw some old dtm footage, some of them really did stick their elbows out...to the point that only manhole covers could stop them!
@@HerrZenki Just in the limited footage I have seen, I have noticed some pretty torn up cars still in the battle! I can't imagine that the aero is quite as much a factor, compared to a NASCAR on a super speedway, like Talladega. Thanks for the feedback.
@@HerrZenkiI would say Australian v8 supercars in the early 2000’s are the closest to that, very limited aero, solid rear axle, no traction, and big v8’s going around a proper circuit. Def worth checking out if you havent
0:17 Lol that cone in frot grill:):) I really love first version Alfa with those cool 4 curved up exhaust ends. And Alfa still racing in Hill Climb Racing.
Seems like someone studied Cironi's videos 😅 good job This is one of my top 3 cars ever built, it's simply F1 tech in a street looking derivative racecar, it was 20/30 years ahead of others racing series. It marked a peak in technology development before the electrification and computer era (despite the super advanced systems for that time). ❤
Dear friend, this is incorrect, in the video by Cironi that you are using, LIMONE clarify that the engine only shares the V angle with the PVR and nothing else, moreover, FIAT was going to abandon the DTM so they didn't want ANY new engine development, LIMONE and his team basically went rogue and launched this new engine. Again this is not a PRV, this is a brand new engine made by Pino Aprile that shares the V angle with the PRV.
Il motore della seconda versione della 155 DTM aveva solo le misure caratteristiche riprese dal PVR per motivi di regolamento ma era un progetto nuovo dei tecnici dell'Alfa Romeo
The car vaguely resembled a 155 road car and that's about all it had to do with it. It was a purpose built racing beast, take note F1 this is what a V6 SHOULD sound like.
Since 1993 Alfa Romeo used the Italian V6 Busso (V6 60° 470 hp) engine for the 155 DTM . In 1996 Alfa Romeo used the French PRV V6 90° engine modified by Alfa Romeo to reach 490 hp
From Wikipedia about the engine: The PRV was also the basis for the 90° V6 engine used by Alfa Romeo in the 155 V6 Ti in the 1996 DTM/ITC season from Silverstone onwards.The engines in that series required the use of bank separation angle and cylinder bore spacing from a production based engine, and as a 90° V6 has greater room between banks than a 60° V6 for a more optimal induction system, Alfa Romeo used the PRV as a basis as it had been used in the Lancia Thema, a car which shared its platform with the Alfa Romeo 164, as well as the Fiat Croma and Saab 9000. Other sources declare that the 90° V6 engine in 1996 Alfa Romeo 155 V6 Ti is based on a 2.6 L V8 from 1970 Alfa Romeo Montreal with two cylinders removed, as allowed by the rules, however the FIA homologation documentation shows the homologated production engine was a "2850cm³" capacity "V6" engine. The bore spacing of the Montreal engine was too close to be suitable for the 155 V6 Ti in any case. Limone invented the "Montreal V8" story to throw the press off the scent and to satisfy FIAT management who were unhappy that a non-FIAT group developed engine was being used.
Highly interesting video with some new facts that I never thought about. Such as less valve train vibrations on the gearbox side, which other engines has the same design because of this reason? And the PRV6, a highly disliked engine among car enthusiast in Scandinavia, being used as a building ground in DTM!? Crazy stuff
That's an interesting film, thanks. I think it's stretching the truth to say it ran a French engine. It didn't. Yes, it was loosely based on the PRV block in terms of measurements and layout but beyond that there were few similarities. It's a bit like saying the early Bugattis were French cars, when of course they weren't at all.
With this car alfa mashed up the DTM. I loved this time, when formula 1 was interesting. didn't watch F1 since 20 years, too boring. Rally and hillclimb are much more entertainment. And Goodwood. Quattro and Walter.... wish that times back.
Never Alfa used the PRV. The competition fa engine has only the same intercentre piston measure. This engine was totally new and designed by ING. Limone.
Absolutely gorgeous machine, if i had the cash id do a full rep except losing all the interior. Please run a full video on the btcc version which absolutely dominated with tarquienie at the wheel . Cheers 👍✌🏻
Yes please. I was at Brands Hatch for the BTCC and one of these cars was parked on a trailer in a public area behind the main grandstand, IE not in the paddock or pits. I took the opportunity to get on the ground under the trailer and have a good look. Those were the days.
@@philiptownsend4026 that would have been an amazing opportunity, im jealous. We had a new black 155 1.8 ts at the time tarquienie was dominating. Loved that car, even the motors rocker cover looked great. Aluminium with alfa romeo in red. Hopefully we get a video on the btcc model you actually got to see up close.definitely that was my favourite btcc era 👌🏻
Wait wait wait.... Sergio Limone in the Davide Cironi's video tells another story. They were in struggle finding an engine in Alfa Romeo's history with the needed dimensions, the rules needed only that, so V angle and the bore spacing to allow the right bore diameter to reach high rpm. Since they were and are in the FIAT galaxy, they had the option of using the PRV dimensions, since FIAT was part of the PSA joint venture. But that's NOT A FRENCH ENGINE. It has only the V angle and bore spacing of the PRV, just for rules needs, but it was completely engineered by Alfa Corse. Don't spread wrong claims, please.
Eh so ragazzi,magari inglesi o francesi e magari pure un po' invidiosi. I tedeschi non possono insegnarci nulla in fatto di motori, figuriamoci gli inglesi e ancor di più i francesi....😂
@@massimilianocampana3951Tutti hanno da insegnare e da imparare, ogni produttore ha avuto meriti e primati. La questione è che è stato riportato il falso (clickbait).
I,m sorry, but I cannot agree with the text french engine: its the 90° V6 concept that comes from peugeot/volvo co-enginering. Alfa used this CONCEPT to solve the cooling problem that the 60° engine had. The engine was further on totaly alfa romeo
It's kinda ironic that one of the most loathed production car V6 engine is also one of the most successful in racing competition... and also the engine of one of the most iconic movie car (DeLorean DMC-12).
I believe del V 60 degrees was the who destroyed the Germans in their own championship then it was used the V 90 degrees from Alfa Lancia based on PRV engine and then it arrives issue to finish races and don’t forget own they ruined Nannini championship with the worst unfair game to make him spin while was in a position to win.
Interesting so the 90 degree V6 only came in 96. I thought the Twinspark was only in the 96 engine but it seems that from this video even the 95 60 degree V6 engine also had the Twinspark heads.
@@taketaa5299 doubt it's a mistake. Looking at images of the Busso block, 133mm between the cylinder bore centres seems reasonable. Bigger than I'd have expected though. 133mm is a huge bore spacing for any car engine
It went to re-check that and there is rarely mentioned the Busso’s bore spacing, only two sources I was able to find say the 133 mm figure. Indeed ridiculously wide, but seems legit looking at the engine deck
As much as I love the M3, the Alfa was such a good looking and sounding car!! And it made the arrogance of the Germans turn into humble boys. BTW in the early days the other drivers lightly pushed the exhaust pipes to slow them down, after that straight pipes were used.
amazing info...I had no idea...always thought the 155 DTM was strictly Busso...go figure in what weird places you find PRV 90 degree V sixes...Delorean...Alpine A310...amazing...I once read somewhere that the V6 in the 155 DTM (don't know which one Busso or PRV) was built to such high tolerances that the head, block and sump went together without gaskets...but I can't find anything about that now anymore
Misleading title, in your opinion the team of engineers who created the engine of the Lancia Delta S4 (700-800 HP), the first car without turbolag, needed to go and get an engine block from somewhere else, if they hadn't been forced by budget reasons and various regulations. Engineer Limoni and Engineer Lombardi are among the protagonists of the Delta S4 Engine and Lombardi is the designer of the Ferrari F1 V12, the engine with the most beautiful song ever, the one on which Senna complimented Lombardi for the incredible acceleration; the same engine that Schumacher wanted to keep instead of the V10
It’s not misleading, they “used” a French engine to beat the rules and by used they meant as a scapegoat to get the design parameters they wanted. Too many people misunderstanding that. If not for the PRV bore spacing and bank angle, they wouldn’t have had the same results from the busso architecture. We all know the engines were 100% Italian designed and 100% race spec
The only PRV parts used would be the homologation form with 90 degrees and 108 mm printed on that, so I'm pretty sure that piece of paper would fit in the glove box.
This engine has only the 90 degrees angle in common with PRV. The other parts were engineered by ex Lancia Martini team. This is NOT a french engine. After that you have to remember that Alfa won DTM with the original Alfa V6 engine with 60 dr angle…
I suggest a correction for the title: Alfa Romeo V6 DTM: A 11,800rpm Italian Engine I also suggest uploading a corrected video, with proper information. And i suggest doing proper research before saying shit. The V6 Alfa is a derivate from the V6 Thema from Lancia and have nothing in common with it, just some paper for proper omologation, is like saying that Nutella taste like shit.
What bloody frnch engine? Limone, Italian. ABARTH Italian, Alfa Italian as much as brand can be. Engine block was at some point used in French-Italian cooperation. Connection ends there. Period. Viva Italia!
I am sorry but you are totally wrong. The first version of the engine, the one that won the DTM in 1993, was a V6 60° that had nothing to do with France PRV 90 degrees V6. And the second version used the design conception of the PRV engine, it means the angle of the V and the "interasso" of the cilinders. The manufacture was totally italian. So first inform yourself before putting such sensationalistic title to your video.
All correct sir. We must give credit to Guilio Alfieri of Maserati for the first to build a 4v 90 degree v6 for racing though. Alfieri’s creation was raced by Ligier at Lemans in 74 placing 8th overall. Made some 400hp at 11k rpm from 3L. Engine was based on the Citroen SM/ Merak block but with 4v heads
Learn to adapt. Mr Visio is a Slovak and speaks excellent English. Yes he has an accent but don't we all? Tolerance needed. Enjoy the rich English language spoken differently around the world and even differently within single countries. Are you American by any chance?
@@philiptownsend4026 I agree with you wholeheartedly - I am Dutch and fond of accents actually. But to me that doesnt make the narration less hard to follow.
The base of the 90 degr. was the Lancia Thema V6 engine which was based on the RPV cooperation. Except V90 angle and bore distances there were no common parts with the RPV engine, but was a completely new constructions of the Lancia race department. So it was really an Italian race engine.
Yes, exactly
Engine block was the same. Alfa made new heads, but block was PRV as homollogation required. So, it was tuned PRV
@@GitonIcon The block would have been a specialised cast or billet racing block with no PRV parts. The homologation is just a piece of paper with the cylinder bore spacing written on it, nothing more.
this is some good info, ty guys
@@alexjenner1108Using your anallogy, this PRV-Alfa was more Alfa than Alfa V8 without two cylinders. There is no shame here being put on Alfa, besides Alfa was manufacturing under licence several Renault models including Dauphine, 8 and 4.
If they didn't feel bad about it why should any Alfa fan? You'll never hear fan of Renault or Volvo saying "No Peugeot WM P88 with 900HP reaching 407 kph wasn't PRV, it was just angle.
I love DTM. This was definitely part of the Golden age of racing
Even today DTM still rocks.
What a beast ❤242 lbs. 420 hp, 11800 rpm in 94, what a design, great sound in real life, vids don’t do a slice of justice to there screaming valve-train😊
France, Germany, Italy, and the UK all fighting for motorsports is the best fighting. The 70's and 80's was a crazy time. Great vid, Visioracer.
I've always liked the Alfa! Love that V6 sound!
Amen, But still : No Turbo - No Fun !!! ! !!! 😀
30 years on and this car still gives ptsd to ze germans
Can confirm, we did nazi that coming.
@@hitleradolf3721I can’t tell what’s better, the joke or the username to reinforce it😂😂
@@JJ-xw7im best part is, I'm a Jewish American. Inappropriate humor is my favorite.
the later mercedes' beat them
Good
I enjoyed this car and the Calibra too in Gran Turismo 2 😍
It’s back in GT7. No calibra yet though.
One of my favorite cars of all time 😊
Sorry Man, but the 1996 Alfa Engine was not French. In the same interview you say, Sergio Limone says that the technical aspects to respect for the new regulamentation were the angle of the V for V6 engine and the the distance from the centers of the cylindres. So, on the documents were released the Montreal V6, but it has too short distances between cylindres, and thanks to a society in the last years of the 80s, Lancia and Alfa were the same Brand, and the PRV equipped the Lancia Thema 6V and the Lancia Thema Limousine, so it was addicted to have the technician values to can be used as shield... the V6 1996 Alfa engine was in experimentation from 1994, and Nannini tested it after the initial develop of Giorgio Francia...
It was not, but that’s not as important. The base was a Swedo-French developed engine that was turned upside down into a full race engine. The “French” is there just to catch attention. You see, making a viewer click on the video is harder these years, don’t get too excited about a single title word, just enjoy the full length video which is made without assumptions, only with pure facts. Peace
Peugeot used same engine at Le Mans, the famous 405 kph record.
@@GitonIcon no that was a PRV engine.
@@VisioRacer I come in peace and sorry if my words seems "violent", I know perfectly it's hard to get clicks, but with a click bait title you have should expect comment like mine... Nice video anyway! have a nice day ^^
@@GitonIcon PSA engine-base was exactly the PRV, Alfa used only tecnical aspect of that engine... ^^
I saw race once and I was hooked on the looks and sound! Gran Turismo was the closest I ever got to racing one.
Getting real Sega Touring Car Championship vibes here.
Back in the 90's I owned an Alfa with a 3 litre V6. 😁 Great car!
Best looking and sounding dtm ever made
The Audi V8 that was competing in dtm looked better imo
This is what the F1 V6 engines should sound like, they could rev up to 15k rpm, be sized up to 2 liters and remove the hybrid system, or make it smaller and lighter. Boom, more power, more sound, more fans, more revenue but they're caring about "environment"
Exactly
I love the DTM cars, I hope to see more videos on other manufacturers like Mercedes, Opel...
Great video. DTM was certainly a "rough and tumble" racing series, in a way that open wheeled formula cars can never be. It was great to watch, and have a favorite team/driver to follow.
Its nascar but its not on a roundy-round circuit.
@@HerrZenki I agree with your analogy. I live in the U.S., and these DTM drivers seem as if they mash up their machinery at least as much or more than NASCAR drivers. The NASCAR "bull rings" like Bristol are small, and where they usually beat up the cars pretty good! Also, on a road course like Sonoma or Watkins Glen.
I really do like the DTM racing though!
@@hugejohnson5011 if you saw some old dtm footage, some of them really did stick their elbows out...to the point that only manhole covers could stop them!
@@HerrZenki Just in the limited footage I have seen, I have noticed some pretty torn up cars still in the battle! I can't imagine that the aero is quite as much a factor, compared to a NASCAR on a super speedway, like Talladega. Thanks for the feedback.
@@HerrZenkiI would say Australian v8 supercars in the early 2000’s are the closest to that, very limited aero, solid rear axle, no traction, and big v8’s going around a proper circuit. Def worth checking out if you havent
0:17 Lol that cone in frot grill:):)
I really love first version Alfa with those cool 4 curved up exhaust ends.
And Alfa still racing in Hill Climb Racing.
Great story. Superb explication and explanation. Thank you. Well worth being a patron. Cheers from NZ🇳🇿.
Brilliant video pal never fails please do lots of these 80s and 90s Motorsport stories
Seems like someone studied Cironi's videos 😅 good job
This is one of my top 3 cars ever built, it's simply F1 tech in a street looking derivative racecar, it was 20/30 years ahead of others racing series. It marked a peak in technology development before the electrification and computer era (despite the super advanced systems for that time).
❤
I did not study the video, I read lots of other articles around the web ✌🏻
@@VisioRacer yeah, was clear you read many other sources, I was just joking a bit.
Howeva great detailed job
💪 keep it up
Touring car racing is just the great
Dear friend, this is incorrect, in the video by Cironi that you are using, LIMONE clarify that the engine only shares the V angle with the PVR and nothing else, moreover, FIAT was going to abandon the DTM so they didn't want ANY new engine development, LIMONE and his team basically went rogue and launched this new engine. Again this is not a PRV, this is a brand new engine made by Pino Aprile that shares the V angle with the PRV.
Those were the days. Wonderful racing car. Nice video as always 👍🙂
I love the sound difference between induction and exhaust as it goes by.
Bellissime gare, altissima tecnologia ma i piloti contavano ancora molto
Bravo e grazie per il video
As an Italian my love for that Alfa it's something else 🥰
Il motore della seconda versione della 155 DTM aveva solo le misure caratteristiche riprese dal PVR per motivi di regolamento ma era un progetto nuovo dei tecnici dell'Alfa Romeo
Truly iconic race car , made so many Sundays special for me as a kid .
No videogame nails that tone. Whenever someone says v6 engines sound like shit I point them to this and the Lancia stratos.
The car vaguely resembled a 155 road car and that's about all it had to do with it. It was a purpose built racing beast, take note F1 this is what a V6 SHOULD sound like.
Thanks for another awesome video!
Since 1993 Alfa Romeo used the Italian V6 Busso (V6 60° 470 hp) engine for the 155 DTM . In 1996 Alfa Romeo used the French PRV V6 90° engine modified by Alfa Romeo to reach 490 hp
Una delle auto da corsa più bella e affascinante di sempre!
Amazing video as always, great information, footage, and research. I love your work, keep it up.
From Wikipedia about the engine:
The PRV was also the basis for the 90° V6 engine used by Alfa Romeo in the 155 V6 Ti in the 1996 DTM/ITC season from Silverstone onwards.The engines in that series required the use of bank separation angle and cylinder bore spacing from a production based engine, and as a 90° V6 has greater room between banks than a 60° V6 for a more optimal induction system, Alfa Romeo used the PRV as a basis as it had been used in the Lancia Thema, a car which shared its platform with the Alfa Romeo 164, as well as the Fiat Croma and Saab 9000.
Other sources declare that the 90° V6 engine in 1996 Alfa Romeo 155 V6 Ti is based on a 2.6 L V8 from 1970 Alfa Romeo Montreal with two cylinders removed, as allowed by the rules, however the FIA homologation documentation shows the homologated production engine was a "2850cm³" capacity "V6" engine. The bore spacing of the Montreal engine was too close to be suitable for the 155 V6 Ti in any case. Limone invented the "Montreal V8" story to throw the press off the scent and to satisfy FIAT management who were unhappy that a non-FIAT group developed engine was being used.
This is a car a special car that has marked a generation with the name Alfa Romeo
I support this content.
Highly interesting video with some new facts that I never thought about. Such as less valve train vibrations on the gearbox side, which other engines has the same design because of this reason? And the PRV6, a highly disliked engine among car enthusiast in Scandinavia, being used as a building ground in DTM!? Crazy stuff
A grande overview, mon cheri.
One of my favorite cars in GT7. Love to race with it.
That's an interesting film, thanks. I think it's stretching the truth to say it ran a French engine. It didn't. Yes, it was loosely based on the PRV block in terms of measurements and layout but beyond that there were few similarities. It's a bit like saying the early Bugattis were French cars, when of course they weren't at all.
155 2.5 V6 TI DTM 😍😍🔥🔥🔥
Super video.
That car sings a sweet song 🎵
Dream car right there.
4:45 that man in pitlane really dash out to see her fly by
I love driving this car in Gran Turismo!
With this car alfa mashed up the DTM. I loved this time, when formula 1 was interesting. didn't watch F1 since 20 years, too boring. Rally and hillclimb are much more entertainment. And Goodwood. Quattro and Walter.... wish that times back.
PRV Stands for Peugeot/Renault/Volvo. The PRV engine was even used in the Delorean DMC12
Never Alfa used the PRV. The competition fa engine has only the same intercentre piston measure. This engine was totally new and designed by ING. Limone.
absolute beauty
Absolutely gorgeous machine, if i had the cash id do a full rep except losing all the interior. Please run a full video on the btcc version which absolutely dominated with tarquienie at the wheel . Cheers 👍✌🏻
Yes please. I was at Brands Hatch for the BTCC and one of these cars was parked on a trailer in a public area behind the main grandstand, IE not in the paddock or pits.
I took the opportunity to get on the ground under the trailer and have a good look.
Those were the days.
@@philiptownsend4026 that would have been an amazing opportunity, im jealous. We had a new black 155 1.8 ts at the time tarquienie was dominating. Loved that car, even the motors rocker cover looked great. Aluminium with alfa romeo in red. Hopefully we get a video on the btcc model you actually got to see up close.definitely that was my favourite btcc era 👌🏻
Sounds better than today F-1. 💪
One of my favourite cars in grand tourismo
Just wonderful.
Wait wait wait....
Sergio Limone in the Davide Cironi's video tells another story.
They were in struggle finding an engine in Alfa Romeo's history with the needed dimensions, the rules needed only that, so V angle and the bore spacing to allow the right bore diameter to reach high rpm.
Since they were and are in the FIAT galaxy, they had the option of using the PRV dimensions, since FIAT was part of the PSA joint venture.
But that's NOT A FRENCH ENGINE.
It has only the V angle and bore spacing of the PRV, just for rules needs, but it was completely engineered by Alfa Corse.
Don't spread wrong claims, please.
Eh so ragazzi,magari inglesi o francesi e magari pure un po' invidiosi. I tedeschi non possono insegnarci nulla in fatto di motori, figuriamoci gli inglesi e ancor di più i francesi....😂
@@massimilianocampana3951Tutti hanno da insegnare e da imparare, ogni produttore ha avuto meriti e primati.
La questione è che è stato riportato il falso (clickbait).
beats the germans at their own game🔥
nope, the later mercedes beat them
did I get this right? final version had 490 hp? man 😮 what a beast
Yess
Nearly 200bhp/liter N/A 😮
I'm just here for the noise.
This engine was a master-piece. Did they enlarge the V-angle as well from '93 to '94 ???
WoooHooo, that's a sweet little engine
I,m sorry, but I cannot agree with the text french engine: its the 90° V6 concept that comes from peugeot/volvo co-enginering. Alfa used this CONCEPT to solve the cooling problem that the 60° engine had. The engine was further on totaly alfa romeo
Yes, it was indeed
It's kinda ironic that one of the most loathed production car V6 engine is also one of the most successful in racing competition... and also the engine of one of the most iconic movie car (DeLorean DMC-12).
I believe del V 60 degrees was the who destroyed the Germans in their own championship then it was used the V 90 degrees from Alfa Lancia based on PRV engine and then it arrives issue to finish races and don’t forget own they ruined Nannini championship with the worst unfair game to make him spin while was in a position to win.
Era só isto 🍀❤️
Interesting so the 90 degree V6 only came in 96. I thought the Twinspark was only in the 96 engine but it seems that from this video even the 95 60 degree V6 engine also had the Twinspark heads.
Well, now you know
Only the later evolutions used that new V6, the 93 one had a narrow angle v6
Yes, that’s what the video says
133mm bore spacing?!!! Did I hear that correctly?
Probably a mistake, most likely is 13.3mm
@@taketaa5299 doubt it's a mistake. Looking at images of the Busso block, 133mm between the cylinder bore centres seems reasonable.
Bigger than I'd have expected though. 133mm is a huge bore spacing for any car engine
@niia.3642 oh yeah, without a doubt. I was referring the 13.3mm as the wall to wall cylinder space but that make sense
It went to re-check that and there is rarely mentioned the Busso’s bore spacing, only two sources I was able to find say the 133 mm figure. Indeed ridiculously wide, but seems legit looking at the engine deck
@VisioRacer That's awesome! I was just shocked that something that wasn't an industrial or large truck engine had bore spacing that wide.
Lol…a French engine designed by an Italian (& probly in Italy).
I might say this is formula 1 engine by today rules
I wish my naturally aspirated v6 would develop 200hp per liter!!! So impressive!
But it wouldn't be drive able! Race engines can only run flat out, that's all they need to do.
Nicola Larini 4ever❤❤❤
As much as I love the M3, the Alfa was such a good looking and sounding car!! And it made the arrogance of the Germans turn into humble boys. BTW in the early days the other drivers lightly pushed the exhaust pipes to slow them down, after that straight pipes were used.
Why do I have a feeling these sounds will be the type we will be hearing in Formula 1 in 2026...
We all hope so ;-)
FORZA RAGAZZZZI
🍀🤍💋
amazing info...I had no idea...always thought the 155 DTM was strictly Busso...go figure in what weird places you find PRV 90 degree V sixes...Delorean...Alpine A310...amazing...I once read somewhere that the V6 in the 155 DTM (don't know which one Busso or PRV) was built to such high tolerances that the head, block and sump went together without gaskets...but I can't find anything about that now anymore
Misleading title, in your opinion the team of engineers who created the engine of the Lancia Delta S4 (700-800 HP), the first car without turbolag, needed to go and get an engine block from somewhere else, if they hadn't been forced by budget reasons and various regulations.
Engineer Limoni and Engineer Lombardi are among the protagonists of the Delta S4 Engine and Lombardi is the designer of the Ferrari F1 V12, the engine with the most beautiful song ever, the one on which Senna complimented Lombardi for the incredible acceleration; the same engine that Schumacher wanted to keep instead of the V10
It’s not misleading, they “used” a French engine to beat the rules and by used they meant as a scapegoat to get the design parameters they wanted. Too many people misunderstanding that. If not for the PRV bore spacing and bank angle, they wouldn’t have had the same results from the busso architecture. We all know the engines were 100% Italian designed and 100% race spec
Mercedes was the most unsportive team in those days... their cars rearended Alfa Romeo cars, and damagede their exhaustpipes....
Please do more DTM videos
And BTCC please.
Eh could you do vauxhall calibra nxt, v6rule btw🎉 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Wow, I remember this F from granturismo 2
12,000 rpm and French makes me very nervous
It isn't French in any way. It was designed and built by Italians in Italy. So no need to worry.
They used a prv in a successful race car!? Wow...20 years after they came out!?
No. The only similarity was the V angle and bore spacing. Everything else built by Italians around those two parameters.
Insomma, ragazzi, un po' alla volta scooriremo che la 155 DTM era un'auto francese con adesivi Alfa 😂
La meccanica invece era Lancia, quella si
Prv base. But hardly elaborated by Ing Sergio Limone from Abarth.
French engine? No joke man, please!
Lies. Alfa Romeo did use their own engine. Just not based on the one found on the production cars
This begs the question, would those Alfa Romeo PRV6 parts fit the PRV6 in a Volvo 260?
Because that would be hilarious.
The race engine, used in last models, has only some dimensions in common with RPV engine (used in a Lancia model).
The only PRV parts used would be the homologation form with 90 degrees and 108 mm printed on that, so I'm pretty sure that piece of paper would fit in the glove box.
Absolute great car but in the end Opel become the most advanced car of the series.
🔥🔥🔥
Are you telling me that they built a touring car engine out of a Delorean?
😂😂😂 A+ nobody else seems to get the joke.
@@_..-.._..-.._ I thought it was quite clever myself.
At least one person got it 🤜
Absolutely nooooo. Listen to the whole video again so you understand what was said.
@@philiptownsend4026 PRV engine was used, so I'm correct.
This engine has only the 90 degrees angle in common with PRV. The other parts were engineered by ex Lancia Martini team. This is NOT a french engine. After that you have to remember that Alfa won DTM with the original Alfa V6 engine with 60 dr angle…
delorean engine
why cant we have something like this nowadays?
Simple... Politics!
I suggest a correction for the title: Alfa Romeo V6 DTM: A 11,800rpm Italian Engine
I also suggest uploading a corrected video, with proper information. And i suggest doing proper research before saying shit.
The V6 Alfa is a derivate from the V6 Thema from Lancia and have nothing in common with it, just some paper for proper omologation, is like saying that Nutella taste like shit.
Sounds just like an F1 car.
What bloody frnch engine? Limone, Italian. ABARTH Italian, Alfa Italian as much as brand can be. Engine block was at some point used in French-Italian cooperation. Connection ends there. Period. Viva Italia!
Do a video covering the most tuneable snowmobile engines
I think you should narrow that down. Maybe the evolution of hillclimb sleds or the 4 stroke takeover and turbos.
I am sorry but you are totally wrong. The first version of the engine, the one that won the DTM in 1993, was a V6 60° that had nothing to do with France PRV 90 degrees V6. And the second version used the design conception of the PRV engine, it means the angle of the V and the "interasso" of the cilinders. The manufacture was totally italian. So first inform yourself before putting such sensationalistic title to your video.
All correct sir. We must give credit to Guilio Alfieri of Maserati for the first to build a 4v 90 degree v6 for racing though. Alfieri’s creation was raced by Ligier at Lemans in 74 placing 8th overall. Made some 400hp at 11k rpm from 3L. Engine was based on the Citroen SM/ Merak block but with 4v heads
"Busso v6", bro, italian BUSSO V6....
The 90° was not the Busso, neither was it Italian in its core.
Interesting video. My only critique would be that the narration is a bit hard to follow at times due to the overall pronunciation.
Learn to adapt. Mr Visio is a Slovak and speaks excellent English. Yes he has an accent but don't we all? Tolerance needed. Enjoy the rich English language spoken differently around the world and even differently within single countries.
Are you American by any chance?
@@philiptownsend4026 I agree with you wholeheartedly - I am Dutch and fond of accents actually. But to me that doesnt make the narration less hard to follow.
They did at first