They should have supercharged that thing
Most of the info has already been posted up, but heres the article and info in full
http://www.carsguide.com.au/site/new...referrer=email
Holden has unveiled the VE MkII Commodore.
And it signals that Holden and Ford's new battle ground will be at the bowser.
GM-Holden yesterday fired a salvo across Ford's bows by launching what it describes as the most fuel-efficient Australian-built six cylinder car available.
It has unveiled two new hi-tech six-cylinder engines for the Commodore range just a week after Ford said it would build a four-cylinder Falcon.
Related Coverage
Reuss leaves HoldenHolden head Reuss to lead GM productCommodore export off againHDT VK Commodore Group A — 1985: buyer's guideHolden Commodore VF: VE faceliftGM-Holden chairman, Mark Reuss, said Holden was going to ‘out-engineer’ its rivals with cutting-edge technology. "Dropping cylinders would be the last resort," he said.
The new direct-injection 3.0-litre and 3.6-litre V6 engines will hit showrooms next month in the face-lifted Commodore and Statesman range. Not only is Australia's best-selling family sedan now cheaper to run, it emits less harmful greenhouse gases, Reuss said.
"We've been listening to what the customer wants," he said. "We've invested in changing what matters most to motorists, increasing fuel efficiency, improving refinement and developing performance."
The new petrol engines will be joined by a more economical LPG Commodore engine. Reuss said the new 3.0-litre Commodore was so efficient, families could drive from Melbourne to Sydney, a distance of 870km, on one tank of fuel.
"We know because we've done it," Reuss said. "The car we drove actually got 7.5l/100km in actual real-world driving, that's right in there with our four cylinder entries in the smaller car market."
Owners will also be able to save $325 in annual fuel costs too, he said.
Reuss said the Commodore's direct-injection technology was a big step forward for the local car industry and Australian manufacturing and was applauded by the Industry Minister, Senator Kim Carr.
"We are defining our own future, creating our own luck," Reuss said. "It places a more refined Commodore amongst four cylinder competitors while delivering the space and flexibility which Australian car buyers clearly want."
Both V6s adopt what Holden calls spark ignition direct injection, to deliver up to 13 per cent better economy and up to 14 per cent lower CO2 emissions, combined with a new six-speed automatic transmission.
The new Omega 3.0-litre gets 9.3 litres/100km, more than 13 per cent better than the existing model's 10.7 litres/100km. This engine also produces 600kg less CO2 emissions than the existing engine. Apart from lower fuel consumption, power is up.
The 3.0-litre develops 190kW, up from 175kW of the previous engine, while the 3.6-litre develops 210kW, up from 195kW.
Holden's popular dual-fuel LPG range will retain the 3.6-litre AlloyTec V6 but it has been reworked for better economy and lower CO2 emissions.
Apart from powering local Commodores, GM-Holden plans to export the engines to several other GM plants globally, including Mexico where it is expected to go into a new Cadillac off-roader.
New Holden Global V6 direct-injection engines
3.0 and 3.6-litre double overhead cam alloy V6.
Uses 91RON ULP, Euro IV+ emissions rating
Power:
3.0 - 190kW @ 6700rpm
3.6 - 210kW @ 6400rpm
Torque:
3.0 - 290Nm @ 2900rpm
3.6 - 350Nm @ 2900rpm
Fuel economy (l/100km)/emissions:
9.3/221g/km - 10.3/245g/km.
Between 9 and 13 per cent fuel consumption improvement, 9-14 per cent emissions improvement.
Superceded V6
3.6-litre double overhead cam, variable inlet camshaft, 24-valve alloy V6 (High Feature in top-spec models).
Power:
175kW @ 6500rpm
HF 195kW @ 6500rpm
Torque:
325Nm @ 2400rpm
HF 340Nm @ 2600rpm (ECE, Nm)
Fuel economy (l/100km)/emissions:
10.6/252g/km -11.6/274g/km
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2013 Ford Focus ST
Calibra - The only car that will institutionalise you and send you broke in the mean time
They should have supercharged that thing
id be interested to see how this new 3L pulls this heavy beast up a hill compared to the previous engine.
Make me a sandwich.
Lots of changes there but external sheet metal remains the same...kind of what I expected.
I wonder if full or part time LPG and/or Diesel powerplants are also in the pipeline...
My rides: 2004 Opel/Bertone TS Astra turbo convertible - 2012 Mercedes Benz C204 C Class coupe
Others: 2009 Honda City VTiL sedan - 2015 Fiat 500
290nm is not enough to pull this boat around town
Audi A3 8P 2.0TFSI QUATTRO | SAT NAV | RS6 19'S | PREMIUM TINT| APR CARBONIO STAGE 2 INTAKE | SPM 3" SS DOWNPIPE W/ 200 CELL CAT
TUNED BY APR
APR STAGE II.
It's backup up with a 6 speed auto with a wider spread of ratios than the old 4 speed/3.6L edition.
290Nm is plenty:
Omega 1670kg (after weightloss of new engine)
Accord Euro 1605kg and 230Nm at 4200rpm
Mazda 6 1470kg and 225 Nm at 4000 rpm
The Omega has a better weight to Nm ratio than both these cars and no one complains about these vehicles being slow.
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