Audi’s V8 engine could become a casualty of the automaker’s
impending shift towards downsized engines and electrification. A source
close to the Volkswagen-owned firm has revealed that its new V8 is
most likely its last.
Mr. VIKRANT CHAUHAN
“It would be
very difficult to justify the huge investment in another new V8 because of the
cost of developing electric drivetrains and battery packs. You have to ask what
is the best use of investment money,” explained an anonymous inside source in a
recent interview with British magazine Autocar.
The source added
that Audi hopes battery-electric vehicles will make up anywhere between 25 and
35 percent of the cars it sells by the year 2025. The company’s current
lineup doesn’t include an all-electric car, so the technology needs to be
developed from scratch. Luckily, Audi can share the cost burden with
other Volkswagen-owned firms.
Fear not, big displacement fans, Audi’s V8 engine still has
several years ahead of it. The diesel-powered variant of the engine (pictured)
was just introduced under the hood of the SQ7 TDI, and it will be found between the fenders of
the brand new second-generation Porsche Panamera as early as next year. And while
we’re unlikely to see the 4.0-liter TDI mill in the United States for
obvious reasons, a gasoline-burning variant of the eight will power upcoming
Audi, Porsche, and even Bentley models for years to come.
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