The Volkswagen Group will introduce mild hybrid and natural gas engine technology to its ranges in an attempt to cut average CO2 outputs to below the upcoming 95g/km limit.
At the Vienna Motor Symposium, the German company confirmed that the Mk8 VW Golf would be the first to come with a new 48V mild hybrid powertrain that's currently under development. The next-gen model is due on roads just before the 95g/km European limit is enforced in 2020.
As first revealed by Autocar, the Mk8 Golf GTI is due to get a boost with mild hybrid technology, but VW’s latest announcement suggests the system will also be integrated in non-performance variants (like the one Autocar has already driven - pictured below).
VW said it “aims to make hybrid drives affordable to an extremely large clientele” with this system, which it claims will “drastically reduce consumption and emissions while at the same time offering extra dynamism and comfort”.
The company is also working to integrate mild hybrid technology into a diesel engine. It has developed a 2.0 TDI with a 12V belt starter generator that’s due to be integrated into Audi models with longitudinally mounted engines. The new mild hybrid diesels will then be used transversely in MQB-based models from the rest of the group.
VW is also investigating less conventional means to reduce CO2 before the new CO2 limit in 2020. It revealed that it is working on a production engine powered by natural gas that it claims produces practically no particle emissions.
Engineers have used a 1.5 TGI Evo engine (below) to develop the technology. VW claims that the natural gas engine produces 128bhp like the petrol alternative that’s currently offered in the Golf, illustrating that performance is likely to be unchanged. A gas power option is set to be added to the next A1.
Join the debate
Add your comment
Mild hybrids are an easy, low-tech fix
Good efficiency and low emissions are easy to achieve by adding a motor-generator (replacing starter and alternator) and battery. Suzuki did this years ago with its SHVS. VW's obsession with dirty diesel has it playing catch-up here. Meanwhile, Toyota's belt-less full hybrids with reliable eCVT continue to improve after 20 years of making hybrids. A mild hybrid VW may be better than a conventional VW but it is still an unreliable VW.
Propane?
Why can't cars run on propane? The nice orange tanks are readily available and easily exchanged at many outlets.
Yawn you too
FadingLady strikes again, no wonder: it is a news report about a VW Group product.
The real yawn is that Toyota will ditch Avensis from sale because no engines on it will comply with Euro 6d-temp: Fact
The real yawn is that Toyota will retract from selling any diesel engines on the european passenger car fleet because the deal with BMW will expire at the end of this year and since Toyota decided to forego with further development of the 1.6 ND engine, there`s nothing available to bring to market: Fact
The real yawn is that Toyota HSD and HSD II aren`t geting that traction as Toyota says it gets and soon 48V mild-hybrids from competitors will prove just that: Fact
The real yawn is that Diesel engine tecnology isn`t dead: Fact
The real yawn is that Brexit has put a lot in question regarding Toyota UK manufacturing: Fact
The real yawn is that Toyota venture in manufacturing in Turkey (with Turkey day by day further away from entering the EU) proves to be a not so great decision: Fact
The real yawn is that TPCA-Kolin factory is going to be a baby that no one wants, PSA with Opel-Vauxhall is the least interested: Fact
The real yawn is that Toyota will have a hard time fostering again a profitable partnership with PSA to have them building vans/people carriers at PSA SAVELNORD, now that Opel-Vauxhall are also sister brands: Fact
Yawn to you (Fact)
coolboy wrote:
Mmnn OK...