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162 CARMAGAZINE.CO.UK | APRIL 2019
Retro
tech From creator of huge power to perfect hybrid bedfellow,
the turbo’s come a long way. Ben Miller tells its story
The turbo: a history
1973
1977
1986
2019
2013
1973 2002 goes turbo
GM dabbled with turbos in the early ’60s, but the ’70s
marks their mainstream adoption. BMW uses a KKK
blower for the 2002 Turbo, giving the sweet little four-
banger a 167bhp kick. But its timing – just as the oil
crisis bites – couldn’t be worse. Later F1-spec BMW
turbo fours make 1400bhp.
1986 Porsche’s sequential thinking
Big turbines give huge power but huge lag; smaller
ones good response but meagre boost. Cue
Porsche, by now fluent turbo speakers, and the 959’s
sequential blowers: as revs rise, the smaller turbines
hand over to the big ’uns to deliver 450bhp without
any infuriating low-rev nothingness.
2019 Porsche nails the blown motor
As a measure of how far the technology’s come,
‘normal’ 911s got down-sized turbo engines with the
991.2 facelift. Mankind threatened global anarchy
until it drove one, and quite liked it. Evolved 3.0-litre
9A2 Evo engine (right) in the new 992 is even better.
1977 Renault turbocharges F1
Blinded by the ongoing brilliance of Ford’s evergreen
DFV V8, F1 teams ignore the bit of the rules that
permits 1.5-litre turbos to run with naturally-aspirated
3.0-litre engines. Bravely, Renault doesn’t. It debuts
the RS01 hand grenade in ’77. Two years later, its
RS10 (above) successor wins its first race.
1920s Aero engineers rejoice
Since turbo engines laugh in the face of thin air
at altitude, speed-hungry aero engineers get
busy bolting on blowers. Come WW2, turbo-
superchargers give American bombers and fighters
in particular astonishing performance at altitude.
2013 Turbos and hybrids fall in love
McLaren’s P1 goes on sale, in which a turbo V8 and
hybrid system work in stunning concert. BMW also
unveils the production-spec i8 (above), albeit with a
more modest hybrid three pot. Now Aston, Ferrari
and McLaren are all working on turbo V6 hybrids.
1905 Good idea patented
Forced induction via
a mechanically-driven
supercharger is almost as old
as the engine itself, but it isn’t
until 1905 that a patent’s filed
on a turbine-driven compressor.
The phrases ‘vicious lag’ and
‘uncontrollable wheelspin’ enter
common usage around the
same time.
Evolved 911
Carrera S six is
good for 444bhp
from 3.0 litres –
and negligible
1905
1920 S
NEW