Audi Variable Valvelift System in Detail

Audi New Valvelift System

By Brian Potter
June 26, 2008 2:00 PM
Filed Under: Audi, German, Technology

After six years of development Audi has revealed the Audi Valvelift System (AVS). Now available on the direct-injection 2.8 and 3.2-liter V6-FSI engines, the system takes variable valve timing to the next level resulting in smooth power build-up, spontaneous throttle response and most importantly, reduced fuel consumption by up to seven percent.

Based on the existing variable valve timing system which permits the valve opening and closing times to be varied, the Audi valvelift system now achieves the next step – variable control of the valve lift, thus influencing the cross-section of the intake duct.

For example, under partial engine load, variable valve lift can be 2.0 mm or 5.7 mm. However, under heavy load conditions the inlet valves can lift completely open to 11.0 mm – ideal for high charge volumes and flow speeds in the combustion chamber. The ability to asymmetrically control valve lift causes the charge air to flow into the combustion chamber spirally and cylindrically, also known as “drumble”. Ultimately, the aim is to open and close the valves in such a way that the correct charge of air is always drawn into the cylinders.

With an operational range of 700 to 4000 rpm the greatest potential for fuel savings is achieved at constant speeds in the mid-range, however, the AVS is capable of handling up to 7000 rpm. Future development of AVS will include the complete shutdown of individual cylinders. 

For precise mechanical and operating details see press release below.

Source: Audi

Press Release (Click to expand)

More power and torque with less fuel consumption – that is the dream of every engine designer. With the Audi valvelift system, which manages the inlet valve timing in a gasoline engine in a very innovative way, that dream becomes a reality. Audi uses this technology for its direct-injection 2.8 and 3.2-liter V6-FSI engines in the A4, A5, A6 and A8.

Intelligence is all in the head, one might say – the cylinder head in the case of a car’s engine. The aim is to open and close the valves in such a way that the correct charge of air is always drawn into the cylinders. The first breakthrough came years ago with the rotation of the camshaft by means of adjusters – permitting the valve opening and closing times to be varied. The Audi valvelift system now achieves the next step – variable control of the valve lift, thus influencing the cross-section of the intake duct.

How it works: The two inlet camshafts are equipped with teeth. On each of them sit three cam elements – cylindrical sleeves, on the outside of which there are spiral grooves. There are six metal pins integrated into the ladder frames of each of the two cylinder heads, which extend by four millimeters, powered by lightning-fast electromagnetic actuators. Two of them are responsible for each cam element.

The top illustration shows the right-hand pin in action. It engages in the groove of the rotating cam element and so pushes it by seven millimeters to the right on the shaft. It is locked in the end position by means of a spring-loaded pin. The metal pin, now idle, is pushed back mechanically.

Each cam element carries two adjacent profiles for small and large valve lifts. When pushed to the right the cam element is in the full load position, where the voluminous full-load profiles (shown in red in the drawing) operate the especially narrow roller cam followers. They open the two inlet valves with a lift of 11.0 mm – ideal for high charge volumes and flow speeds in the combustion chamber.

Under partial load the cam element is pushed to the left by the left-hand pin; now the small cam profiles (green) come into play. They open the valves with a small and variable lift, either only 2.0 mm or 5.7 mm. This asymmetric opening leads the to the charge air rotating both spirally and cylindrically as it flows into the combustion chamber. This "drumble", which is assisted by edges and bumps in the combustion chamber and a specially shaped piston, renders superfluous the charge motion flaps which are otherwise necessary in the intake duct of FSI engines.

The changeover between the valve lift settings takes place in the range between 700 and 4,000 rpm; it is completed within two revolutions of the crankshaft. A collection of short-term interventions – a switch to retarded ignition, the adjustment of all four camshafts and the closing of the throttle – prevent torque surges. What the driver will notice are the engine’s smooth power build-up and spontaneous throttle response.

The most important effect, however, is that fuel consumption drops by up to seven percent. AVS technology achieves its greatest potential fuel savings at a constant speed in the mid-load range. In sixth gear, the engine of the Audi A6 2.8 FSI propels the car at up to 150 km/h (93.21 mph) using the small valve lift setting.

The Audi valvelift system enables the volume of air drawn in to be controlled to a large extent by the opening of the inlet valves. The throttle butterfly can remain fully open even under partial load and the undesirable choke losses are considerably reduced. A technical pipe dream becomes reality – in a new, intelligent way. Current solutions operate with additional elements such as levers or cups between the camshafts and the valves. This has various disadvantages: the increased mass of the moving parts, greater friction and reduced valve gear rigidity.

None of these problems are associated with the two-stage Audi valvelift system. Its uncomplicated design means that it can cope with engine speeds of up to 7,000 rpm, so it can deliver high peak performance. Its compact proportions also simplify the packaging of the engines in the vehicle and permit efficient production using the modular system. The components are made in the engines plant at Györ in Hungary, where a large proportion of the V6 engines also come off the production line. In AVS technology, which is the result of six years of development work, Audi sees a solution with great potential for the future. In theory it will be possible to implement further development stages, up to and including the complete shutdown of individual cylinders.

The FSI engines with AVS sport a few other special features. A new type of sensor technology feeds data to their management systems. It gets its information from the position of the adjustable inlet camshafts and no longer from the pressure in the inlet manifold as before, which is in fact constant when operating with the throttle wide open. In the case of the 2.8-liter V6, a variable intake manifold enhances the effect of the AVS system. It increases torque at low revs and power output at high revs.

Audi Technology ABC

• Choke losses
are unavoidable on a conventional four-stroke gasoline engine, because the engine load is regulated by means of the intake air volume. The engine encounters resistance from the throttle butterfly in the intake choke when drawing in air, since the throttle is only slightly open under partial load, and this choke effect reduces efficiency. The throttle butterfly is still retained with the Audi valvelift system but it now plays only a minor role. The engine actually runs with the throttle wide open in various part-load ranges.

• The Audi valvelift system
is currently employed at Audi on two V6 engines – the 3.2 FSI and the 2.8 FSI. With the 2.8-liter V6, delivering 154 kW (210 hp), the luxury saloon Audi A8 consumes just 8.3 liters of fuel per 100 km (28.34 USmpg). The associated carbon dioxide emissions amount to just 199 grams per kilometer (320.26 g/mile) – the lowest figure in the entire luxury saloon segment.

Comments

Verdano
June 26, 2008 2:48 PM
Even that I am Mercedes Benz Fanatic, respect for Audi. Definitely very good job! Anyway German Cars ROCKS!

alexb81
July 4, 2008 4:07 PM
Hey, guys, Honda did this a loooong time ago with VTEC, like 1989...so, what's new about it????

Joe_Limon
June 26, 2008 3:42 PM
meh, if they really wanted total control they would have made a sloping surface that changes through an infinite number of timing ranges for perfect valve timing control.

m4rtins
June 26, 2008 4:16 PM
Joe-limon - nice to see you have no understanding of engines - there needs to be a smooth transition between cam profile which cannot be achieved with a continual slope, hence there would be an extremely high lateral force for actuator. There is a cylindrical section where the valve transitions between the two cam lobes - otherwise it would smash the engine due to the high loads. Like all that write into forums, you know nothing............

benz_man
June 26, 2008 7:59 PM
While joe-limon's mechanical solution was unfavorable, his theory was spot-on. If Audi really wanted perfect valve lift control, they would have created an infinitely variable design. While BMW's Valvetronic doesn't offer quite as much total valve lift, the system is "stepless" with complete, continuous control of valve lift. Audi's AVS only offers two fixed valve "steps". However, Audi has achieved similar efficiency gains with reduced component costs/complexity. But wont see the same power increases BMW does with Valvetronic. Although they should be able to find additional power somewhere else now, without efficiency losses.

catalin.dinu
June 26, 2008 4:25 PM
it's allright to complete shutdown one of the cylinders?

Sharpshot
June 26, 2008 6:27 PM
Forgive me if I'm wrong, but Porsche has had this for some years with their "Variocam/Variocam Plus". Came out in the early 1990's I believe.

Six years in development? Do not get me wrong, Audi are an amazing company and have a whole selection of inovations when it comes to the industry. However, this is nothing new when a company has had it for atleast 15 years, now on engines that go up to 8400rpm.

http://www.porsche.com/microsite/technology/default.aspx?pool=uk&ShowSingleTechterm=PTVCP&Category=&Model=&SearchedString=&SelectedVariant=

(Unless I am completly wrong and these are two different things, then I apologise for the ignorance)

jalex
June 26, 2008 6:45 PM
Sorry, but Variocam is a valve timing variation system. This, on the otherhand, is a valve lift variation system, meaning it makes the valve open less or more according to the load needs. The main thing here is that this, interesting as it may be, is a variation of a system called valvetronic presented some years ago by BMW. In valvetronic the system goes even further, using the lift variation to totally control the inflow and thus render useless the use of the throtle butterfly. Nice try, though...

Zero
June 26, 2008 6:48 PM
Toyota have been using VVTL-i engines for a number of years, since 1998. But, I belive this is slightly different, because Audi have managed to graft the system for larger engines, and they will be able to get more power out of them.

out4ride
June 26, 2008 7:28 PM
I think you guys need to read this article one more time before jumping into conclusions. Audi is not saying they came up with something new but that they were able to incorporate two systems together.

Sharpshot
June 26, 2008 8:56 PM
Are you sure?

"VarioCam Plus uses a combination of variable valve timing and variable valve lift on the intake side to improve power, torque and fuel consumption across the entire engine-speed range." - http://homepage.virgin.net/shalco.com/VarioCamPlus.htm

Lol, I am indeed giving it a good go Jalex, just need a bit of clarification.

benz_man
June 27, 2008 12:33 AM
VarioCam Plus doesn't offer the amount of lift and timing variations that AVS, VVEL & Valvetronic do. It does work around the same principal though. Plus, Porsche uses electro-hydraulic tappets that, when spun at excessive engine speeds, go poo.

muellr
June 27, 2008 12:41 AM
well, as always there is a minefield of patents out there and so it might take a while to come up with a workaround solution or pay a lot of royalties. and i guess there is nothing worse than to see your competition smile when you sall more cars, cause they just make heaps of cash without the trouble of putting a product on the market...

justanotherfreak
June 27, 2008 12:57 PM
Yes, good job on stating that Audi redesigned the wheel, when Honda already did this around 1989

4rings
June 28, 2008 11:58 AM
Is that so? And on what car did Honda have variable LIFT? Valve timing and valve lift are not the same, and, as for Honda's variable valve TIMING, it wasnt first, and it also wasnt on both intake AND exhaust, until just about everybody else had it on both sides. This arcticle is about a new LIFT system, as stated in the headline, the diagram, and on the link you just clicked to get here. Maybe you also missed the part where the second paragraph begins "Based on the existing variable valve timing system which permits the valve opening and closing times to be varied, the Audi valvelift system now achieves the next step ? variable control of the valve lift, thus influencing the cross-section of the intake duct." Pretty self explanatory wouldnt you say? Its not a very long piece, so maybe you can actually read it.

benz_man
June 28, 2008 9:19 PM
4rings, Vtec is a variable lift system too. Its just no where near as complex or "smart". Another old system that accomplishes the same principle in a different way, with more limitations.

Aesthetics
June 11, 2009 10:54 AM
honda's V-TEC is still the best. all the other are copying thiers in principal, using a little piston to shift lobe torque, even porsche vario cam plus works in the spirit of honda's V-TEC

Sharpshot
June 28, 2008 6:13 PM
Cheers for the clarification benz_man!

benz_man
June 28, 2008 9:19 PM
Anytime I can help man!

HolySteel
July 9, 2008 4:25 PM
The first Honda VTEC system came out in 1983: "introduced on the CBR400 in 1983 known as HYPER VTEC."

"The VTEC system [for cars] was originally introduced as a DOHC system in the 1989 Honda Integra" So the first VTEC was already a DOHC!

"VTEC (Variable Valve Timing and Lift Electronic Control)" So, on ALL cars with VTEC you get variable lift. source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VTEC

droobear
August 8, 2008 6:44 AM
seems to me 4rings has it right. VARIABLE LIFT. Let me say it again. VARIABLE LIFT. If you are using cams and CAM LOBES how does one vary the lift? The lobe draws a circle. If you want a bigger circle FOR MORE LIFT, then you need a bigger lobe. AUDI HAS DONE THAT. SEE THE PICTURE??????? 2 TWO DEUX ZWEI 2 TWO 2 TWO LLLOOOBBBEEESSS. learn your kindergarten geometry before commenting. p.s. Just because the marketing team at Honda calls it variable lift does not make it so. AGAIN you need a bigger lobe means you need two lobes

HolySteel
August 9, 2008 6:13 PM
And what exactly is your problem with that? VTEC systems indeed have 2 different lobes on 1 cam. Don't try to talk about something you obviously have no idea about. Go to wikipedia or wherever first or look at an Honda engine, before posting senseless comments. btw WRITING IN CAPS doesn't make your reasoning any better at all, in case you haven't noticed.

smoky
May 7, 2009 6:44 AM
sorry for a very late comment...Twin Cam VTEC has 3 different lobes on one cam...for low/mid/high rev...

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