Name | BMW M20 engine |
---|---|
Manufacturer | BMW |
Production | 1976–1994 |
Predecessor | None |
Successor | BMW M50 |
Class | Straight-6 |
Engine | 2.0 L (1990 cc/121 in³)2.3 L (2316 cc/141 in³)2.5 L (2494 cc/152 in³)2.7 L (2693 cc/164 in³) |
Similar | Mercedes-Benz M110 }} |
Initially designated M20, the 12-valve, belt driven SOHC design was introduced in the 1977 BMW 520/6 and 320/6 as an entirely new design. With displacements ranging from 2.0 to 2.7 liters, it was the "little brother" to the larger BMW M30 engine. It had bore-spacing instead of of the M30. It was intended to replace the larger displacement 4-cylinder motors and was born out of BMW's conviction that a small six had more development potential than a large four (i.e. 2 liters+)
Powering the E21 and E30 3-Series, as well as E12, E28 and E34 5 Series cars, it was produced for nearly two decades, with the last examples powering the E30 325i touring built until April 1993. By that time, the newer twin-cam M50 engines with 4 valves per cylinder had already been used in the E36 and E34 for a couple of years.
Three different head castings were used over the engine's production run. The earliest was #1264200 aka the "200". These were used in all e21 320/6 and 323i and e12 520/6 engines and later in the e28 and e30 eta engines (eta denoting the 'efficiency' version of the engine, with a lower engine redline amongst other focused differences aimed at increasing fuel economy). The next version was #1277731 aka the "731". This head was the same as the 200 but featured larger intake ports. The final version was #1705885 or "885" introduced in the 325i. Ports were further enlarged, valves were larger and the combustion chamber was redesigned to improve flow and thermodynamic efficiency.
As the BMW M21, it became a diesel engine that was also available with a turbocharger.
Applications:
Applications:
==M20B25== The German version of the M20B25 produced with a catalytic converter and without. It featured the newly designed "885" head featuring an open, higher-volume combustion chamber design. The new engine had an 84 mm (3.3 in) bore, and 75 mm (3 in) stroke. The redesigned pistons and combustion chambers made better power, resisted detonation better and had higher thermodynamic efficiency. It was equipped with Bosch Motronic 1.1/1.3 Adaptive fuel injection. The new 12 valve engineering gave M20B25 the name 'verschieden', meaning 'different' in German. The engine is often referred to as 'the differing one' due to the anomalous valve system. With a minor modification that adjusts the idle speed of a cold engine, the 325i fulfills Euro 2 emission requirements in Germany, resulting in a lower tax compared to Euro 1 (as of 2005).
Applications:
Output was at 4250 rpm for all models produced through model year 1987 and at 4800 rpm for the final year of production in 1988. Peak torque is at about 3250 rpm for all years of the eta. BMW built this engine with fuel economy and low-rev drivability as the top priority. In production it was coupled to a 2.93:1 differential for the E28 5 series and E30 3 series models starting model year 1986. The earlier 325e used a 2.79:1 ratio. The tall final drive gearing was required to keep the engine in its best operating range at various road speeds. These features did achieve exceptional efficiency, but at the expense of the sparkling performance typically associated with the marque.
All eta engines used Bosch Motronic engine management systems that were calibrated for maximum fuel economy. The result were very conservative spark advance and fuel delivery curves. In addition, the Motronic had a built-in rev limiter that engaged at about 4750 rpm. While this was hardly sporting, due to the very low overlap and short duration of the cam and the long, narrow intake tubing, the motor would not have made much power over 5,000 rpm anyway. The low redline was an added safety margin to compensate for the four bearing cam and soft valve springs.
In cars produced from September 1987, the eta engine got a substantial refresh from the factory. This included the more recent Bosch Motronic version 1.1/1.3 with adaptive idle control and revised circuitry, the "885" head casting with the larger valves, ports and revised combustion chambers; new pistons to fit the 2.7 L stroke with the 2.5 L head; a special one year only intake manifold with even narrower runners that opened up at the flanges to match the larger ports of the new head; a dual exhaust system; a special eta-tuned 7-bearing cam; and a 5300 rpm rev limit. A new 6000 rpm tachometer was also used.Applications:
Exhaust upgrades also produce good results from the use of tubular exhaust manifolds (headers) and freer flowing exhausts in general. It must be noted that with the possible exception of the muffler, the original BMW exhaust system from the 325i already flows quite well. Eta exhausts and 320 exhausts(except for late production examples) are more restrictive.
Motronic cars can benefit from high performance chips that remap fuel and spark maps to run on higher-octane fuel. Manufacturers include E.A.T, Conforti as well as many others. Chip selection should be based on the maker's reputation and feedback from current users. K-Jet cars can accommodate flow upgrades and displacement boosts with relative ease and usually require only basic mixture and fuel pressure adjustments for street cars. K-jet does not tolerate radical cams though since it needs a continuous vacuum to actuate the air-flow plate correctly. L-jet cars are more limited since they cannot be chipped and adjustments to fuel pressure and to the air-flow sensor need to be done with extreme care to ensure good results. Simply boosting fuel pressure or adjusting the AFM spring tension without checking the resultant change in mixture can lead to more problems than it solves.
Various intake manifolds were used on injected cars. K-jet cars can only use the original intake since the others do not accommodate mechanical injectors. The intakes on all other models are interchangeable with the best one being from the 325i owing to the larger throttle body, wider tube diameter and shorter overall length for better flow and more power at higher revs. Eta cars up to September 1987 using the "200" head should get the ports opened up to match the wider tubes of the 325i manifold while cars using the 731 head (E30 320i and 323i) require no such modification.
Carbureted 320s have a proprietary manifold and the only induction option on an otherwise stock engine would be porting and/or a carb upgrade. The manifold can also be deleted outright in favor of a custom triple side-draft setup but this would only yield satisfactory results when combined with a cam and some porting.
If you are starting with a eta equipped car, this will require an upgrade to Motronic 1.1/1.3 from a 325i in order to get the desired revs and fuel/spark mapping. This will require the use of the entire engine harness, ECM, front crank pulley with crank sensor and bracket, all the sensors (including AFM), injectors (Etas built before September 1987 with the older Motronic system use low-impedance injectors, wereas the 325i computer must use high-impedance injectors) , also 325i plug wires and the EVAP purge solenoid. An instrument cluster with the 7000 rpm tachometer and a small wiring modification to make the tach work will also be necessary. Owners of Etas made before December 1986 will need to widen the hole where the engine wiring harness goes into the car. Owners of older Etas that have a rectangular plug joining the engine harness to the fuse box instead of a round one will have to change to the later model fuse box or splice all the wires and make a custom connection.
Non-Eta-based strokers use the forged crankshafts from an M52, S50US, S52US, or M54 engines. These cranks all fit neatly into the M20 block with little modification. Block clearance should be checked and adjusted accordingly especially if using E30 325i rods. The installation of a spacer on the front of the crankshaft is needed to accommodate the front crank seal on the M20 and a different front crank bolt must be used. Sometimes a modified intermediate shaft is used where block clearance issues arise. All of these extra parts should come with any stroker kit sold by a reputable vendor.
Performance will vary depending on what other mods, if any, are made (cams, porting, exhausts etc.)and the quality of tuning.
Option 2: m52 84mm crank with 325i pistons and ETA rods. This is the only stroker other than the 2.7 to use all stock parts. Using the m52 crank, ETA rods and 325i pistons results in the same compression height as a stock 325i, plus the increased displacement results in 9.7:1 compression ratio. Some have commented that this is a less than ideal rod stroke ratio of 1.54, but in fact the s52 is even worse at 1.51.
Option 2: Bore unchanged (84mm), Install crank from S52US or M54B30 for 3.0 liters.
-P-Flow/Cold air intake: Will change induction sound to something more throaty but will accomplish little if anything at all on a stock motor since the stock intake is already well designed and located. A badly executed system will do more harm than good while a well-executed one will only yield slight results.
-M30 AFM: Larger flap for more intake airflow. Consists in installing the electronic section of the M20 AFM onto the larger M30 AFM. Tricky to do and difficult to tune correctly. Don't bother unless building larger stroker. Results generally overstated.
-MAF conversion: replaces AFM with hot-wire style MAF on Motronic cars. Needs software to run correctly. Consider only on larger engines.
-M30 injectors: Higher flow injectors generally help prevent mixture from leaning out at higher revs on modified engines. Good easy mod just be sure to be using correct impedance injector for given injection system. As a rule, E34 535i injectors will work with Motronic 1.1/1.3 systems on M20s. Any others should be checked by consulting with Bosch technical help.
-ITBs: Expensive and require extensive custom fabrication and standalone injection system. Not worthwhile unless building a race engine.
-Forced induction: By far the most effective means of increasing power output, with tremendous potential available for far less than the cost of a NA stroker engine. A stock engine with head studs will reliably support over with intercooling, a good tune and a sufficiently large turbine. Standalone injection should be considered mandatory for boost pressures over 1 bar. The bottom ends are very robust and will be the last parts to sustain damage if detonation occurs. The head gasket will fail first, which can crack the cylinder head if the engine is run for very long in that condition. They tolerate a considerable amount of detonation at lower boost pressures but become more sensitive as boost increases. The driver must listen carefully to the engine to avoid damage if detonation occurs. Aftermarket MLS head gaskets resist detonation slightly better which can result in damage to the piston ring lands in the event of severe, sustained detonation. Even slight detonation is audible with a full exhaust system while moderate detonation can usually be heard over an "open dump" wastegate.
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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