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BMW Dominates 2005 International Engine Of The Year Awards

The International Engine of the Year awards are an annual awards chosen by an independant jury of 56 automotive journalists. This year’s awards were handed out on 1st June 2005 in Stuttgart, Germany in conjunction with the Engine Expo 2005.

There are 12 awards to be given out comprising of an overall award and 11 other category awards.

BMW pwnz the awards with it’s engines winning 6 throphies out of the 12 trophies to be given away. It’s 5.0 liter V10 engine inspired by F1 technology makes 507 horsepower and powers the BMW M5 sedan and BMW M6 coupe. And those staggering performance stats are achieved without using forced induction! This engine snatches the overall 2005 International Engine of the Year Award, the “Best New Engine”, “Best Performance Engine”, and “Best Engine Above 4.0 Liter” awards. Impressive!

The M5 V10 beat Ferrari’s new 4.3 Liter V8 engine from the new F430 in three categories it was contending in, the “Best New Engine”, “Best Performance Engine”, and “Best Engine Above 4.0 Liter” awards.


The BMW M6


The BMW M5


The BMW M5/M6 5 Liter 90-degree V10

The engine is a 90 degree V10 with a 5 liter displacement in a lightweight block that weighs only 260kg. The engine pushes the BMW M5 from 0 to 100km/h in a mind-blowing 4.7 seconds. And it does that with such smoothness and refinement. Redline is at 8250rpm and peak torque is 570Nm at 6100rpm with 450Nm already accessible at 3500rpm. The car also features Double VANOS variable valve timing. Power is transferred to the wheels by a 7-speed SMG gearbox which does not need the driver to engage a clutch. You move through the gears sequentially with a lever that you push up or down. The engine is truly a technological masterpiece.

Here are the results:

International Engine of the Year
BMW 5.0-liter V10 (M5, M6)

Best Performance Engine
BMW 5.0-liter V10 (M5, M6)

Best New Engine
BMW 5.0-liter V10 (M5, M6)

Best Fuel Economy
Toyota Hybrid Synergy Drive (Prius)

Best Above 4.0-liter
BMW 5.0-liter V10 (M5, M6)

Best 3.0-liter to 4.0-liter
BMW 3.2-liter (M3)

Best 2.5-liter to 3.0-liter
BMW 3.0-liter Twin-Turbodiesel (535d - European model)

Best 2.0-liter to 2.5-liter
Honda i-CTDi 2.2-liter diesel (Accord, CR-V, FR-V - European models)

Best 1.8-liter to 2.0-liter
Volkswagen 2.0-liter FSI Turbo (2006 Golf, GTI, Jetta; Audi A3, Audi A4)

Best 1.4-liter to 1.8-liter
Toyota Hybrid Synergy Drive (Prius)

Best 1.0-liter to 1.4-liter
Fiat-GM Multijet 1.3-liter diesel (European Fiat and Opel models)

Best Sub 1.0-liter
Honda Hybrid 1.0-liter IMA (Insight)

For the full results, read more.

International 2005 Engine Of The Year Award

1. BMW 5-litre V10
2. BMW 3-litre Diesel Twin-Turbo
3. Toyota 1.5-litre Hybrid
4. Volkswagen 2-litre FSI Turbo
5. BMW 3.2-litre
6. Fiat-GM 1.3-litre Diesel
7. Honda 2.2-litre Diesel
8. Honda 1-litre IMA

2005 Best New Engine Of The Year

1. BMW 5-litre V10 (M5, M6)
2. Ferrari 4.3-litre V8 (F430)
3. Toyota 3.3-litre Hybrid (Lexus RX400h)
4. Porsche 3.8-litre (911)
5. BMW Diesel 3-litre Twin-Turbo (535d)
6. Honda 3-litre Hybrid (Accord)

2005 Best Fuel Economy

1. Toyota Hybrid 1.5-litre
2. Toyota 3.3-litre Hybrid (Lexus RX400h)
3. Fiat-GM Diesel 1.3-litre (Panda, Punto, Lancia Ypsilon, Opel/Vauxhall Tigra, Corsa)
4. Honda 1.3-litre IMA (Civic)
5. BMW Diesel 3-litre Twin-Turbo (535d)
6. Honda 3-litre Hybrid (Accord)

2005 Best Performance Engine

1. BMW 5-litre V10 (M5, M6)
2. Ferrari 4.3-litre V8 (F430)
3. Mercedes-AMG 6-litre bi-turbo (SL65, CL65)
4. Porsche 3.8-litre (911)
5. Chevrolet 6-litre V8 (Corvette, Pontiac GTO)
6. Chrysler/Dodge 6.1-litre V8 (300C SRT-8, Magnum)

2005 Sub-1 litre

1. Honda 1-litre IMA (Insight)
2. Smart Brabus (Roadster)
3. Toyota 1-litre (Yaris/Vitz)
4. Ford 1-litre Superchraged (EcoSport)
5. Smart Diesel (ForTwo)
6. Suzuki 1-litre (Wagon R+)

2005 1 Litre to 1.4 Litre

1. Fiat-GM Diesel 1.3-litre (Panda, Punto, Lancia Ypsilon, Opel/Vauxhall Tigra, Corsa)
2. Honda 1.3-litre IMA (Civic)
3. Peugeot-Citroën/Ford Diesel 1.4-litre (C2, C3, Fiesta, 1007)
4. Volkswagen 1.4-litre FSI (Polo, Golf)
5. Toyota Diesel 1.4-litre (MINI, Yaris/Echo/Vitz)
6. Daihatsu 1.3-litre (YRV, Terios)

2005 1.4 Litre to 1.8 Litre

1. Toyota Hybrid 1.5-litre
2. Toyota 1.8-litre VVTL-i (Celica, Corolla, Lotus Elise)
3. Peugeot-Citroën/Ford Diesel 1.6-litre (C-MAX, C4, C5, Mazda 3, Peugeot 206, 307)
4. MINI 1.6-litre Supercharged (Cooper S)
5. Volkswagen 1.6-litre FSI (Audi A2, VW Golf, Touran)
6. BMW 1.8-litre Valvetronic (316ti)

2005 1.8 Litre to 2 Litre

1. Volkswagen/Audi 2-litre Turbo (A3, A4, Golf GTi)
2. Honda 2-litre (S2000)
3. BMW Diesel 2-litre (X3, 120d, 320d)
4. Subaru 2-litre Turbo (Impreza, Legacy/Outback, Forester, Saab 9-2X)
5. Mitsubishi 2-litre (Evo, Outlander/Airtek)
6. Honda 2-litre (Civic Type-R)

2005 2 Litre to 2.5 Litre

1. Honda Diesel 2.2-litre (Accord, CR-V, FR-V)
2. BMW 2.5-litre (325,525)
3. Ford 2.3-litre Hybrid (Escape HEV)
4. Mazda 2.3-litre Turbo (6MPS)
5. BMW 2.5-litre six cylinder (325, X3, 523, Z4)
6. Honda 2.2-litre (S2000)

2005 2.5 Litre to 3 Litre

1. BMW Diesel 3-litre Twin-Turbo (535d)
2. Honda 3-litre Hybrid (Accord)
3. BMW 3-litre six cylinder (330, 530, 630, 730)
4. Mazda RENESIS (RX-8)
5. Porsche 2.7-litre (Boxster)
6. Jaguar Diesel 2.7-litre V6 Twin-Turbo (S-Type)

2005 3 Litre to 4 Litre

1. BMW 3.2-litre (M3)
2. Porsche 3.8-litre (911)
3. Toyota 3.3-litre Hybrid (Lexus RX400h)
4. Nissan 3.5-litre V6 (350Z/350GT, Infiniti FX35/G35)
5. Porsche 3.6-litre Turbo (911)
6. Mercedes-Benz 3.5-litre V6 (SLK, C-Class, CLS, E-Class, SL)

2005 Above 4 Litre

1. BMW 5-litre V10 (M5, M6)
2. Ferrari 4.3-litre V8 (F430)
3. VW Diesel 5-litre V10 (Touareg/Phaeton)
4. Mercedes-AMG 6-litre Bi-Turbo (SL65, CL65)
5. Chrysler/Dodge 5.7-litre V8 (300C/Magnum)
6. Aston Martin 6-litre V12 (DB9, Vanquish S)

10 Comments »

  1. CHiQ said,

    June 5, 2005 @ 3:57 pm

    Time to buy a BMW!

    It’s amazing how much I learn about cars here…

    Great blog this is.

  2. deutsche volks said,

    June 5, 2005 @ 7:45 pm

    its not preety new thou..last year they seem to conquer it too…conclusion…the best quality cars all come from deutschland..!!!

  3. deutsche volks said,

    June 5, 2005 @ 7:49 pm

    1 thing bout bmw…they build their own motor/engines…but not for transmission..all previous on the road model are made by ZF AG..and for all its M modell are made by Getrag GmbH…with of course monitored by bmw man itself.

  4. deutsche volks said,

    June 5, 2005 @ 7:59 pm

    hei paul..have u any info bout the new civic 2006?..some said it looks kool..but i dunno which is which since ther lotsa version in internet…thanks.

  5. karheng said,

    June 5, 2005 @ 10:40 pm

    Go BAVARIA!

  6. Secret Garden said,

    June 8, 2005 @ 4:11 pm

    The International Engine of the Year Awards

    The International Engine of the Year awards are an annual awards chosen by an independant jury of 56 automotive journalists. This year¡¯s awards were handed out on 1st June 2005 in Stuttgart, Germany in conjunction with the Engine Expo 2005.
    There ar…

  7. Living Gem said,

    June 10, 2005 @ 9:12 pm

    Awesome Fourth-Gen M5

    You can’t deny it, the BMW M5 is the talk of town. The latest issue of car mags everywhere are running reviews on this car. It is, by far the most powerful series-production car BMW has ever produced.

  8. Glen Harris said,

    June 13, 2005 @ 12:34 am

    Interesting article for your review

  9. Kristen said,

    July 6, 2005 @ 10:02 pm

    Just thought you guys would find the review of the 5 series at ForbesAutos.com interesting…Link is below, enjoy!

    http://www.forbesautos.com/reviews/2005/bmw/530/testdrive2.html

  10. 2008 BMW Z10 Supercar said,

    September 19, 2006 @ 2:54 pm

    [...] BMW has set development targets for the Z10 to be a rear/mid-engine supercar powered by a V10. The V10 would be likely a tuned up version of the advanced M5 V10 5 liter engine that won the 2005 Engine of the Year award. Targetted performance figures are 550hp and a curb weight of 1200kg which gives the car a power to weight ratio of 458bhp per tonne. [...]

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