Volkswagen
INTERNATIONAL ENGINE OF THE YEAR 2009: VOLKSWAGEN 1.4-LITRE TSI TWINCHARGER SCOOPS TITLE
The Awards, which are judged by 65 motoring journalists from 32 countries across four continents, including Auto Arabia's editor Mohamed Sheta, also rewarded a variety of other manufacturers for engine excellence in a number of different categories. Toyota won the Sub 1-litre category with its 998cc, three-cylinder engine; Audi was rewarded for its 2-litre, four-cylinder TFSI engine in the 1.8-litre to 2-litre category; and Porsche’s 3.8-litre flat-six was voted New Engine of the Year.
Dean Slavnich, editor of Engine Technology International and co-chairman of the International Engine of the Year Awards, said: “The international judging panel is hugely impressed by this VW engine. It’s a masterstroke of downsizing technology and a real engineering showcase. I have no doubt that this engine will become the template for a whole new generation of high efficiency, small capacity engines in the years to come.�
Although losing out on the top award this year, BMW once again secured success at the Awards with its mighty �M Power’ 4-litre V8 topping the 3-litre to 4-litre category and its 3-litre DI Twin Turbo judged to be the best 2.5-litre to 3-litre engine. The Munich giant also shared a third category win with PSA for their 1.6-litre Turbo engine in the 1.4-litre to 1.8-litre category, an outstanding product generated by the two companies’ joint powertrain development venture.
Also worthy of mention is Mercedes-Benz, which successfully took three category wins. Its 2.1-litre diesel won the 2-litre to 2.5-litre category and its powerhouse, AMG-developed, 6.2-litre V8 won the Above 4-litre category, with the same unit also judged to be the Performance Engine of the Year.
The 11th annual International Engine of the Year Award ceremony took place at Engine Expo 2009 in Stuttgart, Germany on 17 June. The event, one of the annual highlights of the automotive industry calendar, saw a total of 12 Awards given to those manufacturers who have been judged to have achieved excellence in their powertrain engineering.
International Engine of the Year Awards 2009 Winners
Best New Engine of 2009
Porsche 3.8-litre flat-six (911)
Green Engine of the Year
Volkswagen 1.4-litre TSI Twincharger (Golf, Touran, Tiguan, Jetta)
Performance Engine of the Year
Mercedes-AMG 6.2-litre (CLK, S, SL, CL, CLS, ML)
Sub 1-litre
Toyota 1-litre (Aygo, Yaris, Peugeot 107, Citro?«n C1, Subaru Justy)
1-litre to 1.4-litre
Volkswagen 1.4-litre TSI Twincharger (Golf, Eos, Scirocco, Touran, Tiguan, Jetta, Seat Ibiza Cupra)
1.4-litre to 1.8-litre
BMW-PSA 1.6-litre Turbo (MINI Cooper S, Clubman, Peugeot 207, 308)
1.8-litre to 2-litre
Audi 2-litre TFSI (A4, A5, Q5, VW Scirocco, Golf GTi)
2-litre to 2.5-litre
Mercedes-Benz Diesel 2.1-litre (BlueEffieciency C-Class, BlueEffieciency E-Class)
2.5-litre to 3-litre
BMW 3-litre DI Twin-Turbo (135, 335, X6, Z4, 730)
3-litre to 4-litre
BMW 4-litre V8 (M3)
Above 4-litre
Mercedes-AMG 6.2-litre (CLK, S, SL, CL, CLS, ML)
And…
The International Engine of the Year 2009
Volkswagen 1.4-litre TSI Twincharger (Golf, Eos, Scirocco, Touran, Tiguan, Jetta, Seat Ibiza Cupra)

Readers Comments:
João Prates from Lisboa - Portugal wrote:The results for this year Engine of the Year Awards should be subjected to severe auditing from independent sources.
I will only name 1 category where the results are simply outrageous to an extent far beyond comprehension: The Green Engine award.
The jury had several cars to choose from, and two nominees were the VW TSI and the new Prius 3G (3rd generation).
Having:
The VW with 174 hp, 6.2 L/100 km and 144 g/km CO2;
The Toyota with 136 hp, 3.9 L/100 km and 89 g/km CO2
The jury says the car which has:
+30% horsepower, 63% more fuel consumption, 62% more CO2 emissions
is the greenest car... yeah... right... is this for real!?!?!
The general public demands a general inquiry to this Jury votes right now!
This is a shameful representation of how strong lobbies can go.
I feel sick to the stomach reading this year's awards.
Shame on the jury!
Ahmed Dino from Cairo - Egypt wrote:
I am wondering why a company like Skoda does not benefit from the leading TSI technology of VW for their complete product portfolio e.g. Roomster, Fabia, Octavia and Superb here in Egypt???
A Fabia with a 1.4 TSI engine (180hp) would be immediately a challenging and much cheaper Mini-killer alternative.
The Skoda Superb would also be a very powerful car that benefits from the low customs and the head-turning performance. Or are our friends at Skoda too lazy to teach and educate their technicians on how to repair and service these engines?
Well, it seems that my next Skoda will have a VW-Logo outside and a TSI-Engine inside, if Skoda Egypt doesn't wake up.
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