Chrysler Hemi engine
The Chrysler Hemi engine, known by the trademark Hemi or HEMI, is a series of high-performance American overhead valve V8 engines built by Chrysler with hemispherical combustion chambers. Three generations have been produced: the FirePower series (with displacements from from 1951 until 1958; a race and street engine from 1964 through 1971; and family of advanced Hemis (displacing between since 2003.
Although Chrysler is most identified with "Hemi" as a marketing term, many other auto manufacturers have incorporated Hemispherical cylinder head designs.
During the 1970s and 1980s, Chrysler also applied the term Hemi to their Australian-made Hemi-6 Engine, and a 4-cylinder Mitsubishi 2.6 L engine installed in various North American market vehicles.
Design
The main advantage of a hemispherical head engine over other head designs is power. On the other hand, hemi head engines tend to have complex valve trains, are expensive to build, and are larger and heavier than conventional designs.A hemispherical combustion chamber is efficient, with an excellent surface-to-volume ratio, and room for two large valves. However, it allows no more than two valves per cylinder because of their large size, and they are necessarily heavier than those in a multi-valve engine. The intake and exhaust valves lie on opposite sides of the chamber and necessitate a "cross-flow" head design. Because the combustion chamber is a partial hemisphere, a flat-topped piston would yield a low compression ratio unless a very long stroke is used. The piston crown is domed to protrude into the head at top dead center to attain the desired compression ratio. The result is a combustion chamber in the shape of the space between where the domed piston stops and the dome shape in the head receiving it.
The hemi-head design places the spark plug at or near the chamber's center to promote a strong flame front. However, if the hemi-head hemisphere is of equal diameter to the piston, there is minimal squish for proper turbulence to mix fuel and air thoroughly. Thus, hemi-heads, because of their lack of squish, are more sensitive to fuel octane rating; a given compression ratio will require a higher octane rating to avoid detonation in a hemi engine than in some conventional engine designs, such as the wedge and bathtub.
The hemi head always has intake and exhaust valve stems that point in different directions, requiring a large, wide cylinder head and complex rocker arm geometry in both cam-in-block and single overhead cam engines. This adds to the overall width of the engine, limiting the vehicles in which it can be installed.
Significant challenges in the commercialization of engine designs using hemispherical chambers revolved around the valve actuation, specifically how to make it effective, efficient, and reliable at an acceptable cost. This complexity was referenced early in Chrysler's development of their 1950s hemi engine: the head was referred to in company advertising as the Double Rocker Shaft head.
First generation: FirePower 1951–1958
Chrysler developed its first experimental hemi engine for the Republic P-47 Thunderbolt fighter aircraft. The XIV-2220 was an inverted overhead-valve V16 rated at. The P-47 was already in production with a Pratt & Whitney radial engine when the XIV-2220 flew successfully in trials in 1945 as a possible upgrade, but the war was winding down and it did not go into production. However, the exercise gave Chrysler engineers valuable research and development experience with two-valve hemi combustion chamber dynamics and parameters.In addition to the aircraft engine, Chrysler and Continental Motors Company worked together to develop the air-cooled AV-1790-5B V12 Hemi engine used in the M47 Patton tank.
Chrysler applied their military experience with the hemispherical combustion chamber to its first automobile engine, an OHV V8 engine released under the name FirePower, not "Hemi," in 1950 for the 1951 model year. The first version of the FirePower engine had a displacement of and produced. Eventually, three of the four Chrysler divisions had their own version of the FirePower engine, with different displacements and designations, and having almost no parts in common. This lack of commonality was due in part to the three engine versions using different bore spacings. Chrysler and Imperial called their versions the FirePower. DeSoto called theirs the FireDome. Dodge had a smaller version, known as the Red Ram. Only Plymouth did not have a version, but retained the Dodge poly-head engines. There was no Plymouth Hemi engine until the 1964 426.
Briggs Cunningham used the Chrysler version in some of his race cars for international motorsports. A Chrysler-powered Cunningham C-5R won its class in 1953. Cunningham switched away from these designs in 1959 when Chrysler temporarily abandoned the hemispherical concept in favor of the wedge-head B engine until 1964. Carl Kiekhaefer also used the Chrysler engines in his NASCAR cars from 1955 and 1956, winning the Grand National Series championship both years.
Collectively, the 1951–1958 Hemi engines are now commonly retroactively referred to as first-generation Hemi engines, which can be identified by the rear-mounted distributor and the spark plugs in a row down the center of wide valve covers.
1951 Plymouth Hemi V6
There were plans in 1951 for a Plymouth dual overhead cam Hemi V6 displacing designed by Chrysler's Powerplant Research and Engine Design division. Known internally as A173, it was meant to be a powerful, fuel-efficient alternative to Ford's V8 and to replace Plymouth's venerable flathead six. However, the plans were scrapped because of high build costs and the then-unusual design.Chrysler and Imperial
All Chrysler FirePower engines are oversquare; i.e. their bore is larger than their stroke.331
This first FirePower engine, used from 1951 to 1955, has a bore of and a stroke of for a piston displacement of, with a deck height of . The bore spacing, shared by all Chrysler FirePower engines, was, the largest of any first generation Hemi engines. Most used a two-barrel carburetor and produced, with the exception of the 1955 Chrysler C-300 equipped with dual Carter WCFB four-barrel carburetors and was rated at.The 331 engine was used in the following applications:
- 1951–1955 Chrysler New Yorker
- 1951–1954 Chrysler Imperial and 1955 Imperial
- 1951 Chrysler Saratoga
- 1952 Chrysler Saratoga Club Coupe
- 1952 Chrysler Imperial Parade Phaeton
- 1954 Dodge C Series
- 1955 Chrysler C-300
- 1956 Facel Vega FV2B
- 1958 Hongqi CA72
- The Chrysler Air-Raid Siren. At 138 decibels, it is reputed to be the loudest siren ever made.
354
The 354 engine was used in the following applications:
- 1956 Chrysler New Yorker
- 1956 Chrysler 300B
- 1956 Imperial Custom & Crown
- 1957 Dodge D-501
- 1957–1959 Dodge C Series Pickup
392
The 392 engine was used in the following applications:
- 1957–1958 Chrysler New Yorker
- 1957–1958 Imperial Custom, Crown, and LeBaron
- 1957 Chrysler 300C
- 1958 Chrysler 300D
- 1958 Facel Vega Excellence
DeSoto
DeSoto's Hemi engines were called FireDome and served as the naming convention for the DeSoto Firedome sedan.276
In 1952, DeSoto introduced its version of the FirePower, with a bore of and stroke of, for a displacement of. The bore spacing, shared by all DeSoto FirePower engines, was. Power output was. It was a hot seller, with 50,000 vehicles using the engine until it was replaced in 1954.341
Displacement was increased again for 1956 and 1957 to. Bore was increased to, but stroke remained at. The DeSoto Adventurer had a compression ratio of 9.5:1, using a special camshaft profile for hydraulic lifters, and produced using dual Carter WCFB four-barrel carburetors.The 1956 Adventurer was the premiere named high-performance version—the DeSoto equivalent of the twin four-barrel Chrysler 300.