Lamborghini V10


The Lamborghini V10 is a ninety degree V10 petrol engine which was developed for the Lamborghini Gallardo automobile, first sold in 2003.
Developed by Lamborghini, for use in the Gallardo, and the first engine developed for Lamborghini after they were acquired by Audi – part of the Volkswagen Group.
This engine has its origins in two concept cars made by Lamborghini, the 1988 P140 and the 1995 Calà. Both were equipped with engines having a 3.9-litre displacement. In the early 2000s, Lamborghini resumed the project and the engine was redesigned by increasing its displacement.
The crankcase and engine block are built at the Audi Hungaria Zrt. factory in Győr, Hungary, whilst final assembly is carried out at Sant'Agata Bolognese, Italy. The engine has a 90° V angle and, unusually for a production engine, a dry sump lubrication system is utilised to keep the center of gravity of the engine low.
There was also some speculation that the engine block of the original 5.0-litre Lamborghini V10 was closely based on the Audi 4.2 FSI V8, which Audi produces for its luxury cars. However, this was denied by Audi, in their official documentation for their 5.2 FSI V10 engine, as used in the Audi S6 and Audi S8 – the Lamborghini 5.0 V10 has a cylinder bore spacing of between centres, whereas the Audi 5.2 V10 cylinder bore spacing is, the same as the Audi 4.2 FSI V8. The cylinder heads use the four valves per cylinder layout favoured by the Italian firm, rather than the five valve per cylinder variation formerly favoured by the German members of Volkswagen Group – including Audi and Volkswagen Passenger Cars. It was later confirmed that the new 5.2-litre Lamborghini V10 is mechanically identical to the Audi 5.2 V10 engine, as is evident by Lamborghini's usage of Audi's Fuel Stratified Injection, and 90 mm cylinder spacing.

Specifications

;engine configuration: 90° V10 engine; dry sump lubrication system
;engine displacement etc.
;cylinder block and crankcase
;cylinder heads and valvetrain: cast aluminium alloy, four valves per cylinder, 40 valves total, low-friction roller cam followers with automatic hydraulic valve clearance compensation, chain driven double overhead camshafts, continuously variable valve timing system both for intake and exhaust
;aspiration: two air filters, two hot-film air mass meters, two cast alloy throttle bodies each with electronically controlled throttle valves, cast magnesium alloy variable geometry and resonance intake manifold
;fuel system
;ignition system and engine management: mapped direct ignition with centrally mounted spark plugs and ten individual direct-acting single spark coils; two Lamborghini LIE electronic engine control unit working on the 'master and slave' concept due to the high revving nature of the engine
;exhaust system
;5.0 power and torque outputs and applications
;5.2 power and torque outputs and applications

Vehicles

As of 2019, all V10s in the Lamborghini lineup after the first generation Gallardo use the 5.2-litre variant. They are:
Lamborghini
  • Gallardo LP 550–2
  • Gallardo LP 550-2 Spyder
  • Gallardo LP 560–4
  • Gallardo LP 560-4 Spyder
  • Gallardo LP 570-4 Superleggera Edizione Technica
  • Gallardo LP 570-4 Spyder Performante Edizone Technica
  • Gallardo LP 570-4 Squadra Corse
  • Gallardo LP 550-2 Bicolore
  • Gallardo LP 550-2 Tricolore
  • Gallardo LP 570-4 Super Trofeo Stradale
  • Gallardo GT3-R
  • Gallardo LP 600 GT3
  • Sesto Elemento
  • Egoista
  • Huracán LP 610-4 Avio
  • Huracán LP 580–2
  • Huracán LP 580-2 Spyder
  • Huracán LP 610-4 Spyder
  • Huracán LP 610–4
  • Huracán LP 620-2 Super Trofeo
  • Huracán GT3
  • Huracán Super Trofeo Evo
  • Huracán Super Trofeo Omologata
  • Huracán LP 640-4 Performante
  • Huracán LP 640-4 Performante Spyder
  • Huracán LP 640-4 Evo
  • Huracán LP 610-2 Evo RWD
  • Huracán Sterrato
  • Huracán Tecnica
  • Huracán GT3 Evo
  • Asterion LPI 910–4
  • Urus Concept
Audi
  • R8 V10
  • S8 D3
  • S6 C6
  • RS 6 C6
Italdesign
  • Zerouno
  • Zerouno Duerta