Mercedes-Benz M100 engine
The Mercedes-Benz M100 engine was a or single overhead cam V8 produced by Mercedes-Benz between 1963 and 1981. The successor to the M189 version of the company's venerated straight-6 M186, it was introduced in the flagship Mercedes-Benz 600 in 1963. From 1968 to 1972, it was fitted also into the S-class body for a special high-performance Mercedes-Benz 300SEL 6.3 sports sedan that was in 1975 updated to a Mercedes-Benz 450SEL 6.9.
The original displacement of exceeded that of the first Rolls-Royce V8 engine with by approximately 0.1 L. In the 1970s, AMG enlarged M100 engines to 6,8 litre, for racing and road use. In the US, catalytic converters and unleaded fuel caused loss of power. Rolls-Royce had now , and for the Mercedes-Benz 450SEL 6.9 the M100 engine was enlarged to which are close to 6.8 L, but as German tax laws required that a 101 cc engine would be taxed like a 200 cc engine, it was accordingly badged as 6,9.
The M100 featured a cast iron block, aluminum alloy heads, and aircraft-style sodium-filled valves operating against hardened valve seats. As in all Mercedes-Benz automobile engines, the crankshaft, connecting rods and pistons were forged instead of cast.
Each hand-built unit was bench-tested for 265 minutes, 40 of which were under full load. When introduced, it utilized a complicated 8-piston mechanical fuel injection system designed and built in-house by Daimler-Benz. The version used a simpler Bosch K-Jetronic Continuous Injection System.
The 6.3 L engine was conservatively rated at, with of torque helping to compensate for the 2.85 to 1 final drive ratio necessary for sustained high-speed cruising.
In non-US trim, the larger engine produced with of torque. The North American version, introduced in 1977, was significantly less powerful at and of torque due to more stringent emissions control requirements.
The "6.9"-liter M100 used a "dry sump" engine lubrication system, which both enhanced longevity and reduced overall engine height. Originally developed for racing as a way to prevent oil starvation during aggressive cornering, which in turn would create a serious drop in oil pressure, it allowed sustained high speeds at full engine power. The M100 system circulated a massive twelve litres of oil through the engine and a storage tank mounted inside the right front fender, as opposed to the usual four or five litres found in V8s with a standard oil pan and oil pump configuration. The dry sump system also had the benefit of extending the oil change interval to. This, along with hydraulic valve lifters which required no adjusting and special cylinder head gaskets which eliminated the need for periodic retorquing of the head bolts, made the 6.9 nearly maintenance-free for its first.