BMW M10


The BMW 'M10/M12' was an I4 piston engine produced from 1961 to 1987. Displacement ranged from 1499 cm3 to 1990 cm3.
The engine was designed by noted engineer and race driver Baron Alex von Falkenhausen. He was asked to design a small-displacement (1.3 L) engine, but felt that this would be insufficient for the company's future needs. Therefore, he designed a block that could be expanded to 2.0 L and delivered it at 1.5 L.
The design was very successful, with over 3.5 million produced, and it served the company for over 20 years.
The M10 engine is also one of the most successful engines in racing. Starting with the European Touring Car Championship, it was also used in Formula 2, then the Deutsche Rennsport Meisterschaft, where it was turbocharged by Paul Rosche according to FIA Group 5 rules.
The M10 block went on to Formula 1, winning the 1983 championship for Nelson Piquet and Brabham — something which very few 20 year old road car engine designs accomplish. The same applies for the rise in power: twenty-fold from 75 hp to about 1500 hp.
The BMW S14 engine for the first BMW M3 was based upon the M10 block. In the M3, the M10 is still winning races today.
The BMW M40 series of engines replaced the M10 in the late 1980s.

Contents
Formula One history
M115
M118
M116
M05
M15
M17
M31
M41
M64
M43/1
M10
M98
M10B18
See also

Formula One history


Brabham had tested a BMW turbocharged engine in the summer of 1981, and for the 1982 Formula One season the new BT50 was designed around it. Brabham thus became the third team after Renault and Ferrari to employ a turbo engine.
Initially the turbo engine's electronics had reliability and driveability issues. The BMW and Brabham relationship came close to ending, with BMW insisting that Brabham stop using the Cosworth powered BT49Ds, while Ecclestone maintained that the BMW powered cars were not reliable enough. Together with Bosch, the BMW engineers solved the problem. The partnership took its first win at the 1982 Canadian Grand Prix. In 1983 Nelson Piquet became the first driver to win the world championship in a turbo-engined car.
Murray's radical long and low BT55 was fitted with a revised BMW engine tilted over to allow clean airflow to the rear wing. The design was not successful, scoring only two points in the 1986 Formula One season; the engine did not perform well in this orientation and the gearbox from Weissman was unreliable.
From 1986 onwards BMW wound down their Formula One involvement. In 1987 Brabham continued to use the 'tilted' units, as the upright versions had been sold to other teams under the Megatron title — they were used by Arrows and Ligier with moderate success. BMW, whose programme was based around turbocharged versions of their road engines, withdrew from Formula One after the 1987 season. The Megatron badged units were used until the end of 1988.
__NOTOC__
'Models'
EngineDisplacementPowerTorqueRedlineYear
M10B181.7 L (1766 cc/107 in³)77 kW (103 hp) @ 5800145 N·m (106 ft·lbf) @ 4500 1980
M10B181.7 L (1766 cc/107 in³)75 kW (100 hp) @ 5800140 N·m (103 ft·lbf) @ 4500 1985
M10B181.7 L (1766 cc/107 in³)77 kW (103 hp) @ 5800145 N·m (106 ft·lbf) @ 4500 1980
M10B181.7 L (1766 cc/107 in³)75 kW (100 hp) @ 5800140 N·m (103 ft·lbf) @ 4500 1985
M10B18V1.7 L (1766 cc/107 in³)66 kW (88 hp) @ 5500140 N·m (103 ft·lbf) @ 4000 1981
M10B18V1.7 L (1766 cc/107 in³)66 kW (88 hp) @ 5500140 N·m (103 ft·lbf) @ 4000 1981

M115


The 1.5 L (1499 cc/91 in³) 'M115' produced 75 hp or 80 hp (56 kW or 60 kW) (depending on carburetor) and 118 ft·lbf (160 N·m).
Applications:

★ 1962-1964 BMW 1500

★ 1975-1977 BMW 1500

M118


The 1.8 L (1773 cc/108 in³) 'M118' produced 90 hp to 130 hp (67 kW to 97 kW) and 143 to 150 ft·lbf (194 to 203 N·m).
Applications:

★ 1963-1974 BMW 1800

★ 1974 E12 518

M116


The 1.6 L (1573 cc/95 in³) 'M116' produced 75 hp to 105 hp (56 kW to 78 kW). Bore was 84 mm and stroke was 71 mm.
Applications:

★ 1964-1966 BMW 1600

★ 1966-1975 BMW 1600-2/1602

M05


The 2.0 L (1990 cc/121 in³) 'M05' produced 100 hp to 120 hp (75 to 90 kW) and 157 ft·lbf to 167 ft·lbf (213 to 226 N·m). Bore was 89 mm and stroke was 80 mm.
Applications:

★ 1965-1969 BMW 2000C

★ 1966-1972 BMW 2000

★ 1966-1972 BMW 2002

M15


The 2.0 L (1990 cc/121 in³) 'M15' produced 130 hp (97 kW) and 177 ft·lbf (240 N·m). It was the famed ''tii'' engine.
Applications:

★ 1968-1976 BMW 2002tii

M17


The 2.0 L (1990 cc/121 in³) 'M17' produced 115 hp (86 kW) and 162 ft·lbf (220 N·m).
Applications:

★ 1972 E12 520

M31


The 2.0 L (1990 cc/121 in³) 'M31' was turbocharged and produced 170 hp (127 kW) and 240 ft·lbf (325 N·m).
Applications:

★ 1974 E20 2002 turbo

M41


The 1.6 L (1573 cc/95 in³) 'M41' produced 90 hp (67 kW) and 123 ft·lbf (167 N·m).
Applications:

★ 1975 E21 316

M64


The 2.0 L (1990 cc/121 in³) 'M64' produced 125 hp (93 kW) and 172 ft·lbf (233 N·m).
Applications:

★ 1975 E21 320i

★ 1975 E12 520i

M43/1


The 2.0 L (1990 cc/121 in³) 'M43/1' produced 109 hp (81 kW) and 157 ft·lbf (213 N·m).
Applications:

★ 1975 E21 320

M10


The 1.8 L (1766 cc/107 in³) 'M10' produced 98 hp (73 kW) and 142 ft·lbf (193 N·m).
Applications:

★ 1975 E21 318

★ 1976 E12 518

M98


The 1.6 L (1573 cc/95 in³) 'M98' produced 75 hp (56 kW) and 110 ft·lbf (149 N·m).
Applications:

★ 1981 E21 316

M10B18


The 1.8 L (1766 cc/107 in³) 'M10B18' (also known as the 'M98') produced 90 hp (105hp with L-jetronic injection)(67 kW) and 137 ft·lbf (186 N·m).
Applications:

★ 1980 E12 518

★ 1980 E21 316

★ 1980 E28 518

★ 1980 E21 318i

★ 1983 E30 318i

★ 1980 E28 518i

★ 1983 E30 316

★ 1983 E28 518

See also



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