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The Ferrari F154 is a family of modular twin-turbocharged, direct injected V8 petrol engines designed and produced by Ferrari since 2013. It is a replacement for the naturally aspirated Ferrari-Maserati F136 V8 family on both Maserati and Ferrari cars.
The Maserati Ghibli shared the architecture of the sixth-generation of the Maserati Quattroporte, but sits on a 200 mm (7.9 in) shorter wheelbase for a 290 mm (11.4 in) shorter overall length. Suspension is a double wishbone unit at the front axle and 5-link multilink unit at the rear axle; Maserati's Skyhook adaptive damping system is optional.
Lancia - Ferrari D50 engine 2.9 L Quattrovalvole V8 in a 1984 Ferrari 308 GTB Ferrari Tipo 056 F1 racing engine (2008). The first Ferrari V8 engine was derived from a Lancia project, used in D50 F1 racecar. The Dino V8 family lasted from the early 1970s through 2004 when it was replaced by a new Ferrari/Maserati design. Lancia derived
Ferrari F154 engine The F136 , commonly known as Ferrari-Maserati engine , is a family of 90° V8 petrol engines jointly developed by Ferrari and Maserati [ 1 ] and produced by Ferrari; these engines displace between 4.2 L and 4.7 L, and produce between 390 PS (287 kW; 385 hp) and 605 PS (445 kW; 597 hp).
Every Maserati since 2002 has a Ferrari-built engine under its hood. Those days are coming to an end. Ferrari Will Eventually Stop Building Engines for Maserati
The Maserati 3.0-litre V6 Nettuno engine, introduced in the Maserati MC20, shares many of its characteristics with the Ferrari F154 and the Alfa Romeo 690T engines. [8] [9] In 2023 Alfa Romeo presented the 33 Stradale model that featured a bigger displacement 690T engine. Now at 3.0-litres and producing 456 kW (620 PS). [10]
The engines ranged in displacement from 3.2–6.46 L (195–394 cu in), and production continued until 2002. It was later succeeded by (but not to be confused with) the Ferrari-Maserati engine ; a separate engine, completely designed, developed and produced by Ferrari , but used in several Maserati models.
The engine was the latest evolution of Maserati's all-aluminium alloy, DOHC 4 valves per cylinder 90° V6 engine, fitted with water-cooled IHI twin-turbochargers and two air-to-air intercoolers, one per each cylinder bank. Weber-Magneti Marelli IAW electronic fuel injection and ignition system was used.