Mercedes-Benz M276 engine

Mercedes-Benz M276 DE35
Overview
ManufacturerMercedes-Benz
Production2010–2018
Layout
ConfigurationNaturally aspirated 60° V6
Displacement3.5 L (3,498 cc)
Cylinder bore92.9 mm (3.66 in)
Piston stroke86 mm (3.39 in)
Cylinder block materialAluminum
Cylinder head materialAluminum
ValvetrainDOHC with VVT
Combustion
Fuel systemDirect injected
Fuel typeGasoline
Oil systemWet sump
Cooling systemWater cooled
Output
Power output248–302 hp (185–225 kW; 251–306 PS)
Torque output340–370 N⋅m (251–273 lb⋅ft)
Chronology
PredecessorMercedes-Benz M272
SuccessorM276 DE30LA
Mercedes-Benz M276 DE30LA
Overview
ManufacturerDaimler AG
Production2013-2023
Layout
ConfigurationTurbocharged 60° V6
Displacement3.0 L (2,996 cc)
Cylinder bore88 mm (3.46 in)
Piston stroke82.1 mm (3.23 in)
Cylinder block materialAluminum
Cylinder head materialAluminum
ValvetrainDOHC with VVT
Combustion
TurbochargerTwin-turbo
Fuel systemDirect injected
Fuel typeGasoline
Output
Power output328–385 hp (245–287 kW; 333–390 PS)(DELA30-DE30AL)
Torque output480–521 N⋅m (354–384 lb⋅ft)(DELA30-DE30AL)
Chronology
PredecessorM276 DE35
SuccessorM276 DELA35 (DE35AL)
M256

The Mercedes-Benz M276 engine is a direct injected, gasoline automotive piston V6 engine.[1]

The M276 engine is not related to the Chrysler Pentastar except for the 60-degree angle, despite that it was developed while Chrysler was still owned by Daimler AG. This can be seen in its 60 degree vee–angle, as opposed to the 90-degree angle of its M272 predecessor. The 60 degree vee–angle eliminates the need for a balance shaft, improving refinement while reducing mechanical complexity. None of the parts are shared at all.[1][2]

The M276 engine features an aluminum engine block with Nanoslide cylinder coating and dual overhead camshafts with independent variable valve timing on 12 intake and 12 exhaust valves and a new 2–stage timing chain arrangement. The M276 also includes direct injection with piezo–electrically controlled injectors for 2 to 3 sprays per intake stroke in normal operation,[3] multi–spark ignition that creates up to 4 sparks per cycle,[3] and the demand–controlled fuel pump, water pump, oil pump and alternator[3] that reduce parasitic loads.

The first spray of fuel injection creates the base lean burn mixture in the intake cycle, while the later spray(s), up to 4 more times in combustion cycle in difficult conditions for a clean burn, control when and where the ignition starts and how the burn propagates in stratified charge fashion.[3] In combination with a new smaller and more efficient Variable Valve Timing mechanism on all 4 camshafts, the precise combustion control allows a quicker and smoother re–start of the engine for the stop–start system. This VVT can alter cam timing up to 40 crank degrees with a higher speed than before, and enables limiting the intake charge combined with a normal combustion stroke, thus making the operating process an Atkinson cycle in partial throttle conditions for better fuel efficiency.[4] These features are also shared with Mercedes' M278 V8 engine, announced at the same time.[1]

Mercedes–Benz claims that the new engine, in conjunction with the demand–controlled ancillaries and the stop–start system, can produce up to a 24% improvement in fuel economy while increasing power and torque over the M272.[3] This efficiency improvement led to the various models with this engine being labeled with Blue Efficiency moniker.

Retaining most of the above characteristics, turbocharged smaller displacement DELA 30 variant was introduced in 2013 for C400 (W205) and subsequently offered on other models without the name Blue Efficiency.

For 2014 CLS400, a turbocharged larger displacement variant named DELA 35 came out to the market with a lower boost of 0.7 bar (10 psi) compared to 1.8 bar (26 psi) of DELA30 resulting in the same power and torque ratings at a lower fuel consumption.[5]

In 2015, a higher boost and a slightly lower compression ratio (10.5:1) were used to create a DE30LA version for AMG models, and is used for many AMG and Mercedes–Benz vehicles since.

  1. ^ a b c Mercedes' New V Engine Family
  2. ^ "National Post".
  3. ^ a b c d e Davis, Jim. "Mercedes-Benz New V6 and V8 Engines are More Powerful and More Efficient | eMercedesBenz". emercedesbenz.com. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference m276dim was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ "Mercedes-Benz Quietly Introduces All-New V6 Engine on CLS Facelift". 20 June 2014.