List of Mercedes-Benz engines
Appearance
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Mercedes-Benz has produced a range of petrol, diesel, and natural gas engines. This is a list of all internal combustion engine models manufactured.
Petrol engines
Straight-three
Inline-four
- M23, 1.3 L (1933–1936)
- M30, 1.5 L (1934–1939)
- M136, 1.7 – 1.8 L (1935–1955)
- M121, 1.9 – 2.0 L (1955–1968)
- M118, 1.5 – 1.8 L (1965–1972)
- M115, 2.0 – 2.3 L (1968–1985)
- M102, 1.8 – 2.5 L (1980–1996)
- M111, 1.8 – 2.3 L (1992–2006)
- M166, 1.4 – 2.1 L (1997–2005)
- M271, 1.6 – 1.8 L (2002–2015)
- M266, 1.5 – 2.0 L (2004–present)
- M270, 1.6 – 2.0 L (2011–present)
- M200, 1.2 L (2012–present)
- M274, 1.6 – 2.0 L (2012–present)
- M133, 2.0 L (2013–present)
- M260/M264, 1.5 – 2.0 L (2017–present)
- M282, 1.3 L (2018–present)
Straight-six
- M836, 4.0 L (1924–1929)
- M9456, 6.3 L (1924–1929)
- M02, 2.0 L (1926–1933)
- M03, 3.0 L (1926–1927)
- M04, 3.0 – 3.1 L (1927–1928)
- M09, 3.4 L (1928–1929)
- M06, 6.8 – 7.1 L (1928–1934)
- M10, 3.5 L (1929–1933)
- M11, 2.6 L (1929–1935)
- M15, 1.7 L (1931–1936)
- M18, 2.9 L (1933–1937)
- M21, 2.0 L (1933–1936)
- M143, 2.2 L (1936–1941)
- M142, 3.2 L (1937–1942)
- M153, 2.3 L (1939–1943)
- M180, 2.2 – 2.3 L (1951–1980)
- M186, 3.0 L (1951–1958)
- M188, 3.0 L (1952–1958)
- M194, 3.0 L (1952)
- M198, 3.0 L (1954–1963)
- M199, 3.0 L (1955–1958)
- M127, 2.2 L (1958–1964)
- M189, 3.0 L (1958–1967)
- M129, 2.5 L (1965–1967)
- M108, 2.5 L (1965–1967)
- M130, 2.8 L (1968–1972)
- M114, 2.5 L (1967–1972)
- M123, 2.5 L (1976–1985)
- M110, 2.8 L (1972–1986)
- M103, 2.6 – 3.0 L (1984–1995)
- M104, 2.8 – 3.6 L (1989–1997)
- M256, 3.0 L (2017–present)
V6
Straight-eight
- M08, 4.6 – 5.0 L (1928–1939)
- M07, 7.7 L (1930–1938)
- M19, 3.8 L (1932–1933)
- M22, 3.8 – 4.0 L (1933–1934)
- M24, 5.0 – 5.4 L (1934–1944)
- M150, 7.7 L (1938–1944)
- M124, 5.8 L (1939) (prototype)
V8
- M100, 6.3 – 6.9 L (1963–1981)
- M116, 3.5 – 4.2 L (1969–1991)
- M117, 4.5 – 5.6 L (1971–1992)
- M119, 4.2 – 6.0 L (1989–1999)
- M113, 4.3 – 5.5 L (1997–2012)
- M155, 5.4 L (2004–2009)
- M156, 6.2 L (2006–2014)
- M273, 4.7 – 5.5 L (2005–2010)
- M159, 6.2 L (2009–2014)
- M278, 4.7 L (2010–present)
- M157, 5.5 L (2010–present)
- M152, 5.5 L (2012–2015)
- M177/M178, 4.0 L (2014–present)[1]
- M176, 4.0 L (2017–present)
V12
- MB503
- MB509, 4.4 L (used in Panzer VIII Maus V1)
- M120, 6.0 – 7.0 L (1991–1998)
- M297, 6.9 – 7.3 L (1997–2016)
- M137, 5.8 – 6.3 L (1999–2002)
- M285, 5.5 L (2003–2012)
- M275, 6.0 L (2004–2015)
- M279, 6.0 L (2012–present)
- M158, 6.0 L (2012–present)
- M277, 6.0 L (2014–present)
Wankel
- M950F, 1.8 – 2.4 L (1969–1970)
Diesel engines
One-cylinder
Two-cylinder
Straight-three
- MB853, 4.3 L
- M203B, 9.7 L (1947–???)
- MB863, 4.3 L (1954–???)
- OM660, 0.8 L (1998–2015)
- OM639, 1.5 L (2004–2009)
Inline-four
- OM138, 2.5 L (1935–1940)
- OM636, 1.7 – 1.8 L (1949–1990)
- OM621, 1.9 – 2.0 L (1959–1967)
- OM615, 2.0 – 2.2 L (1968–1985)
- OM616, 2.4 L (1973–1985)
- OM601, 2.0 – 2.3 L (1983–2001)
- OM604, 2.0 – 2.2 L (1993–1998)
- OM668, 1.7 L (1997–2005)
- OM611, 2.1 – 2.2 L (1998–2011)
- OM646, 2.1 L (2002–2010)
- OM640, 2.0 L (2004–2012)
- OM651, 1.8 – 2.1 L (2008–present)
- OM654, 2.0 L (2016–present)
- OM699, 2.3 L (2017–present)
- OM608, 1.5 L (2018–present)
Inline-five
- OM617, 3.0 L (1974–1991)
- OM602, 2.5 – 2.9 L (1985–2002)
- OM605, 2.5 L (1993–2001)
- OM612, 2.7 L (1999–2006)
- OM647, 2.7 L (2004–2006)
Straight-six
- OM603, 3.0 – 3.5 L (1986–1997)
- OM606, 3.0 L (1993–2001)
- OM613, 3.2 L (1999–2003)
- OM648, 3.2 L (2002–2006)
- OM656, 2.9 L (2017–present)
Busses and trucks:
- OM5, 8.6 L (1928–1932)
- OM49
- OM54, 12.5 L (1934–1939)
- OM57, 11.3 – 12.5 L (1938–1940)
- OM65
- OM67, 7.2 – 7.4 L (1935–1954)
- OM77
- OM79, 10.3 L (1932–1936)
- OM302, 4.6 L (1941) (prototype)
- OM312, 4.6 L (1949)
- OM314, 3.8 L
- OM315, 8.2 L
- OM321, 5.1 – 5.7 L
- OM326, 10.8 L
- OM346, 10.8 L
- OM355, 11.6 L
- OM360, 8.7 L
- OM352, 5.7 L (1963–present)
- OM364, 4.0 L
- OM366, 6.0 L
- OM407
- OM427
- OM447
- OM457, 12.0 L (2003–present)
- OM460
- OM470, 10.7 L
- OM471, 12.8 L
- OM472, 14.8 L
- OM473, 15.6 L (2012–present)[2]
- OM906, 6.4 L
- OM926, 7.2 L
- OM936, 7.6 L (2012–present)
V6
- OM642, 3.0 L (2005–present)
Busses and trucks:
V8
Busses and trucks:
V10
V12
- OM404, 20.9 L
- OM424
- OM444, 22.6 L
- MB500, 66.4 L (used in e-boats)
- MB507, 42.4 – 44.5 L
- MB512
- MB517, 42.4 L (used in Panzer VIII Maus V2)
- MB820
- MB835
V16
V20
- MB 501
- MB 511
- MB518, 134.4 L (1951–1973)
Natural gas engines
References
- ^ Mercedes details 4.0L twin-turbo V8 for AMG GT
- ^ "Mercedes Arocs is the new force in construction---as previously mentioned by Biglorryblog!". Biglorryblog. 29 January 2013. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
- ^ Kacher, Georg (September 1982). Kennett, Pat (ed.). "Munich Show report". TRUCK. London, UK: FF Publishing Ltd: 73.