1900–1914 Among the first overhead camshaft engines were the 1902
Maudslay SOHC engine built in the United Kingdom and the 1903
Marr Auto Car SOHC engine built in the United States. The first DOHC engine was a Peugeot inline-four racing engine which powered the car that won the
1912 French Grand Prix. Another Peugeot with a DOHC engine won the
1913 French Grand Prix, followed by the
Mercedes-Benz 18/100 GP with an SOHC engine winning the
1914 French Grand Prix. The
Isotta Fraschini Tipo KM — built in Italy from 1910–1914 — was one of the first production cars to use an SOHC engine.
World War I aircraft engine During World War I, both the
Allied and
Central Powers; specifically those of the
German Empire's
Luftstreitkräfte air forces, sought to quickly apply the overhead camshaft technology of motor racing engines to military aircraft engines. The SOHC engine from the
Mercedes 18/100 GP car (which won the 1914 French Grand Prix) became the starting point for both Mercedes' and Rolls-Royce's aircraft engines. Mercedes created a series of six-cylinder engines which culminated in the
Mercedes D.III. Rolls-Royce reversed-engineered the Mercedes cylinder head design based on a racing car left in England at the beginning of the war, leading to the
Rolls-Royce Eagle V12 engine. Other SOHC designs included the Spanish
Hispano-Suiza 8 V8 engine (with a fully enclosed-drivetrain), the American
Liberty L-12 V12 engine, which closely followed the later Mercedes D.IIIa design's partly-exposed SOHC valvetrain design; and the
Max Friz-designed; German
BMW IIIa straight-six engine. The DOHC
Napier Lion W12 engine was built in Great Britain beginning in 1918. Most of these engines used a shaft to transfer drive from the crankshaft up to the camshaft at the top of the engine. Large aircraft engines— particularly air-cooled engines— experienced considerable thermal expansion, causing the height of the cylinder block to vary during operating conditions. This expansion caused difficulties for pushrod engines, so an overhead camshaft engine using a shaft drive with sliding spline was the easiest way to allow for this expansion. These bevel shafts were usually in an external tube outside the block, and were known as "tower shafts". Hispano Suiza 8 A Brussel.jpg |1914–1918
Hispano-Suiza 8A SOHC aircraft engine Hispano-suiza-V8 220PS.jpg |1914–1918
Hispano-Suiza 8Be SOHC aircraft engine with "tower shafts" at the rear of each cylinder bank Later Mercedes D III Valvetrain.jpg |Later production (1917-18)
Mercedes D.III upper valvetrain details sketch, its design features copied by the
BMW III and the Allied
Liberty L-12 engines Liberty L-12-2.jpg |Detail closeup of a
Liberty L-12's upper valvetrain, showing the similarity to the later-production Mercedes design
1919–1944 straight-eight grand prix racing engine An early American overhead camshaft production engine was the SOHC straight-eight engine used in the 1921–1926
Duesenberg Model A luxury car. In 1926, the
Sunbeam 3 litre Super Sports became the first production car to use a DOHC engine. In the United States, Duesenberg added DOHC engines (alongside their existing SOHC engines) with the 1928 release of the
Duesenberg Model J, which was powered by a DOHC straight-eight engine. The 1931–1935
Stutz DV32 was another early American luxury car to use a DOHC engine. Also in the United States, the DOHC
Offenhauser racing engine was introduced in 1933. This inline-four engine dominated North American open-wheel racing from 1934 until the 1970s. Other early SOHC automotive engines were the 1920–1923
Wolseley Ten, the 1928–1931
MG 18/80, the 1926–1935
Singer Junior and the 1928–1929
Alfa Romeo 6C Sport. Early overhead camshaft motorcycles included the 1925–1949
Velocette K Series and the 1927–1939
Norton CS1.
1945–present SOHC engine The 1946–1948
Crosley CC Four was arguably the first American mass-produced car to use an SOHC engine. This small mass-production engine powered the winner of the 1950
12 Hours of Sebring. The 1966–2000
Fiat Twin Cam inline-four engine was one of the first DOHC engines to use a toothed timing belt instead of a timing chain. In the 1980s, the need for increased performance while reducing fuel consumption and exhaust emissions saw increasing use of DOHC engines in mainstream vehicles, beginning with Japanese manufacturers. By the mid-2000s, most automotive engines used a DOHC layout. == See also ==