Diesel engines The 1938
Lancia 3Ro trucks introduced a straight-five diesel engine to replace the previous straight-three engine. Built for the Italian and German armed forces during World War II and later for civilian usage, the truck remained in production until 1950. The first mass-production straight-five passenger car engine was the 1974
Mercedes-Benz OM617, a
naturally-aspirated engine introduced in the
Mercedes-Benz 300D (W114/W115) models. In 1978, a
turbocharged version was introduced in the
Mercedes-Benz 300SD Turbo models. Mercedes-Benz continued to produce straight-five engines for the next 28 years, until the
Mercedes-Benz OM647 engine ended production in 2006. In 1978, the
Audi 2.0 R5 D engine was introduced in the
Audi 100 sedan. In 1983, a turbocharged version was introduced, initially for the U.S. market Audi 100. Several Volvo cars were produced with Audi straight-five diesel engines, prior to the introduction of the
Volvo D5 turbo-diesel engine; this engine was produced from 2001 to 2017 and was used in several diesel hybrid applications (marketed as "twin engine" models). Other mass-production straight-five diesel engines include the 1999–2001
VM Motori 531 turbo-diesel engine, the 1998–2007
Land Rover Td5 turbo-diesel engine, the 2006–2019
Ford Duratorq 3.2 turbo-diesel engine, the 1998–2009
Fiat JTD 2.4 turbo-diesel engine and the 1990–2001
Toyota PZ engine.
Petrol engines Henry Ford had an inline-five engine developed in the late 1930s to early 1940s for a compact economy car design, which never saw production due to lack of demand for small cars in the United States. The first production straight-five petrol engine was the
Audi 2.1 R5 introduced in the Audi 100 in 1977. Audi has continued use of straight-five petrol engines (in both
naturally aspirated and
turbocharged versions) to the present day. The
Audi RS3 currently uses straight-five engines. In motorsport, the first car to use a straight-five engine was the
Audi Quattro rally car; other racing cars which used straight-five engines include the 1985-1986
Audi Sport Quattro E2 and the 1989
Audi 90 Quattro IMSA GTO. For the year 1987 factory team tested a 735 kW (1000 hp) version of the inline-5 powered Audi S1 Sport Quattro. Several Volkswagen-branded straight-five engines have been produced, beginning with the
Volkswagen WH/WN 1.9 litre 10v engine used in the 1981 Volkswagen Passat. The final Volkswagen straight-five petrol engine was the
Volkswagen EA855 2.5 litre 20v engine used in the North American Passat models until 2014. The
Volvo Modular engine was introduced in the 1991 Volvo 850 sedan and was used in various Volvo models, along with the
Ford Focus ST and
Ford Focus RS models. All of the straight-five petrol engines used by Volvo and Ford were built at the Volvo Skövde engine plant in
Skövde,
Sweden, until their discontinuation in 2016. Other straight-five petrol engines include • 1989-1998
Honda G-series 2.0-2.5 litre 20v engines • 1995-2006
Fiat Family C 2.0-2.4 litre 20v engine • 2004-2012 General Motors
Vortec 3500/
3700 3.5-3.7 litre 20v engines In recent years the engine has been falling out of favour, with Volvo announcing in 2012 it would discontinue building them, for example. == Usage in commercials ==