indirect injection turbodiesel Prior to Volkswagen Group's first TDI engine, the first turbocharged diesel engine used in a passenger car was an
indirect injection five-cylinder engine fitted to the 1978
Mercedes-Benz 300SD (W116) 300 SD sedan. The first turbodiesel engine with direct injection was the 1986
Fiat Croma 2.0 TD i.d. liftback sedan. Three years after the Fiat Croma, Volkswagen Group's first TDI engine was introduced in the 1989
Audi 100 TDI sedan. The Audi 100 was powered by the
Volkswagen 2.5 R5 TDI straight-five engine which used an electronic distributor
injection pump (called "VerteilerPumpe" by Volkswagen) and two-stage direct injection. The initial version of this engine generated at 3,250 rpm and at 2,500 rpm. TDI engines using
common rail fuel injection (using
piezoelectric fuel injectors) were introduced with the
Volkswagen Group 32v TDI V8 engine used in the 1999
Audi A8 3.3 TDI Quattro, two years after the 1997
Alfa Romeo 156 2.4-L JTD became the first passenger car to use common rail injection. In 1999, the
Volkswagen 1.2-litre TDI won the
International Engine of the Year categories for "1.0 to 1.4 litres" and "Best Fuel Economy". In 2000, a fuel system using
unit injectors (called "Pumpe Düse" by Volkswagen) began to replace the distributor injection pump systems (except for the V8 engine, which used common rail design). In 2003, upgraded fuel injectors using a piezoelectric design began to replace the previous solenoid-operated unit injectors. Since 2009, most of the Volkswagen Group TDI engines have switched from unit injectors to common rail injection. == Emissions testing falsification ==