Originally Posted By: Hokiefyd
Yep, same with the CR-V. It took a large fuel economy jump, from 21/24/28 in 2011 to 23/26/31 in 2012. They also cited lots of friction-reducing technology in the engine. That's a 9.5%/8.3%/10.7% improvement in the fuel economy numbers.
Interesting to look at modern stuff compared with old technology. My first car was an Olds Cutlass with a 307 V-8 engine. It would upshift, floored, at about 4,800 rpm. And it had a rather short 3.385" stroke (86mm). That's only 2,708 ft/min!
And sorry...all of the ft/sec units in my previous post should be ft/min.
Well, you were dealing with an engine that had a small cam, small head ports, leading to a torque an HP peak that happened at such a low RPM, that going past 4,800 RPM was pointless.
Also, there are two other things determining the maximum piston speed, weight and strength of the individual components.