Originally posted by: BullyCanadian
"Theres no replacement for displacement."
That is the only thing I have to say, take it for its worth.
This was true once. Not anymore.
Now and days there are a lot of factors. The engineering behind motors is quite complex. OHC (over head cam) motors are typically more efficient (power and gas wise) than an OHV equivelant (over head valve). Those are the two distinct variations in motor design. Then you have the V configuration, inline and boxer style cyllinder placement. These all change how the motor performs as well.
More cubic inches is not always better nor will it always mean more power. This is the mentality of the by gone muscle car era. Because back then, all they did was take a motor and make it bigger, no further engineering was done. People bought it because it made more power and was indeed faster. It was also easier to get more power out of a bigger motor. This is not at all true any longer. In fact, most car companies who re-engineer motors make them smaller, yet more powerful.
An example of this is the new Ford V-8 TD (turbo diesel). They went from a clunky, and not very fuel efficient 7.0 liter V8 motor down to a 5.something (cant remember) V8 which produced more HP and quite a bit more torque. In fact, the old 7.0 liter had 520 torque or so and the new more which is almost 1/3 less in size makes 560 lb-ft torque and a bit more HP. Thats because they designed the motor that way. Ferrari is another example. They get specific output out of their V8 motors. But everytime they redesign it, they make them smaller AND more powerful.
This isn't to say bigger isn't better. Because if your an every day Joe "drag strip" Doe, and all you care about is your 1/4 mile time, then you could probably do more to a big block chevy V8 then a small block. The whole "bigger is better" mentality came from an American mentality from the 60's. Where all they cared about was this, drag strip times. All they cares about was more power.
All I have to say is that handling and breaking in a daily driven car is resoundingly more important. If you don't have the big @ss disc brakes and good suspension, you have no business getting more power. That power needs control. Thats why they design cars around such different criteria now.