Oldsmobile’s Jetfire Was A World First Turbo Car With A Fatal Flaw
In the early 1960s American buyers were increasingly being swayed by the idea of a smaller, lighter, more efficient car from Europe, like the Mini and the Volkswagen Beetle. They were cheap, easily available and used vastly less fuel than the thirsty US V8s of the era.
The US was hardly about to turn its back on big ol’ eight-bangers, though, so to combat this troublesome invasion of frugal small cars Oldsmobile looked to its F85 Cutlass. As big as a small Belgian province, it was nonetheless one of the American firm’s smaller offerings and it came with a positively minuscule 3.5-litre V8 as a more efficient option.
To improve fuel economy without sacrificing the performance of a ‘big’ V8, Oldsmobile struck up an interesting partnership with Garrett Corporation, which at the time only made industrial turbochargers that definitely would not fit on your Honda. Together, the two giants developed automotive-suitable blowers with a smaller diameter and internal combustion-focused pipework to make it run.
This T5 turbocharger was simply a bolt-on design that was installed onto a special version of the F85 Cutlass called the Jetfire. It remains one of the best names ever given to a car. Some people say it was the first turbocharged production car in the world. Others say the Chevrolet Corvair Monza Syder Turbo emerged a couple of weeks sooner, and still others say they came out so close together that to give either one the honour would be disingenuous. Both were General Motors, after all.
The 215bhp ‘Turbo-Rocket’ engine was a revelation in performance. It added 30 per cent torque to the non-turbocharged version’s output, delivering 300lb ft by 3200rpm with 280lb ft said to be on tap from just 2000rpm. Thus equipped the F85 could reach 100mph some 10 seconds faster than its most powerful non-turbo sibling and hit 60mph almost twice as quickly as the entry-level 155bhp model.
Unfortunately there were two problems with it. Firstly the suspension was still the same wobbly, uncomfortable, unresponsive and downright unstable setup fitted to the common-or-garden Cutlass. Secondly, the Jetfire engine needed a special solution to avoid detonation, or engine knock, and owners just could handle it.
It used a special tank filled with ‘rocket fluid’, a mix of methyl alcohol and water. The system needed to spray it into the intake air stream to cool it and keep combustion temperatures lower. Let the tank run dry and the Jetfire protected itself by entering into a low-power mode where the boost pressure was limited by a butterfly valve. Guess what everyone did? Yup; forget to top-up the tank.
Scores of owners took their Jetfires back to their dealers complaining about loss of power. Sure enough, it was just that they hadn’t filled the rocket fluid tank. Doing so proved too much of a hassle for people and buyers turned off the idea. The fuel injection system was reportedly erratic, too, causing many problems of its own. Plenty of Jetfire owners lost patience with Oldsmobile and the company actually ended up retro-fiting a four-barrel carburettor to fix it. Oops.
The idea was short-lived, anyway. By 1964 the US had become a bit bored of small European cars and turned back to big V8s en masse. The day of the turbocharged engine was done for a few years. The next car to use it? The BMW 2002 in 1970.
Comments
If it had an intercooler to cool down the charge air all these problems could have been avoided. It just wasn’t known back then that you need one. Some WW2 aircraft already had turbocharged engines, but they also used an extra injection system (water/methanol) instead of an intercooler.
Having an intercooler is close to impossible with a suck-through carburettor. As You can see from the graphic, the fuel is injected before the turbocharger, meaning all the fuel will need to go through the intercooler, where it will most likely condense.
Nice article. Thanks :)
Turbo rocket fluid basically a predecessor to modern Water-Meth
‘Modern’ Water-Meth ?
You know the Water-Meth system was in mery operation during WW2 ?
BF109’s where equiped with it amongst others :)
What happend to Top 10 comments of the week
They don’t care anymore
because top comments are all about how bad CarThrottle has became. They don’t want you to see that.
That and editors picks?
I loved those
God damn that car looks good
And this success helped them make it to the top where they are today …
F to pay respects
Horsepower: DITTTOOOOOOO
“metamorph” for the french pokemon fans x)
Sorry for that, im allready out
A genius idea that was passed to other genius engineers…..I tip my hat in front of this nice article.
How long until Jay Leno owns one?
he propably already does own one