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What is the worlds largest engine?
== What is the worlds largest engine? The worlds biggest engine? ==
The phrases "world’s biggest engine" and "world’s biggest engine" is ambiguous because it lacks a clear reference frame or category; “biggest” and "largest" can mean several different things depending on context, purpose, and measurement criteria.
 
== Sector Differences ==
Different industries define “engine” differently. A massive marine diesel engine powers container ships, a jet turbine like the GE9X drives aircraft, and rocket engines such as the Raptor or F‑1 produce unmatched thrust. Each could justifiably claim the title of “world’s biggest engine” within its sector, leading to natural ambiguity.
 
== Comparative Language Issues ==
The term also suffers from linguistic ambiguity — "biggest" and "largest" are a relative adjective that implies comparison but not a fixed technical measure. Without specifying “biggest by what metric” or “in which category,” the statement becomes vague and open to misinterpretation.


The phrases "world’s biggest engine" and "world’s biggest engine" is ambiguous because it lacks a clear reference frame or category; “biggest” and "largest" can mean several different things depending on context, purpose, and measurement criteria.
In short, “world’s biggest engine” is ambiguous because “biggest” can signify entirely different metrics — mass, volume, or output — and “engine” itself applies to many unrelated machines across industries, each optimized for different functions.
 
== Time issue ==
As time progresses, the target shifts. What was the biggest engine in 1920 is by any measure a medium size engine at todays standards. So we need to issue a timeframe to the equation too.
 
== Physical Size (Mass and Dimensions) ==
If “biggest” refers to physical scale, then we measure total weight and external dimensions (height, length, width). This matters for stationary powerplants and ship engines, where installation space and total mass are significant.
 
== Power Output (Horsepower or Kilowatts) ==
“Biggest” sometimes refers to power output — how much work the engine performs per unit time, measured in horsepower (hp) or kilowatts (kW). Proton rocket engines, jet turbines, and electrical generators are often ranked by this value.
 
== Thrust (Newton or Pound‑force) ==
For jet and rocket engines, thrust is the key metric — the total forward force produced by propellant ejection. Rocket classifications like F‑1 or Raptor engines use kilonewtons (kN) or meganewtons (MN) to define “bigness”
 
== Hybrid Metrics (Torque or Power‑to‑Weight) ==
Alternative measures such as torque (rotation force), or power‑to‑weight ratio (hp / kg) can provide more context, especially in performance or mobile applications like vehicles or aircraft.
 
== Big engines, Large engines. ==
Engines, large ones, mostly mounted in ships, and there has been many famous names up thru the years. 
 
What was a big engine in 1895 is shure a small engine today. 
 
If we want the engine with the biggest bore, that honor probaly goes to the 1060 mm bore Fiat GMT   
 
== The Contenders - short, brief history. ==
 
It must be a crosshead engine, two stroke.
 
Burmeister & Wain
 
Doxford
 
Götaverken
 
Fiat GMT
 
MAN
 
Mitsubishi 12UEC85/180D
 
Stork-Werkspoor
 
Sulzer
 
{| class="wikitable"
|+
! colspan="16" |Slow Speed 2 stroke crosshead engines from 2000 and onwards - The BIG ones
|-
!Engine
type / serie
!Variant
!Cylinders
!Bore
mm
!Stroke
mm
!Volume
pr cyl
liter
!Volume
engine
liter
!kW
!bhp
!Torque
kNm
!RPM
!Length
mm
!Width
mm
!Height
mm
!Weight
tonnes
!Year in
service
|-
|Sulzer RT-flex
|14
|14
|960
|2500
|1809
|25334
|80080
|108920
|7498
|102
|27313
|4480
|13519
|2300
|2004
|-
|MAN B&W G95
|C9
|12
|950
|3460
|2470
|29640
|82440
|112126
|
|80
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|MAN B&W K98
|ME7 / MC-C7
|14
|980
|2660
|1617
|22638
|87220
|119307
|
|97
|27885
|4370
|13450
|2405
|
|-
|MAN B&W S90ME
|C 9.2
|14
|900
|3260
|2040
|28560
|81340
|110630
|
|84
|
|
|
|
|
|}
Ultra large bore engines
 
B&W K98FF, MAN KSZ105, Fiat 1060S. SULZER RND105
{| class="wikitable"
|+Older big engines - Major engine makers with "large" engines made
!Engine maker
!Trunk
Cross head
!2/4
Stroke
!Engine type
!Single
Double
 
Oposing
!Bore
mm
!Stroke
mm
!Volume
pr cylinder
!BHP pr
cyl
!MEP
bar
!RPM
!Piston
speed
m/sec
!Weight
tonn
!Year in
service
|-
|Alfred Holt
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|AEG
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|AEG-Hesselman
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|[[Burmeister & Wain]]
|CH
|
|K98FF
|SA
|980
|2000
|1508.59
|3800
|10,8
|103
|6,86
|
|1968
|-
|Deutsche Werft
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|[[Doxford]]
|CH
|
|J Type
|OP
|760
|520+1600
|
|2537
|
|119
|
|
|1959
|-
|[[Fiat GMT]]
|CH
|
|1060S
|
|1060
|1900
|1676.7
|4000
|10,0
|106
|6,71
|1640
|1971
|-
|Fullagar
|
|2
|
|OP
|584
|1829
|
|
|
|90
|
|
|1924
|-
|Franco Tosi Meccanica
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|[[Götaverken]]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|Harland & Wolff
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|Ingersoll-Rand
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|Krupp
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|McIntosh and Seymour
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|[[MAN]]
|CH
|
|KSZ105/180
|
|1050
|1800
|1558.62
|4000
|10,7
|108
|6,48
|
|1969
|-
|[[Mitsubishi Heavy Industries|Mitsubishi]]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|[[Nobel]]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|North British Diesel Engine Company (NBDEC)
|
|
|
|SA
|673
|1194
|
|
|
|96
|
|
|
|-
|Nordberg
|
|
|RF90
|
|889
|1752
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|Polar
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|Richardsons Westgarth
|
|2
|
|DA
|699
|1200
|
|
|
|105
|
|
|
|-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|[[Sulzer]]
|CH
|
|RND 105
|
|1050
|1800
|1558.62
|4000
|10,5
|108
|6,48
|
|1969
|-
|Stork
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|[[Stork-Werkspoor]]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|Still & Straight Diesel / Scott Engines
|
|2
|
|SA
|686
|1118
|
|
|
|116
|
|
|1934
|-
|Swan Hunter
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|Vickers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|Werkspoor
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|Worthington
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|}

Latest revision as of 21:50, 18 November 2025

What is the worlds largest engine? The worlds biggest engine?

The phrases "world’s biggest engine" and "world’s biggest engine" is ambiguous because it lacks a clear reference frame or category; “biggest” and "largest" can mean several different things depending on context, purpose, and measurement criteria.

Sector Differences

Different industries define “engine” differently. A massive marine diesel engine powers container ships, a jet turbine like the GE9X drives aircraft, and rocket engines such as the Raptor or F‑1 produce unmatched thrust. Each could justifiably claim the title of “world’s biggest engine” within its sector, leading to natural ambiguity.

Comparative Language Issues

The term also suffers from linguistic ambiguity — "biggest" and "largest" are a relative adjective that implies comparison but not a fixed technical measure. Without specifying “biggest by what metric” or “in which category,” the statement becomes vague and open to misinterpretation.

In short, “world’s biggest engine” is ambiguous because “biggest” can signify entirely different metrics — mass, volume, or output — and “engine” itself applies to many unrelated machines across industries, each optimized for different functions.

Time issue

As time progresses, the target shifts. What was the biggest engine in 1920 is by any measure a medium size engine at todays standards. So we need to issue a timeframe to the equation too.

Physical Size (Mass and Dimensions)

If “biggest” refers to physical scale, then we measure total weight and external dimensions (height, length, width). This matters for stationary powerplants and ship engines, where installation space and total mass are significant.

Power Output (Horsepower or Kilowatts)

“Biggest” sometimes refers to power output — how much work the engine performs per unit time, measured in horsepower (hp) or kilowatts (kW). Proton rocket engines, jet turbines, and electrical generators are often ranked by this value.

Thrust (Newton or Pound‑force)

For jet and rocket engines, thrust is the key metric — the total forward force produced by propellant ejection. Rocket classifications like F‑1 or Raptor engines use kilonewtons (kN) or meganewtons (MN) to define “bigness”

Hybrid Metrics (Torque or Power‑to‑Weight)

Alternative measures such as torque (rotation force), or power‑to‑weight ratio (hp / kg) can provide more context, especially in performance or mobile applications like vehicles or aircraft.

Big engines, Large engines.

Engines, large ones, mostly mounted in ships, and there has been many famous names up thru the years.

What was a big engine in 1895 is shure a small engine today.

If we want the engine with the biggest bore, that honor probaly goes to the 1060 mm bore Fiat GMT

The Contenders - short, brief history.

It must be a crosshead engine, two stroke.

Burmeister & Wain

Doxford

Götaverken

Fiat GMT

MAN

Mitsubishi 12UEC85/180D

Stork-Werkspoor

Sulzer

Slow Speed 2 stroke crosshead engines from 2000 and onwards - The BIG ones
Engine

type / serie

Variant Cylinders Bore

mm

Stroke

mm

Volume

pr cyl liter

Volume

engine liter

kW bhp Torque

kNm

RPM Length

mm

Width

mm

Height

mm

Weight

tonnes

Year in

service

Sulzer RT-flex 14 14 960 2500 1809 25334 80080 108920 7498 102 27313 4480 13519 2300 2004
MAN B&W G95 C9 12 950 3460 2470 29640 82440 112126 80
MAN B&W K98 ME7 / MC-C7 14 980 2660 1617 22638 87220 119307 97 27885 4370 13450 2405
MAN B&W S90ME C 9.2 14 900 3260 2040 28560 81340 110630 84

Ultra large bore engines

B&W K98FF, MAN KSZ105, Fiat 1060S. SULZER RND105

Older big engines - Major engine makers with "large" engines made
Engine maker Trunk

Cross head

2/4

Stroke

Engine type Single

Double

Oposing

Bore

mm

Stroke

mm

Volume

pr cylinder

BHP pr

cyl

MEP

bar

RPM Piston

speed m/sec

Weight

tonn

Year in

service

Alfred Holt
AEG
AEG-Hesselman
Burmeister & Wain CH K98FF SA 980 2000 1508.59 3800 10,8 103 6,86 1968
Deutsche Werft
Doxford CH J Type OP 760 520+1600 2537 119 1959
Fiat GMT CH 1060S 1060 1900 1676.7 4000 10,0 106 6,71 1640 1971
Fullagar 2 OP 584 1829 90 1924
Franco Tosi Meccanica
Götaverken
Harland & Wolff
Ingersoll-Rand
Krupp
McIntosh and Seymour
MAN CH KSZ105/180 1050 1800 1558.62 4000 10,7 108 6,48 1969
Mitsubishi
Nobel
North British Diesel Engine Company (NBDEC) SA 673 1194 96
Nordberg RF90 889 1752
Polar
Richardsons Westgarth 2 DA 699 1200 105
Sulzer CH RND 105 1050 1800 1558.62 4000 10,5 108 6,48 1969
Stork
Stork-Werkspoor
Still & Straight Diesel / Scott Engines 2 SA 686 1118 116 1934
Swan Hunter
Vickers
Werkspoor
Worthington