Don't let the new Cruze's gas engine displacement mislead you into thinking it's a refresh. This is a completely new engine capitalizing on GM's latest combustion-optimization expertise. Similarly, the new 1.6-liter diesel — designed in Europe where they really "get" oil-burners — is claimed to be the world's quietest diesel. Already in production in a brace of Opels (Astra, Meriva, Mokka, and Zafira), this characteristic has inspired the European press to dub it theFlüsterdiesel, or "whisperdiesel."
Let's look at the gasser first. Already powering the Chinese Cruze (which is a half-generation off of ours) and destined for the Opel Astra, as well, you can basically think of this 1.4-liter, turbocharged inline-four as an Opel Adam 1.0T with an extra cylinder. We've driven and been impressed with that little triple, and this four-banger shares a long list of parts and dimensions with it: bore (74.0mm), stroke (81.3mm), cylinder-bore spacing, pistons with low-friction rings, connecting rods, cam drive, centrally located direct fuel injectors, piston-cooling oil squirters, sensors, and even engine control systems. Both integrate the exhaust manifold into the cylinder head, both employ an extremely rigid aluminum block, a bedplate lower-end structural design, and a forged steel crankshaft, and they both use stamped-steel oil pans.
These last few qualities contribute considerably to reducing the noise emanating from the engine, and indeed Chevrolet claims this Ecotec four is 50 percent quieter than VW/Audi's competing 1.4-liter turbo. Boost from the MHI turbo peaks at 14 psi — impressive in an engine running 10.0:1 compression on regular unleaded fuel. Engine output increases from 138 hp and 125 lb-ft to an SAE-certified 153 hp and 177 lb-ft. (Those numbers inch up a bit if you run premium.) Auto stop/start technology will be included on models with the 6T35 automatic transmission. (An M32 six-speed manual is standard.)
GM estimates the highway fuel economy figure will start with a 4, even without extra-cost Eco trimmings. And between the economies of scale realized on an engine architecture that will be produced in quantities of 2.5 million per year (ours will come from Flint, Michigan, and Toluca, Mexico) and savings from not certifying a third engine, this greatly improved engine can now serve as the base Cruze powertrain without resulting in a commensurate price increase.




