Mercedes-Benz OM651 engine


The OM651 is a family of inline-four cylinder automobile diesel engines introduced by Mercedes-Benz in 2008.

Design

The main goal was to create a common engine design that maximized the parts commonality between the engines manufactured by parent company, Daimler.
One requirement of the design was the ability of the engine to be mounted both longitudinally and transversely. Improved fuel efficiency and compliance with Euro 5 emission standards were also design objectives, by 2010 being updated to the Euro 6 standard; four piezo-electric injectors fed with very high pressure fuel from a common rail inject fuel directly into the combustion chambers to improve combustion compared to previous Mercedes Diesel engines and recirculated exhaust gas reduces the oxygen in the cylinders to "starve" any reactions that would produce NO.
Although all engines have the same swept volume, engines with various power outputs are produced ranging from to . The and versions employ a bi-turbo charging setup with a small, high pressure turbo providing quick boost at low RPM and a large, lower pressure turbo providing increased performance at higher RPM. The lower output version has only a single turbocharger.
In the summer of 2017 the engine, together with OM642, is under investigation whether for the engine operated in a laboratory emissions testing, a different amount of diesel exhaust fluid is used illegally, other than in real world operating scenarios.