Big news from the 2008 Chicago Auto Show. After a 2 year haitus, VW is bringing back the Jetta TDI, and it'll be 50-state legal! Expect to start seeing these beauties in US showrooms this summer. Discuss the new Jetta TDI in our forums.
Details here | Chicago Auto Show here.
More coverage of the new Jetta TDI at Edmunds.
The Next TDI: VW Reveals 2008 Jetta Bluetec Diesel
Date posted: 01-23-2007
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Volkswagen of America unveiled the next step
in the company's U.S. diesel strategy at the Washington, D.C. auto
show, showing a Jetta
TDI that employs an all-new 2.0-liter, common-rail diesel engine that
will meet emissions requirements in all 50 states when it rolls out
next year.
While the Jetta carries the Bluetec badge, referring to VW and Audi's
alliance with DaimlerChrysler on diesel emissions technology, the car
will not require the AdBlue liquid urea additive to comply with federal
standards.
That is because the engine is smaller than the 3.0-liter V6 diesel engine that the company will install in the Touareg SUV in 2008, which will employ AdBlue, according to Norbert Krause, director of VOA's engineering and environmental office.
Instead, Bluetec refers only to the vehicle's ability to meet federal
Tier II bin 5 emissions standards. That means the car will not only be
available in states that are governed by national standards, but also
in the five states that follow California emissions rules. The four
Northeastern states and California that have separate, tighter
requirements, account for 40 percent of VW's U.S. sales, Krause said.
The new engine abandons VW's old mechanical fuel injection system in
favor of a common-rail system using piezoelectric fuel injectors. This
technology permits higher injection pressures, which better atomize the
fuel and makes it easier to control pollution, he said.
Diesel engines struggle particularly with oxides of nitrogen (NOx)
pollution, and the Tier II bin 5 standard permits only 0.05 grams per
mile. Volkswagen will use a NOx trap and two oxidation catalysts to
scrub the Jetta TDI's breath.
The new engine is smoother, quieter, more powerful and more efficient
than the old Jetta TDI, which won many friends, but it won't cost more.
Fuel economy should be better, in the 45 mpg range, while the engine
produces 140 horsepower and 235 pound-feet of torque, according to
Krause.
Jetta TDI production will commence in January of 2008, with U.S.
availability scheduled for May of '08, at a starting price of about
$23,000 and a typically equipped car listing for $25,000, which is in
line with the outgoing model, according to spokesman Keith Price.
What it means to you: The diesel story keeps getting better, with more power and efficiency, but less pollution and noise.