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10 cars with 10 cylinders: The best V-10s ever made


Cars

10 cars with 10 cylinders: The best V-10s ever made

Kristen Lee
MotorTrend
MotorTrend presents the best V10s ever made

Over the years, engines have arrive in various sizes and layouts, but arguably none have a flair for the dramatic like a V-10 does. We had a solid run of V-10-powered cars from the early ’90s to the complete of the 2010s. In today’s climate, a V-10 doesn’t make much sense, as there are far more advanced and efficient powertrains to choose from, making similar or better power. But there will always be room in the enthusiast’s heart for large displacement, natural aspiration, smooth power, and the ungodly caterwaul of a 10-cylinder engine note. Here are 10 of our favorite V-10 cars ever built.

The Audi R8 engine

What’s the most recent V-10 car?

A mere 20 years ago, it really did seem like we were in the midst of enjoying the golden age of V-10 cars. Ten-cylinder engines found their way into trucks, vans, coupes, sedans — even a wagon. But as 2024 winds down, we must sunset these glorious engines.

The last two production cars to still propose a V-10 are the Audi R8, which officially ended production earlier this year, and the Lamborghini Huracán, whose production is set to complete sometime soon. Hell,the Huracán’s successor has already been named, and that car, the Temerario, makes do with a twin-turbo plug-in hybrid 4.0-liter V-8. When the Huracán is officially dead, it will spell the complete for V-10-powered production cars.

2014 Audi R8 V-10 engine

Why are V-10s so rare?

Even when large-displacement engines were in vogue and hybridization technology wasn’t as excellent as it is today, a V-10 engine in a road car (outside of trucks and vans, like Fords equipped with the Triton V-10) was a rather fringe thing. Engineers and automakers preferred to lean on either V-8s or V-12s to make large-period power. That’s because V-10s, which are essentially two inline-fives, are inherently more imbalanced than either eight- or twelve-cylinder motors. To offset that extra vibration, they require far more external balancing in order to be considered tolerable. More external balancing hardware means added weight and complexity — you can view how most would prefer to abandon the entire endeavor in favor of something less high-maintenance.

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But those who persevered gifted us some of the greatest (and greatest-sounding) cars ever made.

1991 Dodge Viper

1991 Dodge Viper

People have been tooling around with V-10s for decades, but the first production V-10 appeared in the Dodge Viper toward the complete of 1991. It’s a ordinary misconception that the Viper used the truck engine that would appear in 1994 Ram pickups; instead, the sports car got a Lamborghini-built aluminum unit mated to a six-speed manual. Creature comforts basically stopped there, as frivolous add-ons like a roof, side windows, anti-lock brakes, stability control and air conditioning were simply omitted. The Viper nameplate carried on from 1991 until production ended in 2017. No successor has arrived since.

The 1991 Viper started at around $52,000, which is roughly $122,000 in today’s money. At auction on Bring a Trailer, first-gen Vipers now typically leave for around $40,000.

Dodge Viper RT10 rear three quarter

1991 Dodge Viper specifications

  • Engine: 8.0-liter V-10
  • Output: 400 hp/450 lb-ft of torque
  • 0-60: 4.5 seconds
  • Top speed: 163 mph (est.)

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2002 Volkswagen Touareg V-10 TDI

Back before “diesel Volkswagen” became a filthy phrase, the German automaker was all in on its TDI diesel rollout. That included the original Touareg, which was the first application of its then-recent V-10 diesel engine. Expensive and over-engineered, the V-10 Touareg was short-lived, as emissions regulations killed it off after a relatively short run. Plus, it could only be sold in most of the 50 states, so, all in all, the thing proved to be more trouble than it was worth. We enjoyed its waves of torque and smooth power delivery, but there’s no way this engine could have survived.

The V-10 Touareg started at around $60,000 (approximately $107,000 in 2024 money). Today, they look to be selling at around $10,000. For the novelty alone, would you?

2002 Volkswagen Touareg V-10 TDI engine

2002 Volkswagen Touareg V-10 TDI specifications

  • Engine: 5.0-liter V-10
  • Output: 310 hp/553 lb-ft of torque
  • 0-60: 7.5 seconds
  • Top speed: 144 mph (est.)
2005 Dodge Ram SRT-10 Quad Cab

2004 Dodge Ram SRT-10

It’s always sillier when you put unexpected engines in unsuspecting body styles. There’s no clearer example of this than the Dodge Ram SRT-10. With a Viper’s heart, it was built with the earlier Ford Lightning directly in its crosshairs. factual, there have been V-10-powered Ford pickups in the history (recall the Triton?!), but not ones meant exclusively for act. A purpose-built warm rod, the SRT-10 could burn rubber, but also carry six people, haul groceries, and tow up to 7,500 pounds of whatever you wanted. They declare you can’t have it all, but this power pickup begged to differ.

At launch, Dodge priced the Ram SRT-10 to commence at $45,000. In today’s dollars, that’s about $77,000. That’s about how much a recent Ford Raptor costs. On the used trade, these V-10-powered trucks leave for about $27,000.

2004 Dodge Ram SRT-10

2004 Dodge Ram SRT-10 specifications

  • Engine: 8.3-liter V-10
  • Output: 500 hp/525 lb-ft of torque
  • 0-60: 5.2 seconds
  • Top speed: 150 mph (est.)
2004-Lamborghini-Gallardo-front-three-quarter

2004 Lamborghini Gallardo

Nothing like the Gallardo had ever been seen before. Dubbed the “baby Lambo,” it was Lamborghini’s way of bringing a so-called “more affordable” supercar to more buyers. Volume sales were the objective, but it didn’t cruel the Gallardo’s designers and engineers compromised. A lovingly angular mid-engine supercar, the Gallardo’s calling card was its fabulously sonorous V-10. From a business that made its name building V-12 supercars, this was a breath of fresh air. It was unlike anything anyone in Maranello was doing, then or now. Technically, the Huracán is the Gallardo’s successor, but it sort of feels like just a continuation of the first great concept. In that sense, the Gallardo’s lineage has spanned for 20 years. You can read our First Drive here. It’s a excellent one.

The first Gallardo was priced starting at $165,900, which is about $283,000 today. Presently, you can get them for just about $100,000.

112_0310_First_Drive_2004_Lamborghini_Gallardo_z 2004_Lamborghini_Gallardo Interior_View_Seats_Dashboard

2004 Lamborghini Gallardo specifications

  • Engine: 5.0-liter V-10
  • Output: 495 hp/376 lb-ft of torque
  • 0-60: 4.7 seconds
  • Top speed: 192 mph (est.)
2004 Porsche Carrera GT _5

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2004 Porsche Carrera GT

There is perhaps no greater nor more notorious car in Porsche’s history than the venerable Carrera GT. The fastest and most technically advanced street car the automaker had ever produced to that point, the Carrera GT has only gotten more valuable and sought-after today. It had creature comforts like a glovebox and a Bose audio structure, but it was essentially a race car for the road. And it was a manual, with the shift knob placed in its now-iconic high position, correct next to the steering wheel. The only downside — besides its sky-high expense — was the truth that most people don’t live near places where you can truly drive it flat-out, like it was meant to be driven.

Prices started at $440,000, which is about $740,000 today. When you consider how contemporary halo supercars are priced easily over $1 million, the Carrera GT’s starting sticker in 2004 was actually reasonable for what you were getting. Of course, the cars regularly leave for between $1.3 and $2 million at auction today, so if you missed out then, you’ll probably miss out now.

2004 Porsche Carrera GT

2004 Porsche Carrera GT specifications

  • Engine: 5.7-liter V-10
  • Output: 612 hp/435 lb-ft of torque
  • 0-60: 3.2 seconds
  • Top speed: 205 mph (est.)
2006 BMW M5

2006 BMW M5

By the period the 2006 BWM M5 arrived, V-10s had already found themselves in sport coupes, pickup trucks and supercars. So why not a sedan — one of the ultimate sleeper sedans ever made? With an engine inspired by BMW’s Formula 1 program, the E60-production M5 wowed the globe when it came out, for a variety of reasons. First, the engine (duh). With an 8,250-rpm redline, it encouraged drivers to rev the snot out of it and listen to it scream. But it also gave the driver the ability to calibrate just about everything about its tactile feedback, and it had the globe’s first sequential manual transmission with seven forward gears. Later on, the M5 would be equipped with a six-speed manual, but the engine always felt like it was geared for seven. Though the Bangle-designed 5 Series was controversial at the period, it’s aged pretty gracefully.

Special mention here for the BMW M6, which used the same engine in a coupe body. Of the two, the M5 is the cooler and more practical one, hence all the internet ink we devoted to it.

With a base starting worth of $85,595, the M5 would be $136,000 today. Second-hand, you can get them for around $21,000. Yeah, the devaluation hammer really hit these challenging.

2006 BMW M5

2006 BMW M5 specifications

  • Engine: 5.0-liter V-10
  • Output: 500 hp/383 lb-ft of torque
  • 0-60: 4.5 seconds
  • Top speed: 155 mph (electronically limited)
2006 Audi S8

2006 Audi S8

Meanwhile, V-10 fever was taking over at Audi as well. The engine found itself in the S8 sedan, as well as the most excellent RS6 Avant — yep, a V-10 wagon. But we never got that here (though we did get the S6 sedan) which is a tragedy. Still, the S8 was excellent in its own correct: a butter-smooth executive sedan that’d hammer-down when you needed it to. It seemed larger than life, according to our First Test review, and that was saying something, since the mid-2000s were characterized by automotive opulence and grandeur. Understated and suave, it was the sleeper of its day. Audi’s famed all-wheel-drive structure gave it the ability to tank around in even the crummiest of conditions, making the car a hit with those in regions that encounter inclement weather. Eighteen years later, its design is still handsome.

If you wanted one of these in 2006, you’d write a check for $92,500 to commence, which is $143,000 today. Used prices are extremely favorable. We’re talking like $15,000. But you recognize what they declare: There’s no such thing as a cheap German car.

Audi S8 engine

2006 Audi S8 specifications

  • Engine: 5.2-liter V-10
  • Output: 450 hp/398 lb-ft of torque
  • 0-60: 4.9 seconds
  • Top speed: 155 mph (electronically limited)
2009 Audi R8

2009 Audi R8

The original Audi R8 stunned the globe with its attractive, sculpted looks and timeless proportions. Three years later, Audi added two cylinders to the original V-8 and shipped out a V-10 version of its two-seater, mid-engine halo car. Did the already-excellent R8 require anything more? Yes, apparently. Faster, better sounding and just a touch heavier, the V-10 R8 somehow improved on something we didn’t ponder could be improved. Plus, how often can you declare your Audi shares its heart with a Lamborghini? And it had a gated manual shifter. We truly didn’t recognize how excellent we had it. The R8 enjoyed a very, very long run, with production finally ending in March of this year. And what a run it was. While everyone else was downsizing and turbocharging, the R8’s V-10 remained, stubbornly, defiantly. 

Those extra cylinders increased the R8’s MSRP by nearly $20,000, for a $150,200 starting worth—in today’s money, that comes to about $219,000. Hey, compared to the current Huracán, that’s basically a steal!

2009 Audi R8

2009 Audi R8 specifications

  • Engine: 5.2-liter V-10
  • Output: 525 hp/391 lb-ft of torque
  • 0-60: 3.4 seconds
  • Top speed: 196 mph (est.)
2012 Lexus LFA

2010 Lexus LFA

From the comfortable but relatively humdrum Lexus lineup came something no one expected: a rear-drive, two-seater V-10 supercar that still tops peoples’ lists of favorite cars of all period even today, nearly a decade and a half later. To offset a V-10’s inherent settlement issues, Lexus engineers gave it a 72-degree financial institution angle (“optimal for smooth firing with a five-throw crank,” our Arthur St. Antoine wrote in 2009) and arid-sump lubrication to assist bring down the center of gravity. Driven challenging, the engine was incredibly smooth and sounded like the wail of angels from the outside. Does the “Pitch—the Pursuit of Perfection” advertisement live rent-free in anyone else’s head? The LFA was by far one of the most attractive-sounding cars ever built.

With a starting worth of around $380,000 ($528,000 today), it was an obscenely expensive car, let alone a Lexus. So worth it, though, because nothing else like it has arrive along since and is not likely to. On the used trade, LFAs are priced correct around $900,000.

2012 Lexus LFA

2010 Lexus LFA specifications

  • Engine: 4.8-liter V-10
  • Output: 552 hp/354 lb-ft of torque
  • 0-60: 3.7 seconds
  • Top speed: 202 mph (est.)
2024 Lamborghini Huracan Sterrato

2024 Lamborghini Huracán Sterrato

Yes, yes, we just got done saying the Huracán is basically an extension of the Gallardo. Spiritually, we recognize this to be correct. But seeing as, technically, no recent V-10 cars had been introduced since the Lexus LFA, the Huracán Sterrato felt like a fitting way to close out the V-10 era purely because of how ridiculous it is. An off-road Huracán? Sure, why not! It should be illegal to have that much fun kicking around in the dirt. And, you recognize what, the Sterrato is actually far more practical than you’d ponder. Now that we’ve been introduced to the V-10 Lambo’s successor, the V-8-powered Temerario, the Sterrato is also tinged by the reality of being among the last of its benevolent. Natural aspiration, 10 cylinders, gobs of power. We’ll miss it.

Offered in limited numbers, the Sterrato starts at $278,972. But being such a special car, we figure this is one of those cars that’s only going to appreciate once Lambo is done building it.

2024 Lamborghini Huracan Sterrato engine

2024 Lamborghini Huracán Sterrato specifications

  • Engine: 5.2-liter V-10
  • Output: 602 hp/413 lb-ft of torque
  • 0-60: 2.6 seconds
  • Top speed: 160 mph (est.)
Lexus LFA front three quarter view in motion 660x432

The best V-10s cars ever made

  • 1992 Dodge Viper
  • 2002 Volkswagen Touareg V10 TDI
  • 2004 Dodge Ram SRT-10
  • 2004 Lamborghini Gallardo
  • 2004 Porsche Carrera GT
  • 2006 BMW M5
  • 2006 Audi S8
  • 2009 Audi R8
  • 2010 Lexus LFA
  • 2024 Lamborghini Huracán Sterrato

Photos by MotorTrend archive, Violet Cruz

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