Volvo V60 (P3)
2014-2018 - P3 Platform
The Volvo badge appears on not just cars, but also semi trucks, heavy industrial equipment, marine engines, and even some jet engines. In 1999, Volvo elected to sell off the automotive part of its business, and the now-separate Volvo Cars was picked up by Ford Motor Company, becoming a part of their Premier Automotive Group alongside Jaguar, Land Rover, and Aston Martin. By 1999, Volvo's new flagship on their new P2 platform, the S80, had already been released, and development on the soon-to-be-released S60 and V70 midsize cars was just finishing up; these P2s can be regarded as the last "pure" Volvos, and Ford soon began leveraging its global reach to integrate the companies.
For an automaker, "integration" means shared parts and shared platforms, and Volvo, Mazda, and Ford of Europe engineers put their heads together in Ford's Cologne, Germany design center to co-develop the compact P1 platform, also known as the Ford C1 platform and the Mazda BK platform, underpinning the S40/V50/C30, European Focus, and Mazda3 respectively. As with the P2 platform underpinning multiple sizes of car and crossover, Volvo and Ford extensively re-engineered the new P1 compact platform to a full-size format. The resulting "EUCD" (European Class D segment) platform for mid- and full-size cars became known as the P3 in Volvo usage, and after the debut of their S80 flagship and V70/XC70 large station wagon, Volvo debuted the next-generation V60 in 2014
The V60 brought some new engines to the table, featuring gasoline versions of either Volvo's long-lived 2.5L turbocharged five cylinders or a 3.0 turbocharged "SI6" inline six, designed by Volvo and built by Ford of Britain. All engines were paired with the Aisin-Warner TF-80SC 6-speed automatic transmission, with Haldex AWD optional on the T5 and standard on the T6.
The ubiquitous "white block" turbo five had most of the kinks ironed out by the time it appeared under the hood of the V60. It's the same "compact" version that appears in the smaller P1 cars, and keeping the PCV system, engine mounts, and timing belt in good health will keep this engine running for many years.
The SI6 engines were specially developed by Volvo to fit transversely (sideways) in the engine bay of FWD cars, and they feature some unique engineering tricks to do this: the timing chain, accessory belt drive, and components like the alternator and A/C compressor have been relocated either to the sides of the engine (driven via special gears off the middle of the crankshaft) or to the "back" end of the engine, above the transmission and driven by gears off the end of the crankshaft.
We've found these "short six" engines to be pretty stout, but they have an achilles heel: the brake vacuum pump. Above the transmission and driven by the camshafts, this pump often develops leaks from the o-ring where the pump bolts to the engine, and the oil dripping down can appear like expensive transmission or rear main seal leak when viewed from underneath. We offer both a reseal kit and new pumps for this purpose.
A special, high-performance variant of the T6 was the V60 Polestar, along with its S60 Polestar sedan counterpart. In addition to increased power from a twin-scroll turbocharger and high-flow exhaust, the Polestar featured special interior and exterior trim (and unique Polestar Blue paint), Öhlins suspension, Brembo brakes, and more aggressive Haldex AWD and transmission programming, including launch control.
From 2015, a new "modular" 2L inline four (also known as the Volvo Engine Architecture or "VEA" engine) appeared in T5 and T6 guises, paired with an Aisin-Warner TG-81 8-speed automatic; in the Polestar in 2017, a twincharged (turbo- and supercharged) VEA variant with a TG-81 tuned for agressive shifts dropped the 0-60 time to a very brisk 4.5 seconds.
These new engines were a great swan song for the P3s, with the last ones being sold in 2018 before the new SPA-based, second-generation V60 launched in 2019.
- First generation V60
- Five door station wagon based on the Volvo P3 platform
- Sold in the USA from 2014 through 2018 model year
- Available in the USA with 2.0L inline four "VEA", 2.5L inline five "white block", and 3.0L inline six "SI6" turbocharged gasoline engines, with the VEA (also known as the "DRIVe") gradually replacing larger engines:
- T5 models:
- 2014-2016: B5254T12
- 2014-2018 "DRIVe": B4204T11
- T6 models:
- 2014-2016: B6304T4
- 2014-2016 "R-Design": B6304T4 with overboost
- 2016-2018 "DRIVe": B4204T9
- Polestar models:
- 2014-2016: B6304T5
- 2017-2018 "DRIVe": B4204T43
- T5 models:
- Haldex AWD available as an option on all models, standard on Polestar and six-cylinder T6 models
- Cross Country V60 available from 2015, featuring increased ride height, rugged plastic exterior trim pieces, standard AWD and VEA engines
- T6 R-Design model has special interior and exterior trim and a T6 engine with some extra power
- Aisin-Warner automatic transmissions on all models:
- TF-80 SC 6-speed automatic on five- and six-cylinder models
- TG-81 8-speed automatic on VEA models
Model information is based on the USA vehicle market. Other model variations may exist outside the USA.