lol, I should have read my own notes, they were DOHC, in the last generation...
In 1977 it started off as a production engine (2.7). It had a single turbo running a KKK blower and K-Jet fueling. In 79, they ditched the K-Jet and switched to Kugelfisher mechanical and WM designed their own 4 valve heads (not dohc - designed by Meunier (the M in WM)
The engine was still based on a production 4 bearing block. but Peugeot pioneered the side bolting of the main bearing caps to prevent any cracking. Federal Mogul produced all the engine blocks and castings for Pug, Renault and Volvo (the Espace block is actually from Pug), but WM gradually phased in their own pistons, rods, cranks. Each piston also had an oil spray to the base. The new 4 valve head was produced outside of Peugeot, but retained the normal production chain drive system as we have on our normal PRVs
In '79, they saw 500bhp running 1.2bar of boost on a 2.7 4 valve engine.
Later on they revised the rocker covers, front casing which allowed the enigne to run fully stressed and took the bore up to 91mm with the 73mm crank which brought the capacity up to 2849cc. 223mph was acheived in this guise, running Garrett twin turbochargers.
In 1983, engine development was pushed over to Dennis Mathiot Competition, who introduced electronic efi control to the Kugel injection cam to allow it to be responsive to boost, throttle and revs (like VVT now - but still really primative) Race power was 600bhp at 7000rpm and 62m/kg at 6000rpm.
In 84, this car ran 227mph, in 85 they raised the compression and used oi gallery pistons and pushed over 600bhp
WM had planned for 400kph (250mph plus) in the P87 car running twin KKK blowers again, 8200rpm redline and 1.6bar of boost and 850bhp.
1988, At 1.8 bar of boost it saw 910bhp with 93mm bore and 3000cc. This engine was still built on a factory fresh block from Federal Mogul, ie bog standard as we get today. This made it very cheap to use and had no further modifications to it. All the engines ran standard factory cast liners, but machined to WM specs, and side bolted main caps again. It had a light alloy dry sump and magnesium cam covers and the same bespoke heads, now twin cam with the seperate tappet block.
WM replaced the steel iron crankshaft with its own forged odd fire version. Several companies produced forged crankshafts for WM. The production stroke was retained but concentrated on balanced web design (not t'internet
)
The oddfiring nature was unchanged, and it was run as two 3 cyl engines with twin Motronic MP1.2 management per bank, twin injectors per cylinder, and each bank having its own water and oil circuits. Ignition was normal Bosch CD with a seperate dizzy per bank running to 10mm Champion plugs.
The crank was run without any type of balancer shaft with a usual steel flywheel with starter gear and 7 bolt fixing. The crankpins were larger than standard and carried WMs bespoke I-beam forged rods, turning oil gallery fed pistons (Mahle Forged) with base squirters and chrome plated Goetz top piston rings. The pistons had traditional gudgeon pin fittings.
Between the front main cover and the engine was the tradition 3 sproket arangement as found on the production PRV, one to each head, the other to a scavenge oil pump which is mounted on the outside of the cover (unlike inside) The crank nose also went through the cover to provide drive for the alternator (sat in the middle of the V), the water pumps. There were 4 pickups for oil pumping, one for each head externally and one for each turbo.
The combustion chambers were tradition pent roof type, valves at 31 degrees to the vertical. Special valve seats, Nimonic valves (I don't know the diameter, most likely 33/28.), dual springs on steel buckets with normal shim adjustment. The heads had the usual 8 bolts, and the twin pulleys were single gear fed so they could use the traditional production change drive setup.
Throttle setup was before the compressors of the turbos, compression ratio was 6.5:1 and 1.8 bar maximum boost where the max made was 910bhp. Race boost was 1.3-1.4 bar (around 700bhp and a lower rev limit - 7500rpm)
Some engines revved to 8200, another to 8500. Drivers were asked to keep to 7500, unless going for the 400kph run..