Recently, after a discussion with friends, I stumbled over the engines available for a Fiat Panda Mk4 (yes, this is a "long story short" situation and now I'm stuck in a rabbit-hole). And I noticed something strange; a couple of days later it's still nagging me:
How can a 2-cylinder, 900 ccm have more power, more torque, a higher top speed, be quicker, and at the same time have less emissions and get better mileage than its 4-cylinder, 1,200 ccm counterpart?
The data I'm getting is from the car's Wikipedia page; as far as I was able to cross check, the numbers are accurate. In particular, I'm looking at the two 2011 petrol engines (to keep things fair), "0.9 TwinAir Turbo" and "1.2 Fire 8v".
The first is a straight-2 with 875 ccm that generates 63 kW, has 145 Nm of torque, with a top speed of 177 km/h, and does 0–100 km/h in 11,2 s. It emits 99 g of CO2/km and needs 4,2 l for 100 km.
The other is a straight-4 with 1,242 ccm that generates 51 kW, has 102 Nm of torque, with a top speed of 164 km/h, and does 0-100 km/h in 14,2 s. It emits 120 g of CO2/km and needs 5,2 l for 100 km.
Granted, some of the values differ only marginally. Others, on the other hand, are quite egregious discrepancies. How can the smaller, more "efficient" (for a lack of a better word) option outshine the bigger, "hungrier" sibling in basically every category?
Somebody suggested "it's the turbo; it does all the difference" (and I've seen questions answered on this platform, but the differences were far less pronounced). "Turbo" might very well be the reason, but then another question arises: Why would anyone want the 4-cylinder option? Why is it even offered as an option if it has zero advantages over the smaller one? What are the advantages of this particular bigger engine?