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The Mitsubishi Sirius or 4G6/4D6 engine is the name of one of Mitsubishi Motors' four series of inline-four automobile engines, along with Astron, Orion, and Saturn.. The 4G6 gasoline engines were the favoured performance variant for Mitsubishi.
Automobile and truck engines were mainly built by three branches of one of these companies, Central Heavy Industries (Shin-Mitsubishi Heavy Industries from 1952). These three branches (Mizushima, Nagoya, and Kyoto Engineering Works) were established as clusters of the many small aircraft factories built during the war. [ 1 ]
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Mitsubishi Sirius engine; V. List of Volkswagen Group diesel engines; Mitsubishi Vulcan engine
Sirius 4G64 (Gasoline engine) The Mitsubishi Astron or 4G5/4D5 engine , is a series of straight-four internal combustion engines first built by Mitsubishi Motors in 1972. Engine displacement ranged from 1.8 to 2.6 litres , making it one of the largest four-cylinder engines of its time.
Basically, the 76.9 x 86.0 mm measurement ties up exactly with the bore / stroke of the 4G32 1.6 L Mitsubishi Saturn engine, so unless someone can cite me a source, I'm going to assume the previous info was just a simple mistake. Certainly, on english.auto.vl.ru, I can't find a single instance of a 76.9 x 86.0 mm Sirius engine.
According to Mitsubishi, the new cylinder dimensions contribute to a free-revving character (max power at 6500 rpm), linear power delivery and wide torque curve. Mitsubishi used a timing chain instead of a belt for better reliability and iridium spark plugs to lower emissions and to help extend major service intervals for lower cost of ownership.
The Hyundai Sirius engine was the company's first larger inline-four engine, with displacements from 1.8 L (1795 cc) to 2.4 L (2351 cc). It is a license-built Mitsubishi construction . This engine is no longer used by Hyundai.
The Mitsubishi Saturn or 4G3 engine is series of overhead camshaft (OHC) straight-four internal combustion engines introduced by Mitsubishi Motors and saw first service in the 1969 Colt Galant. Displacement ranges from 1.2 to 1.8 L (1,239 to 1,755 cc), although there was also a rare 2-litre (1,994 cc) inline-six version built from 1970 until 1976.