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1955-1962 — ME7/15/18 — This was Mitsubishi's first air-cooled OHV engine over one liter's displacement. In 1955, the 1276 cc ME7 was developed for the 1.5-tonne (3,310 lb) Mitsubishi TM7 . The 1145 cc ME15 and the 1489 cc ME18 were premiered in 1958 for the TM15/16 and TM17/18 trucks; production of this engine series ended when Mitsubishi ...
Mitsubishi 3A9 engine; Mitsubishi 3B2 engine; Mitsubishi 3G8 engine; Mitsubishi 4A3 engine; Mitsubishi 4A9 engine; Mitsubishi 4B1 engine; Mitsubishi 4D5 engine; Mitsubishi 4G1 engine; Mitsubishi 4G3 engine; Mitsubishi 4G4 engine; Mitsubishi 4G5 engine; Mitsubishi 4G6 engine; Mitsubishi 4G9 engine; Mitsubishi 4J1 engine; Mitsubishi 4M4 engine ...
The Mitsubishi 4A3 engine is a range of alloy-headed inline four-cylinder engines from Mitsubishi Motors, introduced in 1993 in the sixth generation of their Mitsubishi Minica kei car. It shares a 72 mm (2.8 in) bore pitch with the 3G8-series three-cylinder engines, but has a considerably shorter stroke so as to stay beneath the 660 cc limit ...
The Mitsubishi 6B3 engine is a range of all-alloy piston V6 engines developed by Mitsubishi Motors. Currently, only one engine has been developed, a 3.0 L (2,998 cc) V6 first introduced in the North American version of the second generation Mitsubishi Outlander which debuted in October 2006.
The Mitsubishi 4B1 engine is a range of all-alloy straight-4 piston ... 409 PS (403 hp; 301 kW) at 6500 rpm (UK only FQ400) ... 2013 Mitsubishi Lancer GT Manual;
Mitsubishi 4G1 engine The Mitsubishi 4A9 engine is the newest family range of all- alloy inline four-cylinder engines from Mitsubishi Motors , introduced in the 2004 version of their Mitsubishi Colt supermini , and built by DaimlerChrysler -owned MDC Power in Germany (previously a joint venture).
In 1939, Packard became the first automobile manufacturer to offer an optional air conditioning unit in its 1940 model year cars. [2] [3] These bulky units were manufactured by Bishop and Babcock (B&B), of Cleveland, Ohio and were ordered on approximately 2,000 cars. [4] The "Bishop and Babcock Weather Conditioner" also incorporated a heater.
The 2.0-litre 6G71 model featured SOHC and produced 88 kW (120 PS; 118 hp) at 5,500 rpm and 172 N⋅m (127 lbf⋅ft) at 4,500 rpm. It was installed with two valves per cylinder, and used Mitsubishi's ECI-Multi multiple port fuel injection fuel delivery system. The compression ratio was 8.9:1.