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  2. Mitsubishi Motors engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_Motors_engines

    The numbers do not in any way relate to each other or across letter codes and were purely issued in order of development. In 1964 the three companies were merged into Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and eventually a new naming system emerged. Since the introduction of the 2G10 engine in October 1968, Mitsubishi engines use a four-digit naming ...

  3. List of Mitsubishi Fuso engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_Mitsubishi_Fuso_engines

    The 4DR6 is a direct injection turbo version with 17.5:1 compression ratio and Mitsubishi TD04-1 turbocharger that produced up to 94 PS (69 kW) and 21.0kgm of torque. Both of these engines were used in large forklift trucks, as well as Canter models and the Mitsubishi J20 and J50 series Jeep.

  4. Mitsubishi 4N1 engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_4N1_engine

    Together with Mitsubishi's electric vehicle technology the new diesel engines are positioned as a core element in the Mitsubishi Motors Environment Initiative Program 2010 (EIP 2010) announced in July 2006. [3] [9] The 4N1 engine family is the world's first to feature a variable valve timing (intake side) system applied to passenger car diesel ...

  5. Mitsubishi KE engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_KE_engine

    The engines were overhead valve iron-blocks, for gasoline and diesel use. The first digit after the KE denotes the number of cylinders, straight-4s becoming KE4 and six-cylinder versions such as the single overhead camshaft 2.0 L straight-6 which was developed in 1964 for the new Mitsubishi Debonair flagship sedan, receiving the KE6 prefix. The ...

  6. Category:Mitsubishi Motors engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mitsubishi_Motors...

    0–9. Mitsubishi 2G1 engine; Mitsubishi 2G2 engine; Mitsubishi 3A9 engine; Mitsubishi 3B2 engine; Mitsubishi 3G8 engine; Mitsubishi 4A3 engine; Mitsubishi 4A9 engine

  7. Mitsubishi 4M4 engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_4M4_engine

    The Mitsubishi 4M4 engine is a range of four-cylinder diesel piston engines from Mitsubishi Motors, first introduced in the second generation of their Montero/Pajero/Shogun SUVs. They superseded the previous 4D5 engine family, main differences are enlarged displacements and the utilization of one or two over-head camshafts .

  8. Mitsubishi 6G7 engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_6G7_engine

    The 6G7 series or Cyclone V6 engine is a series of V6 piston engines from Mitsubishi Motors.Five displacement variants were produced from 1986 to 2021, with both SOHC and DOHC, naturally aspirated and turbo charged layouts.

  9. Mitsubishi Astron engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_Astron_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.