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The Daihatsu 2HA engine is a horizontal engine that was developed for Daihatsu Bee (1951-1952). The 2HA engine was available in two version, 540 cc and 804 cc. The earlier version was a 540 cc, with output 13.5 PS (13.3 hp; 9.9 kW) and the larger 804 cc available shortly, with output increased to 18 PS (17.8 hp; 13.2 kW). [17]
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Daihatsu engines" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 ...
Based from Japanese Wikipedia article. The engine first appeared in Daihatsu Charade G102/112 in 1987 and was discontinued in 2009. The displacement is 1.3 L (1295 cc), bore and stroke is 76.0 mm x 71.4 mm. [4] Available with carburettor (HC-C/F) and fuel injection (HC-E/EJ).
The P-3 was the first Daihatsu race car and it featured a 1.3-litre straight-four engine fitted in the front of the car, which was capable of producing up to 100 hp (74.6 kW; 101.4 PS). [ 1 ] The P-3 made its competitive debut at the Japanese Grand Prix in 1966, which was held at Fuji Speedway , where it won the eponymous P3 category.
The P-5 was an updated version of the P-3, but featured a bigger 1.3-litre straight-four engine, fitted in the rear of the car. The engine had double overhead camshafts and two carburettors, and was capable of producing up to 140 hp (104.4 kW; 141.9 PS). [1] It was shown at the 14th Tokyo Motor Show in October 1967 as the Daihatsu P-5X. [2]
The turbocharged 660 cc EF-DET engine in a Daihatsu Atrai. The Daihatsu E-series engine is a range of compact three-cylinder, internal combustion piston engines, designed by Daihatsu, which is a subsidiary of Toyota. The petrol-driven series has cast iron engine blocks and aluminum cylinder heads, and are of either SOHC or DOHC design, with ...
The Daihatsu A-series engine is a range of compact two-cylinder internal combustion piston engines, designed by Daihatsu with the aid of their owner Toyota. Petrol-driven, it has cast iron engine blocks and aluminum cylinder heads, which are of a single overhead cam lean burn design with belt-driven camshafts.
The Daihatsu K-series is a series of three unrelated engine families (KF, KR and K3/KJ), even though named with same initial "K" letter code. These engines were built in DOHC 12-valve inline three (KF & KR) and DOHC 16-valve inline four (K3/KJ) engine layout , ranging from 0.66 L, 1.0 L and up to 1.3 L.