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The Nissan Maxima was a five-passenger, front-engine, front-drive sedan manufactured and marketed by Nissan as Nissan's flagship sedan primarily in North America, the Middle East, South Korea, and China — across eight generations.
The first Nissan/Jatco transmission, the Jatco 3N71 transmission, used a simple naming scheme: the "3" meant "3-speed", and the remainder was the series number ...
The 4N71 was a 4-speed automatic transmission from Nissan Motors. It was available as either a light-duty ("L4N71B") or medium-duty ("E4N71B") unit for rear wheel drive vehicles with longitudinal engines. The latter used an electronically controlled lock up torque converter. Applications:
The Nissan L series of automobile engines was produced from 1966 through 1986 in both inline-four and inline-six configurations ranging from 1.3 L to 2.8 L. It is a two-valves per cylinder SOHC non-crossflow engine, with an iron block and an aluminium head. It was most notable as the engine of the Datsun 510, Datsun 240Z sports car, and the ...
Nissan. 2004–2006 Nissan Maxima (code RE5F22A) [3] 2004–2006 Nissan Quest; 2004–2006 Nissan Altima; Renault. 2001–2007 Renault Laguna [nb 9] (code SU1) [4] [14]
Nissan NAPS Nissan Anti Pollution System, predecessor to Nissan ECCS; Nissan PLASMA (Powerful & Economic, Lightweight, Accurate, Silent, Mighty, Advanced) is an acronym for the engine series designed to counter Toyota's Lightweight Advanced Super Response Engine (LASRE). Nissan ECC is the Exhaust Gas Recirculator or EGR.
A VQ35DE in a 2007 Nissan Maxima Cylinder head of VQ35DE. The 3.5 L (3,498 cc) VQ35DE is used in many modern Nissan vehicles. Bore and stroke are 95.5 mm × 81.4 mm (3.76 in × 3.20 in). It uses a similar block design to the VQ30DE, but adds variable valve timing for the intake. It produces from 231 to 304 PS (170 to 224 kW; 228 to 300 hp) of ...
Nissan engineers wanted the VG to have improved performance, fuel economy, reliability, and refinement, while being both lighter and more compact than its predecessor. The resulting engine was designed by Nissan from scratch, and shared few mechanical components with its predecessor, or with any other automaker.