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The VQ is a family of V6 automobile petrol engines developed by Nissan and produced in displacements varying from 2.0 L to 4.0 L. Designed to replace the VG series, the all-aluminium 4-valve per cylinder DOHC design debuted with Nissan's EGI/ECCS sequential multi-point fuel injection (MPFI) system. Changes from the VG engine include switching ...
Nissan VQ engine, Nissan RB engine The VR is a series of twin-turbo DOHC V6 automobile engines from Nissan with displacements of 3.0, 3.5, and 3.8 L. An evolution of the widely successful VQ series , it also draws on developments from the VRH , JGTC , and Nissan R390 GT1 Le Mans racing engines.
McLaren bought the rights to the Tom Walkinshaw Racing developed engine, itself based on the Nissan VRH engine architecture, [2] which was designed for the IRL Indycar championship but never raced. However, other than the 93 mm (3.66 in) bore, little of that engine remains in the M838T. [ 3 ]
Wards 10 Best Engines is an annual list of the ten "best" automobile engines available in the U.S. market, that are selected by Wards AutoWorld magazine. The list was started in 1994 for model year 1995, and has been drawn every year since then, published at the end of the preceding year.
Nissan ED engine – 3.0/3.3, used on 1976 Nissan Clipper; Wankel engine. Nissan showed a prototype Wankel rotary engine at the Tokyo Motor Show in 1972, but it ...
Nissan VRH50A engine at the Nissan Engine Museum. The VRH50A was used in the Nissan R391. Cylinder Block: Aluminum, Closed Deck; Aspiration: Naturally Aspirated; Valvetrain: DOHC, 4 Valves per Cylinder; Displacement: 5.0 L (4,997 cc) Bore x Stroke: 96 mm × 86.3 mm (3.78 in × 3.40 in) Compression ratio: 14.0:1 (estimated) Redline: 8000 rpm
Nissan L20 engine. The L20 is a SOHC 12-valve engine produced from 1966. A bore and stroke of 78 mm × 69.7 mm (3.07 in × 2.74 in) meant a displacement of 1,998 cc (2.0 L; 121.9 cu in). It was used in the Nissan Skyline 2000 GT and Nissan Cedric 130, producing 109 hp (81 kW) for the 2000 GT and 123 hp (92 kW) for the Cedric. This engine was ...
His suggestion was to shorten the cylinder block of the 1.5-litre B-Series licence built in Japan as the 1H engine, [4] thus the 1-litre Nissan C engine also known as the "Stone engine" was born being manufactured on Austin's old transfer machines. When it was later increased to 1.2-litres from 1958, it was named the Nissan E engine. [5]