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The Nissan Juke (Japanese: 日産・ジューク, Hepburn: Nissan Jūku) is a subcompact crossover SUV produced by the Japanese car manufacturer Nissan since 2010. Debuted as a production vehicle at the 2010 Geneva Motor Show in March, it was introduced to North America at the 2010 New York International Auto Show to be sold for the 2011 model year as the smallest crossover in Nissan's lineup ...
1965–1982 Nissan J engine — 1.3/1.5/2.0 L — J13, J15, J16; 1966–2010 Nissan A engine — 1.0/1.2/1.3/1.4/1.5 L — A10, A12, A12T, A12A, A13, A14, A15; 1967.5–1970 Datsun U engine — 2.0 L — U20; 1968–1988 Nissan L engine — 1.3/1.4/1.6/1.8/2.0 L — L13, L14, L16, L18, L20B, LD20, LD20-II (diesel) (See Straight-6 below for ...
The Nissan J series are straight-4 and straight-6 gasoline internal combustion engines produced by Nissan from the 1960s through the 1980s. It is similar to the BMC B-Series engine that was built in Japan under licence as the Nissan 1H before being de-stroked to become the 1.0 L Nissan C [1] [2] and 1.2 L Nissan E engines, [3] but wasn't a direct copy.
The PR engine is a gasoline inline-four piston engine with a displacement of 2.5 L (2,488 cc) that was introduced in 2018 by Nissan. [1] The motor has an aluminum block and head, and has a dual overhead camshaft four-valve design with variable valve timing and direct injection.
The GA engine is a 1.3 to 1.6 L inline-four piston engine from Nissan. It has a cast-iron block and an aluminum head. There are SOHC and DOHC versions, 8, 12, and 16 valve versions, carbureted, single-point, and multi-point injected versions, and versions with variable valve timing (GA16DE). The GA was produced from August 1987 through 2013.
Cylinder block material: Aluminum: Cylinder head material: Aluminum: Valvetrain: DOHC 4 valves x cyl. with VVT: Compression ratio: 9.1:1-10.5:1: Combustion; Supercharger: On QR25DER only: Fuel system: Port Fuel Injection or Direct Fuel Injection: Fuel type: Gasoline: Cooling system: Water-cooled: Output; Power output: 103–186 kW (140–253 PS ...
It is a larger version of the VR30DDTT and replaces the 5.6-liter VK56 V8 engine in Nissan's largest automobiles. A bore and stroke of 86 mm × 100.2 mm (3.39 in × 3.94 in) makes for an overall displacement of 3.5 L (3,492 cc; 213.1 cu in).
Second big problem: GM's cost-cutters decided not to fit a water separator. Unlike gasoline, diesel fuel is subject to water condensation – hence the need for a water separator. Without one, water in the fuel becomes water in the engine, where it can rust either the cylinders or the complicated mechanical fuel injection pump.