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Prince G-1 engine of Nissan Prince Skyline 1500 Van Deluxe V51B The Prince G-1 was the improved GA-4, and was rated at 1.5 L, but displaced 1.5 L; 90.6 cu in (1,484 cc) thanks to an entirely different 75 by 84 mm (2.95 by 3.31 in) bore and stroke.
The Nissan G-series engine was a pushrod engine produced in the 1960s. [1] The G series was used in the Fairlady/Sports 1500 roadster, the Cedric, and Junior. It evolved into the Datsun 1600's "R"/H16 engine. Note that, prior to its merger with Nissan, Prince also made a G series of engines.
The engine technology is used by Nissan to reduce fuel consumption and emission output while improving overall engine performance. e-POWER for its line of series hybrid vehicles using an electric traction motor derived from the one used in the Nissan Leaf, which draws power from a battery and generator driven by a gasoline engine.
The Prince Motor Company (Japanese: プリンス自動車工業株式会社) was an automobile marque from Japan which eventually merged into Nissan in 1966. It began as the Tachikawa Aircraft Company, a manufacturer of various airplanes for the Japanese Army in World War II, e.g., the Ki-36, Ki-55 and Ki-74.
Nissan Prince Skyline 1500 DeLuxe S57 (1967) In August 1967 Prince released the successor of the S50D-2 called the S57. [10] It used a new engine of Prince's (designed before the merger with Nissan), the OHC 1.5 L (1,483 cc) G15. At 88 PS (65 kW; 87 hp), it was the most-powerful engine in the Japanese 1,500 cc class.
The Prince Royal was the third Japanese built post-war vehicle to use a V8 engine; the first was the Toyota Crown Eight in 1964, and the second was the Nissan President in 1965. Because of the massive weight at 3,200 kg (7,054 lb), a 6,437 cc (391 ci) Prince series W64 V8 with overhead valves , producing 260 PS (191.2 kW; 256.4 bhp) was used ...
The Prince family shares its basic block dimensions with the previous PSA TU engine family. Engineering design was directed by BMW using their Valvetronic variable valve lift system on the intake side, flow-controlled oil pump, timing chain, single belt drive of all ancillary units, composite camshafts and cylinder head produced by lost-foam casting.
The Nissan P engine is a large overhead valve, inline-six cylinder engine manufactured by Nissan Diesel Motor Co., Ltd. from 1959 to 2003 and used in light-duty trucks by Nissan, as well as in the Nissan Patrol. It replaced Nissan's older, sidevalve engines with which it shared its dimensions. [2]