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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.
It has a 10.3:1 compression ratio. Its fuel economy is 4–6 km/L (11–17 mpg ‑imp; 9.4–14.1 mpg ‑US) in city, and 7–9 km/L (20–25 mpg ‑imp; 16–21 mpg ‑US) on highway. [citation needed]. Holden also produced the 3.2L engines that were used by Alfa Romeo as the basis of its JTS V6 engine. Applications:
These included the shared use of a 3.4L V6 engine which was the top-of-the-line engine in both the Tacoma and T100. The V6 engine would serve as the base engine for the Tundra, while a second engine was added, a 4.7L V8, the first V8 for a Toyota pickup. Model code XK30 denotes rear-wheel drive models, while XK40 is for four-wheel drives. [1]
Toyota marketed the front-drive Avalon as a replacement for its rear-drive Cressida, a model discontinued for the American market in 1992. The Cressida was an upper-level, mid-size, rear-wheel drive sedan. The Avalon has at times overlapped Toyota's models using the same platform, including the Camry V6 and the Lexus ES.
The Toyota Camry (XV10) is a mid-size car that was produced by Toyota between 1991 and 1996 in Japan and North America, and 1993 and 1997 in Australia. The XV10 series represented the third generation of the Toyota Camry in all markets outside Japan, which followed a different generational lineage.
The GM Ecotec engine, also known by its codename L850, is a family of all-aluminium inline-four engines, displacing between 1.2 and 2.5 litres.Confusingly, the Ecotec name was also applied to both the Buick V6 Engine when used in Holden Vehicles, as well as the final DOHC derivatives of the previous GM Family II engine; the architecture was substantially re-engineered for this new Ecotec ...
The M engine was replaced by the dual overhead camshaft Toyota JZ engine, which was produced from 1990 to 2007 and is arguably known as Toyota's best straight-six engine. Toyota's third line of straight-six engines was the 2.0 L Toyota G engine, which was released as a single overhead camshaft engine in 1979 and upgraded to dual overhead ...
M117, 4.5 – 5.6 L (1971–1992) M119, 4.2 – 6.0 L (1989–1999) 500I, 3.43 L (1994; non-production – Indy car racing engine) IC108, 2.65 – 3.43 L (1995–2000; non-production – Indy car racing engine) M113, 4.3 – 5.5 L (1997–2012) M155, 5.4 L (2004–2009) M273, 4.7 – 5.5 L (2005–2010) FO, 2.4 L (2006–2013; non-production ...