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The Nissan NA family of straight-four engines is a series of engines manufactured by Nissan (Nissan Machinery). It is the replacement of the Z series , on which its design is based, and is mostly used in commercial vehicles due to its use of Liquefied petroleum gas for fuel on engines with a "P" suffix code.
1988–2004 Nissan KA engine — 2.0/2.4 L — KA20DE, KA24E, KA24DE; 1989–2015 Nissan NA engine — 1.6/2.0 L — NA16, NA20 - replacement of Z series and mostly used in commercial vehicles. Designed based on Z series.
European Leafs are offered in the following trim lines: Visia, Acenta, N-Connecta, and Tekna. The N-Connecta adds from Acenta an intelligent around view monitor with moving object detection and front and rear parking sensors, part synthetic leather and cloth trim, heat pack with heated seats and heated steering wheel, 43 centimetre (17 inch ...
The license agreement terminated in the late 1950s and the Nissan G engine was a more compact replacement, which in turn became replaced by the (below) Nissan H engines. The 1H would also be de-stroked from 89mm to 59mm to become the 1.0 L (990 cc) to create the Nissan C engine at the suggestion of former Willys-Overland engineer Donald Stone ...
The HR12DDT is a 1.2 L (1,197 cc) all-aluminium direct injected and turbocharged straight-four engine equipped with lifetime timing chain, 16v DOHC, VVT, variable displacement oil pump, Stop-Start and regenerative braking, Bore: 72.2 mm (2.84 in), Stroke 73.1 mm (2.88 in). It produces two choices, 85 kW (114 hp; 116 PS) at 4500 or 5000 or 6000 ...
1937–1941 Nissan 90 Bus; 1939–1941 Nissan Type 50; 1941 Nissan Type 30; 1941 Nissan Type 53; 1941–1952 Nissan 180 Truck (based on the 1937–1941 Chevrolet 133/158 trucks) 1941–1949 Nissan 190 Bus; 1949-1951 Nissan 290 Bus; 1952–1953 Nissan 380 Truck 1952-1953 Nissan 390 Bus; 1953–1955 Nissan 480 Truck 1955 Nissan 482 Truck; 1953 ...
The 4.0-litre V6 engine outputs 261 hp (195 kW) and 281 lb⋅ft (381 N⋅m) of torque, while the 5.6-litre V8 engine outputs 375 hp (280 kW) and 387 lb⋅ft (525 N⋅m) of torque. [5] The V8-engined versions are also electronically limited to a top speed of 100 mph (161 km/h).
The Leaf—Nissan's second battery-electric automobile—debuted on 2 August 2009. It is the first generation of the model and was succeeded by the second generation in 2017. Before official production commencement, Nissan developed three prototype battery electric vehicles—dubbed the EV-01, EV-02 and EV-11.