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It is used in the Subaru BRZ, and is identified by a Toyota engine family code known as the 4U-GSE, which is installed in the Toyota 86 and the Scion FR-S. [5] According to Subaru, 0W-20 oil is recommended. Wards Auto put the FA20D on their "10 Best Engines" list for 2013. [6] Compression Ratio: 12.5:1; Application: 2012–2016 Subaru BRZ ...
2012 Insurance Institute for Highway Safety Top Safety Pick in the US (Scion FR-S and Subaru BRZ); [166] 2013 10Best List by the American Car and Driver (Scion FR-S and Subaru BRZ); [167] 2012–2013 Japan Car of the Year "Special Award" (Toyota 86 and Subaru BRZ). [157] The Subaru BRZ was also crowned:
Powering the car, that Subaru now says is 50% stiffer, is an updated 2.4-liter naturally aspirated engine "boxer" 4-cylinder engine, with 228 hp (over 20 more hp than before) and 184 lb-ft of ...
The Subaru EN inline-four engine was introduced in 1988 to replace the straight-two EK series engine that was originally engineered as an air-cooled engine, then modified as a water-cooled engine used in the 1969–1972 Subaru R-2. The EN was used in all kei cars and kei trucks in production by Subaru up until 2012.
BRZ: 2012 2021 - Global Front-engine, rear-wheel drive two-door 2+2 sports car. ... Subaru's largest SUV and the successor of the Tribeca. Crosstrek: 2012 2023 –
The second-generation Subaru BRZ/Toyota GR86, jointly developed with Toyota, uses neither the SGP nor the Toyota New Global Architecture (TNGA) platform, but the "knowledge and techniques" gained from the development of SGP were credited with increasing chassis rigidity and stiffness for the new BRZ. [26]
The engine is a Subaru designed-and-built flat-four engine called the FA20D, with a Toyota engine code. The engine is built at Subaru's Oizumi Plant in Ota, Gunma . It features Toyota's D4-S direct and port injection systems, with a maximum power rating of 200 PS (147 kW; 197 hp) at 7000 rpm and a maximum torque rating of 205 N⋅m (151 lb⋅ft ...
Subaru BRZ a car jointly developed by Toyota and Subaru . Toyota increased their share of FHI to 16.5% in July 2008. [19] Subsequently, Toyota and Subaru jointly developed the Subaru BRZ, first sold in January 2012. Toyota sold the BRZ as the Scion FR-S until 2018, where it was renamed to the Toyota 86 due to the discontinuation of Scion in 2016.