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The Nissan Z engine is a series of automobile and light truck four-cylinder engines that was engineered by Nissan Machinery, manufactured by the Nissan Motor Company from 1979 through August 1989. All Z engines had 4 cylinders, a total of 8 valves and a single overhead camshaft (SOHC) .
The 2.5 L (2,488 cc) SD25 is the biggest version of the four-cylinder SD series, with the larger bore and stroke of 89 mm × 100 mm (3.50 in × 3.94 in). It was fitted to Nissan 720 pickup trucks 1983 through 1986 and D21 Nissan pickups (only 1986–1988). In some European markets it was also fitted to the Nissan Urvan and Cabstar.
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.
151 N⋅m (15.4 kg⋅m; 111 lb⋅ft) at 2200 rpm; This engine was installed in the 1987-1992 Nissan Pickup (D21); it was also used in the 1986-1988 E24 series Nissan Caravan. [6] It replaced the earlier SD23 engine in Nissan Atlas 1-ton trucks in 1986. [8]
The Nissan ZD30 engine family is a 3.0-litre (2,953 cc) inline-four cylinder diesel engine with a bore and stroke of 96 mm × 102 mm (3.78 in × 4.02 in), that replaced the Nissan QD, BD and TD engines.
In the Nissan B120 Sunny "RoadStar" truck it is capable of 49 mpg (17,3 km/L). [9] A fuel-injected version of the A15 (A15E) was offered in Asian markets. Applications. Nissan Sunny PB310 ("Datsun 210") Nissan Cherry F10 ("Datsun F10") Nissan B120 Pickup ("RoadStar" and "SportStar") in New Zealand [9] 1985-2009 Nissan Vanette C22; Datsun 310 ...
Power on base Extended Cab models comes from a 4-cylinder engine. A V6 is optional on Extended Cab models and standard with the Crew Cab. Both engines are supplied by Nissan. Rear view. The base 2.5 L QR25DE Inline-4 produces 152 hp (113 kW) at 5,200 rpm and 171 lb⋅ft (232 N⋅m) at 4,400 rpm, [2] and is a rear-wheel-drive.
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 ...