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The R-Type is a family of straight-4 turbocharged diesel engines developed by both Nissan and Renault, and also Daimler in regarding the R9M/OM626 engine. Released in 2011, it replaced the 1.9 dCi engine in Renault's range and the 2.0 dCi in the Nissan Qashqai, and in 2015, it also replaced the 2.0 dCi in the Renault Mégane as well.
The Nissan Qashqai (/ ˈ k æ ʃ k aɪ /) is a compact crossover SUV designed and produced by the Japanese car manufacturer Nissan since 2006. The first generation of the vehicle was sold as the Nissan Dualis (Japanese: 日産・デュアリス, Hepburn: Nissan Dyuarisu) in Japan and Australia, and Qashqai in the rest of the world.
05/2018- : H5Ht, 1332 cc, used on Mercedes A class(W177) and other compact cars, Renault Scenic IV, Renault Captur, Renault Megane IV, Renault Clio V, Nissan Qashqai, Renault Kadjar, Dacia Duster, Renault Samsung XM3, Renault Oroch; 04/2020- : H4Dt/H5D, 999 cc, turbo-charged petrol engine used on Renault Clio, Nissan Almera, Dacia/Renault Duster
The K-Type is a family of inline-4 automobile engines developed and produced by Renault since 1995. This is an internal combustion engine, four-stroke, with 4 cylinders in line bored directly into the iron block, water cooled, with overhead camshaft(s) driven by a toothed timing belt and an aluminium cylinder head.
This engine debuted in two power levels, 160 and 200 PS (118 and 147 kW; 158 and 197 hp), in the Renault Talisman II 2.0 Blue dCi which was produced from December 2018. In December 2020 a single 190 PS version replaced both of the earlier versions. The engine is fitted to the following vehicles: 2007–2011 Nissan Qashqai
2006–2013 Nissan Qashqai J10/NJ10; 2006–2019 Nissan Livina/Grand Livina L10, L11; 2008– Renault Mégane MK3; 2009–2019 Nissan NV200, [5] also rebadged as Mitsubishi Delica D:3; 2010 Nissan Juke F15 (Japan) 2011 Nissan Sunny/Latio N17; 2012 Nissan Sylphy/Sentra B17, B18; 2012–Present Nissan Versa/Almera (Americas) N17, N18; 2015 Dacia ...
The previous 2.2-litre dCI was replaced with two 2.0-litre dCI versions, offering 150 and 177 PS (110 and 130 kW; 148 and 175 hp) respectively. The second generation was released in Malaysia in 2010, where it was fully imported from Indonesia.
1980 Citation X-11. Produced as a separate trim level, the Citation X-11 was a variant featuring cosmetic, chassis, and powertrain upgrades over the standard Citation. While less powerful than the Camaro Z28 (and later Monte Carlo SS), the Citation X-11 would also take over the role of the similarly sized Chevrolet Monza.