From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Nissan H engine
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Nissan H engine |
| manufacturer | Nissan Motors |
| production | 1954–2003 |
| predecessor | Nissan G engine |
| configuration | Inline-4 & Inline-6 |
| displacement | 1489–2974 cc |
| bore | |
| stroke | |
| block | Cast iron |
| head | |
| valvetrain | |
| fueltype | Gasoline |
| fuelsystem | Carburetor |
| coolingsystem | Water-cooled |
| compression | 8.0:1–9.0:1 |
| power | 50–152 PS |
| torque | 159–221 Nm |
The Nissan H series of automobile engines is an evolution of the Nissan "R" engine which was based on the 1.5-liter, three-main bearing "G" engine used in the 1960s. Both inline-four and inline-six versions were produced. It is a pushrod OHV design with iron block, early models with an iron head, later models with aluminum head. Versions of this motor have been used in many Nissan autos and forklifts, well into the eighties and a version called H20II was in production until 2003. The SD diesels are based on this series of motors (bore spacing and basic block layout)
Inline-4
1H
The 1H is not related to the later H engines. It was also an all-iron, OHV engine, but this was a licensed BMC (Austin) B engine. With a bore and stroke of 73 × it displaced 1489 cc, power was 50 PS at 4,400 rpm in 1956, but this increased to 57 PS in August 1958. 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.
Applications:
- 1954–1959 Nissan Austin
- 1956–1960 Nissan Junior B40/42
H
The basic H is a 1883 cc engine produced from 1962 for Nissan's Cedric. Bore and stroke was 85 ×. The 8.0:1 compression version produced 92 hp and 159 Nm, while a high-compression engine (8.5:1) produced 95 hp and 163 Nm.
Applications:
- 1962 Nissan Cedric 31 (high-compression)
- 1962–1965 Nissan Junior 40
- 1962–1965 Nissan Caball C141
- 1962–1966 Nissan Echo GC141
H20
The H20 is the most-common member of the family. Displacing 1982 cc thanks to a larger 87.2 mm bore, H20 engines produced around 99 hp and 167 Nm.
Applications:
- 1965–1971 Nissan Cedric 130
- 1966–1970 Nissan Junior 41
- 1966–1967 Nissan Caball C142
- 1966–1972 Nissan Clipper T65
- 1967–1976 Nissan Caball C240
- 1971–1975 Nissan Cedric 230
- 1971–1975 Nissan Junior 140
- 1975–1982 Nissan Junior 141
- 1976–1979 Nissan Cedric 330
- 1979–1983 Nissan Cedric 430
- 1970s Yue Loong Cedric 803 (91 PS at 4,800 rpm)
- Nissan Caravan/Homy
- 1980–1982 Nissan Urvan Also N230S, T40, forklifts and other machinery
H15
The H15 is an improved, smaller version of the H20-II. It was used in forklifts.
Applications:
- Nissan J-type forklift (J01M09, J01A15, etc.)
H20-II
The H20-II is an improved version of the H20. It was used in forklifts.
Applications:
- Nissan J-type forklifts (J02M20, J01A30, etc.)
H20P
The H20P is the LPG-powered version of the H20.
Applications:
- 1976–1979 Nissan Cedric 330
- 1975–1979 Nissan Gloria 330
H25
The H25 was developed as a high-output version of the H20-II. This engine was used in forklifts.
2472 cc bore × stroke: 92 ×.
- compression ratio 8.7:1
- maximum output (gross) 62 bhp at 3200 rpm
- maximum torque (gross) 132 lbft at 1600 rpm
R (H16)
The R engine used essentially the same block as the H20, but a 17 mm shorter piston stroke resulted in a capacity reduction of 387 cc. The R was later named H16. The "R" motor made the switch from 3 to 5 main bearings in 1967 for improved reliability, and the H20 was developed from this arrangement. The R/H16 bore and stroke is 87.2 × displacing 1595 cc. With 9.0:1 compression, the engine produced 96 hp and 103 lbft.
Applications:
- 1965–1967 Nissan Bluebird R411 SSS
- 1965–1968 Nissan Silvia CSP311
- 1967–1970 Datsun Sports SP311/SPL311
- 1968–1972 Nissan Homer T641
U20
The U20 was similar to the H20 but with an SOHC cylinder head for motorsports applications. Although Prince Motor Company is credited in many sources with designing the U20, it was actually designed in-house at Nissan by Kenichi Sasaki. The U20 was produced in two forms: a stock 135 hp version with twin SU carburetors, or a 150 hp version with twin Mikuni/Solex carburetors and a "B" model camshaft.
Applications:
- 1967.5–1970 Datsun Sports SR311
Straight-6
K
The K engine is a 2825 cc straight-6 engine produced from 1963 to 1965. The K engine is an H engine with two extra cylinders. The K engine produces 115 PS at 4,400 rpm, 21.0 kgm at 2,400 rpm.
Applications:
- 1963–1965 Nissan Cedric Special 50
H30
The H30 is a 2974 cc straight-6 version produced from 1965. Output ranged from 120 to and torque is 163 lbft. The H30 is an H20 with two extra cylinders.
Applications:
- 1965–1973 Nissan President 150
- 1973–1975 Nissan President 250
- 1966–1976 Nissan C80 This engine is used in large forklifts
References
References
- Ozeki, Kazuo. Miki Press. (2007)
- (2012). "The Reckoning". Open Road Integrated Media.
- (2007). "Britain & Japan : biographical portraits. Vol. VI". Global Oriental Ltd.
- (1977). "Quattroruote: Tutte le Auto del Mondo 77/78". Editoriale Domus S.p.A.
- "セドリック スペシャル". Nissan Motor Corporation.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Nissan H engine — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report