Mercedes-Benz OM601 engine
The Mercedes-Benz OM601 engine is an inline-four diesel engine that was manufactured by Mercedes-Benz from 1983 to 2000.
Three variants of the engine were built: a model, a version built for the US market, and a for commercial vehicles. The first two were rated by the manufacturer for at 4200 rpm and of torque at 2800 rpm; the increase in displacement reduced emissions in order to meet US automobile emissions requirements. The commercial vehicle version had in standard variants, the turbocharged version in the V230 TD and Vito 110D had.
It is closely related to the 5 cylinder OM602 engine|OM602] and the 6 cylinder OM603 engine families of the same era.
The OM601 was built with an aluminum head on an iron block. The camshaft and fuel injection pump are driven by a duplex chain from the crankshaft. A separate single row chain drives the oil pump from the crankshaft.
Fuel supply is indirect injection via a prechamber arrangement. The OM-601's injection pump is a mechanical fuel injection unit with a 5,150 rpm mechanical governor, automatic altitude compensation, and a 'load sensing' automatic idle speed control. The pump is lubricated by a connection to the engine oil circulation.
Use of the block heater was recommended in climates where it drops below for long periods.
The engine was used in the 208D, 308D and 408D Mercedes-Benz T1 and later the Phase 1 308D Mercedes-Benz Sprinter. The versions OM01.911 and OM601.921 were used in the 190D.