Nissan L engine
The Nissan L series of automobile engines was produced from 1966 through 1986 in both inline-four and inline-six configurations ranging from 1.3 L to 2.8 L. It is a two-valves per cylinder SOHC non-crossflow engine, with an iron block and an aluminium head. It was most notable as the engine of the Datsun 510, Datsun 240Z sports car, and the Nissan Maxima. These engines are known for their reliability, durability, and parts interchangeability.
The four-cylinder L series engines were replaced with the Z series and later the CA series, while the six-cylinder L series engines were replaced with the VG series and RB series.
History
The L series started with the production of the six-cylinder L20 in 1966. This engine was rushed into production by Datsun and was designed prior to the Prince merger using the Mercedes overhead cam engine as a model. It was discontinued two years later.Learning lessons from the first L20, the four-cylinder L16 was developed in 1967. The L16 four-cylinder design was influenced by the Mercedes-Benz M180 engine that the Prince Motor Company developed in four- and six-cylinder displacements called the Prince G engine. This engine was given a full design and development cycle in Nissan's Small Engine Division to prevent repeating the same mistakes made from the original L20 engine. With this new engine design, the L16 went through rigorous testing and proved to be a much more superior design over the original L20. This engine set the standard for later L series engines, with the original L20 being replaced by the L16-based L20A.
Straight-four
L13
The L13 was a engine with a bore × stroke of that appeared in 1967. It was not available in the United States, but Canada received it in 1968 only. It produces SAE at 6,000 rpm. In the Japanese market, the gross JIS rating was used and the figure is JIS at the same engine speed. Torque is SAE or JIS at 3,600 rpm. The L13 was essentially a short-stroke L16.Applications:
The L14 was destined for most of the world, but was never offered in the US.
Specifications
Bore × stroke
at 6,400rpm, at 4,000rpm
- 1968–1973 Nissan Bluebird
- Nissan Violet/140J
- 1971–1973 Datsun Sunny Excellent
- 1971–1973 Datsun Sunny Excellent - Coupé
- 1973–1976 Nissan Sunny Excellent
- 1973–1974 Datsun 140Z L14 with twin Dell'Orto carburetors and performance cam
- 1975 Nissan GR-1 concept
L16
Learning lessons from the original L20, the L16 was given a full design and development cycle in Nissan's Small Engine Division. Influenced by the design of the Mercedes-Benz M180 engine that Prince Motor Company developed in four- and six-cylinder displacements called the Prince G engine, this resulted in a superior design that proved itself over time and served as the basis for the later L24 and L20A. It also serves as the basis of Nissan's "Modular L Series" lineup well into the 1980s.
In US trim, it produces at 6,000 rpm and maximum torque of at 3,600 rpm.
When this engine was installed in a 1972 Canadian 510 sedan model with manual transmission, two sets of points were installed in the distributor and this second set of points was in circuit only in third gear and under certain throttle-opening angles to obtain a different dwell angle. A similar arrangement exists in the US-spec 510/610 cars and 521/620 pickup trucks for the years 1970 –1973.
Applications:
- 1967–1973 Nissan Bluebird
- 1968–1973 Datsun 510
- 1970–1972 Datsun 521 pick-up
- 1971–1977 Nissan 160B sedan
- 1972–1973 Datsun 620 pick-up
- 1973–1977 Nissan Violet/Datsun 160J
- 1977–1978 Nissan Violet/Auster/Stanza/160J
L16S
Applications:
- Nissan Bluebird
L16T
Applications:
- Nissan Bluebird - At least in European version, where it was known as Datsun 1600SSS, 1968 –1972.
- Nissan Violet SSS/Datsun 710 SSS/Datsun 160J SSS 1973–1977
- Datsun 160Z, specific to the South African market where it was assembled.
- Nissan Skyline, offered in the 1600TI model. Replaced by the Z16 in late 1978.
L16E
The L16E was fuel injected version of L16, components provided by Bosch. It was available only in Japan; in brochures it is rated 10 horsepower more than the L16T engine.Applications:
- Nissan Bluebird SSS-E 1971–1976
- Nissan Violet SSS-E 1973–1977
- Nissan Stanza 1977–1981
L16P
Applications:
- Nissan Bluebird
- Nissan Violet
L18
- 1971–1976 Nissan Bluebird/Datsun 180B
- 1973 Nissan Bluebird/Datsun 1600 SSS
- 1973 Datsun 610
- 1974 Datsun 620 truck
- 1974 Datsun 710
- 1979–1981 Nissan Silvia/Datsun 180SX
- 1980–1986 Datsun 720
- Datsun 810
L18S
Applications:
- 1979 Nissan Bluebird
- 1975–1979 Nissan Silvia/Datsun 180SX
L18E
Applications:
- 1976–1979 Nissan Silvia/Datsun 180SX
- 1980–1983 Datsun 180SX
L18T
L18P
The L18P is the LPG version of the L18 engine; it was mainly installed in cars intended for taxi use.Applications:
- Datsun Bluebird
- Datsun Violet 710
L20B
The engine used a carburetor but switched to fuel injection in some non-USA markets in 1977. Carburetors were used in all US L20B applications for both cars and trucks. In the US, the L20B was used in six different model families -A10, 610, 710, S10, 620, and 720 models- making it the most versatile powerplant in the company's US history. To avoid confusion with the six-cylinder L20, Nissan designated this engine the L20B.
- 1974–1976 Datsun 610
- 1975–1977 Datsun 710
- 1975–1979 Datsun 620
- 1975–1979 Datsun 200SX
- 1977–1981 Datsun 200B
- 1978–1981 Datsun 510
- 1979.5–1980 Datsun 720
- 1981 –198? Nissan/Datsun Skyline R30
LD20/LD20T
;LD20
- diesel engine pre-combustion chamber
Models:
- Vanette
- Largo
Introduced in 1986, the LD20 II has a differently shaped combustion chamber. The camshaft is driven by a timing belt instead of a chain as in the LD20.
at 4600 rpm and of torque at 2400 rpm
Models:
- Bluebird
- Vanette
- Largo
- Ebro/Nissan Trade
at 4400 rpm and of torque at 2400 rpm
Models:
- Bluebird
- Largo
- Homy / Caravan
LZ (competition)
The LZ engine uses a standard L series engine block but mounted with a DOHC cylinder head. It also uses four valves per cylinder instead of two valves for a total of 16 valves. Usually the bottom end is dry sumped using a Tsubakimoto dry sump pump. The crankshaft used is a Nismo chrome moly "8 bolt flywheel" type. Connecting rods are of various length to suit the engine stroke. The rod caps have aircraft grade rod bolts and are dowelled. Pistons are thin ring forged units.
There are two different LZ cylinder heads. The early head is the same thickness as a normal L series head. The engine using the first head was simply named as the L14 twin cam with no mention of the "Z" in the name. This L14 twin cam head engine has flat exit side exhaust ports, the early 12 bolt rocker cover and the coolant discharge on the inlet side of the head. All early twin cam engines appear to have the 14 bolt rocker cover. Later engines use the full flat cover with six bolts to secure it.
The head was available for purchase from Nissan and was sanctioned by the FIA. The LZ14 was used during the 1973 Japanese GP, taking the top three positions. In open wheeler "Formula Pacific" racing the LZ14 engine dominated competition in most events it was entered in. It received multiple top rankings in some events.
The LZ14 is naturally aspirated and has a bore and stroke of . For qualifying and non endurance events the LZ14 can be tweaked to produce at 11,000 rpm. The LZ14 engine used in "Formula Pacific" race cars produces at 10,200 rpm.
In some Japanese racing classes the LZ engine is fitted with low compression pistons and a "T05B" turbocharger. These engines are electronically fuel injected instead of carburetted. The LZ turbo engine was tuned to produce at 7,600 rpm and at 6,400 rpm. A very successful example of the LZ turbo was in the famous Japanese "White Lightning" Silvia and "Tomica" R30 Skyline, both driven by Hoshino in the mid-1980s. The LZ turbo engine was also used in the 1986 Nissan March 85G Le Mans car. The original LZ20B turbo engine used in the 1983 Nissan Silvia "White Lightning" Group 5 race car, produced at 8,000 rpm.