Subaru EA engine
The Subaru EA engine is a series of automobile internal combustion engines manufactured by Subaru, a division of Fuji Heavy Industries. All EA series engines are of a flat-4 design, and have always been water cooled.
Design and history
Prior to 1966, Subaru was known for producing kei cars in Japan; for their first four-passenger model, the firm developed an air-cooled boxer engine for a prototype of the Subaru 1500 in 1960, but Fuji Heavy Industries was unable to continue development due to a shortage of funding. A new prototype front-wheel-drive car was built with a water-cooled boxer engine, which became the basis for the Subaru 1000 and the EA-52 boxer engine. The car began sales to the public starting in 1966.The EA series engines have aluminum heads with aluminum blocks. Each cylinder has two valves, one for exhaust and one for intake. They came in either an OHV pushrod or SOHC configuration. The engine was very short, only about long overall. The crankshaft had three main bearings.
Subaru produced the EA series from 1966 to 1994, and were found in the Subaru FF-1 Star, the Subaru Leone, the Subaru Brat, the Subaru Loyale, the Subaru Omega, the Subaru Vortex, the Subaru RX, and the Subaru XT.
Models
EA-52
The Subaru EA-52 engine was produced from 1966 until 1970.Found on
- Subaru 1000
- Subaru FF-1 Star
EA-53
EA-61
The Subaru EA-61 engine was produced from 1969 to 1972. The Japanese-spec Subaru FF-1 Sport Sedan and the FF-1 Super Touring sedan used twin carburetors, with the engine designation EA-61S. It was sold in the United States only for the 1971 model year. It was also briefly available in the first Leone, only in 1100 Van specification.Found on
- Subaru FF-1 1100/Star
- 1972-197? Subaru Leone A21 Van
EA-62
Found on
- Subaru FF-1 1300 G
- Subaru G
EA-62S
Found on
- Subaru FF-1 1300G Sports Sedan and Super Touring
EA-63
Found on
- 1973–1979 Subaru Leone
EA-64
Found on
- 1973–1975 Subaru Leone
- 1973–1977 Subaru Leone A25
- 1973–1979 Subaru Leone A65
EA-65
Found on
- 1975–1985 Subaru Leone for Japanese domestic market, Europe, Africa Asia and Latin America.
- The only first sedan with a similar box body shape with same shape as the nissan model.
- Equipped with an internal temperature control Ac different from the current compressor pump.
- Had the two wheel drive for fuel efficiency the 1298 cc with options of 4wd.
- In African market became the family car for major house hold nick named meaning the mother of Subaru due to its unique speed and pick performance.
- The very first edition with a speed clock of 220km/h display.
- The Leone EA65 became an icon in the safari rally and hence was considered the best sedan model for off-road.
EA-71
Found on
- 1976–1994 Subaru Leone
- 1978–1980 Subaru BRAT
- 1980–1990 Subaru Hatchback
EA-71S
Found on
- 1979–1981 Subaru Hatchback
- 1979–1980 Subaru Brat
EA-72 Concept Engine
Specifications
- Displacement: 1,595 cc
- Bore: 92 mm
- Stroke: 60 mm
- Compression Ratio: 8.7:1
- Valvetrain: SOHC
- Horsepower: unreleased
- Torque: unreleased
EA-81
Found on
- 1980–1989 Subaru Leone
- 1981–1994 Subaru BRAT, Subaru Brumby
- 1980–1990 Subaru Hatchback
EA-81S
Found on
- 1980–1982 second gen Subaru Leone
- 1980–1982 Second Gen Subaru Brat, Subaru Brumby.
- 1983 Subaru RX
EA-81T
Found on
- 1983–1984 Subaru Leone
- 1983–1984 Subaru BRAT
EA-82
Found on
- 1984–1994 Third generation of Subaru Leone, Subaru Loyale, Subaru Omega
- 1985–1991 Subaru XT / Alcyone / Vortex
EA-82T
A revised intake known as the "Spider" manifold was available and is seen as an early version of the EJ style intake manifold.
ER27
The ER series is a flat-6 engine with a displacement of 2.7 L manufactured by Subaru, a division of Fuji Heavy Industries. The ER series has aluminium engine blocks and aluminium cylinder heads. It is found on the 1988–1991 Subaru Alcyone VX.Created as a refined luxury engine with improved power over the EA82T, Subaru introduced the ER series engine in 1988 exclusively to be featured in the Subaru Alcyone VX. Like the EA series engines, the ER series engine featured 2-valve cylinder heads with hydraulic lash adjusters and the block shared the same bore and stroke. While recognised as bearing many similarities to the Subaru EA82 engine, there are numerous differences in design between the two engines and a large portion of parts are unique to the ER27. The oil and water pumps are unique to the ER27, sharing similar bolt patterns and design to the EA82, but being of a higher flow in both cases.
The intake manifold uses a two-piece design with a lower section bolting to the heads containing the coolant bridge, injectors and various vacuum lines. The upper intake manifold then bolts to the lower section and is unlike the EA82 or EJ22 "spider" manifold designs in that there is no central plenum chamber. The valve timing system is belt-drive using two individual timing belts, curiously one belt uses a spring tensioner whilst the other uses a hydraulic tensioner. Both JDM and USDM versions of the ER27 used multi-point electronic fuel injection. The ER27 designation was the first time Subaru incorporated the engine's displacement into the series name and all future engines have retained this nomenclature.