Mitsubishi - 4G61 4G62 4G63 4G64 4G65 4G67 & 4G69

sakuraguy

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Mitsubishi - 4G3x 4G5x 4G6x 4G9x 6A1x & 6G7x

Just to share with you people here on some advanced engines from Mitsubishi...

Hope i didnt source any mistakes here because, i took this informations from official Mitsubishi source.

:tee: :tee: :tee:


SakuraGuy
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sakuraguy

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Mitsubishi Motors uses a simple four-digit naming scheme for its automobile engines:

The first digit signifies the number of cylinders
The second is the fuel type; "G" for gasoline
The third is the engine family
The fourth is the engine model
The first digit is sometimes omitted, shifting the entire scheme by one to make room for another character, such as "T" for turbocharged or "B" for second-generation.

I4
Mitsubishi has developed five families of straight-4 engines:

4G1x "Orion" - 1.2 L to 1.5 L
4G3x "Saturn" - 1.2 L to 1.8 L
4G5x "Astron" - 2.0 L to 2.6 L "Silent Shaft"
4G6x "Sirius" - 1.6 L to 2.4 L
4G9x - 1.6 L to 2.0 L

There a future upcoming family of straight-4 engines in a joint-venture with DaimlerChrysler and Hyundai known as Global Engine Manufacturing Alliance (GEMA)

V6
Mitsubishi has two families of V6 engines:

6A1x - 1.6 L to 2.5 L
6G7x - 2.5 L to 3.5 L
 

sakuraguy

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MITSUBISHI ORION

4G11
The 4G11 displaces 1.2 L (1244 cc).

Applications:
Mitsubishi Colt/Mirage
Mitsubishi Lancer

4G12
The 4G12 displaces 1.4 L (1410 cc).

Applications:
Mitsubishi Colt/Mirage
Mitsubishi Lancer
Mitsubishi Celeste
Mitsubishi Tredia/Cordia

4G13
The 4G13 displaces 1.3 L (1298 cc). It is an SOHC engine.

Applications:
Mitsubishi Colt/Mirage
Mitsubishi Lancer
Mitsubishi Space Star
Mitsubishi Carisma
Mitsubishi Dingo
Proton Saga/Iswara
Proton Satria/Wira

4G15
The SOHC 4G15 displaces 1.5 L (1468 cc).

Applications:
Mitsubishi Colt/Mirage
Mitsubishi Lancer/Eagle Summit
Mitsubishi Dingo
Proton Saga/Iswara
Proton Satria/Wira

4G16
The 4G16 displaces 1.2 L (1198 cc).

Applications:
Mitsubishi Colt/Mirage
Mitsubishi Lancer


MITSUBISHI ASTRON

The Mitsubishi Astron is series of straight-4 internal combustion engines, along with Orion, Sirius, and Saturn. Engine displacement ranges up to 2.6 litre (one of the largest four cylinder engines of its time. It powered models such as the Mitsubishi Pajero, Mitsubishi Sigma and Mitsubishi Magna.

It employs a hemispherical head, chain driven single overhead camshaft (SOHC) and has 8 valves (two per cylinder). In 2.6 L (4G54) Astron II EFI guise (used in the TN Magna) it produced 93 kW at 4800 revolutions per minute and 205 N·m at a low 2300 rpm. United States passenger car versions had a small secondary intake valve, called by Mitsubishi the "Jet Valve", to induce swirl in the intake charge, enabling the use of leaner fuel/air mixtures for lower emissions. Rather than redesign the head as three valves per cylinder, the Jet Valve was designed as a cartridge containing the valve spring and seat which simply screwed into a threaded hole in the head, similarly to a spark plug but inside the cam cover, thereby reducing modifications to the head design to simply providing the threaded hole. The rocker arms for the intake valve were widened on the valve end to accommodate the extra valve, which was equipped with a very soft valve spring so as not to increase wear on the camshaft intake lobe.

In 1975, the Astron featured a modern balance shaft system, dubbed "Silent Shaft". The 2.6 was praised for its smoothness and strong low-end torque, but later in its life its power and (never great) economy was eclipsed by newer (many of them DOHC) engines.

4G52
The 4G52 displaces 2.0 L (1995 cc).

Applications:
1979-1989 Dodge Ram 50

4G54
The SOHC 8-valve 4G54 displaces 2.6 L (2555 cc). It was designed for longitudinal use in rear wheel drive and all wheel drive vehicles. It was equipped with a Hitachi 2 barrel carburetor with vacuum operated progressive secondary, except for the turbocharged version and a version used in Australian Mitsubishi Magnas which were fuel injected.

Applications:
1978-1980 Plymouth Fire Arrow 2.6
1976-1983 Mitsubishi Sapporo
1979-1989 Dodge Ram 50
1986-1989 Mazda B2600
1982-1990 Mitsubishi Starion (turbocharged and fuel injected)
1985-1996 Mitsubishi Magna (EFI and Carburated)

4G55
The 4G55 displaces 2.3 L (2346 cc).



MITSUBISHI SATURN

4G32
The 4G32 displaces 1.6 L (1597 cc). It is an 8-valve SOHC design with an aluminum head and iron block. The engine has five main bearings, a cross flow head and a single up draught carburetor. Firing order is 1-3-4-2.

Bore x Stroke: 76.9 x 86 mm (3.03" x 3.39")

Applications:
Mitsubishi Galant
Hyundai Stellar
Hyundai Pony
Dodge Colt
Plymouth Arrow
Mitsubishi Galant
Mitsubishi Lancer
Mitsubishi Sapporo

4G33
The 4G33 displaces 1.4 L (1439 cc).

Applications:
Dodge Colt
Hyundai Pony
Hyundai Stellar
Plymouth Arrow
Mitsubishi Celeste
Mitsubishi Colt
Mitsubishi Lancer
Mitsubishi Galant

4G36
The 4G36 displaces 1.2 L (1238 cc).

Applications:
Mitsubishi Celeste
Mitsubishi Colt
Mitsubishi Lancer

4G37
The 8-valve SOHC 4G37 displaces 1.8 L (1755 cc).

Applications:

Mitsubishi Cordia
Eagle Talon
Mitsubishi Eclipse
Plymouth Laser



MITSUBISHI SIRIUS

4G61
The 4G61 normally displaces 1.6 L, but there are two distinct variations: An earlier version uses 3.03x3.39 in bore and stroke, while a later one has moved to 3.24x2.95 in. This engine was always DOHC 16-valve and used either ECFI or MPFI fuel injection. A turbocharged version was also produced for the Mirage. The 4G61 does not have balance shafts like the other 4G6x motors. Instead, it has different components, some of which can be used on the "Silent Shaft" motors.

Applications:
3.03x3.39
1989 Mitsubishi Mirage ECFI
1989-1990 Dodge Colt MPI
3.24x2.95
1990-1992 Mitsubishi Mirage MPFI

4G62
The larger 1.8 L 4G62 was an SOHC 8-valve unit for longitudinal RWD/4WD use. With a 3.17x3.46 in bore and stroke, it displaces 1795 cc.

Applications:
1988 Mitsubishi Cordia
1988 Mitsubishi Tredia

4G63
The 4G63 was a 2.0 L (1997 cc) version. Again, there were two different bore and stroke versions, and both SOHC and DOHC were produced. It is found in various Mitsubishi models including the Eclipse and Galant but also appears in Chrysler-branded versions of the Eclipse: the Eagle Talon and Plymouth Laser.It comes with either 4/6/& 7-bolt mains. The increase in main-bolts, is to reduced 'cam-crawl';the 7-bolt is used in the VR-4 & Evolution. This makes for swaps into other vehicles difficult, except the Galant GSX*.

Note that the 4G63 block in the Eclipse and Galant (and other Mitsubishi and Chrysler passenger cars) is not identical to the 4G63 block found in the Mitsubishi Mighty Max and Dodge Ram 50. The car-bound 4G63 has a bore and stroke of 3.35 in (85 mm) and 3.46 in (88 mm), whereas the truck 4G63 has a bore and stroke of 3.31 in (84 mm) and 3.54 in (90 mm).

Output for the US-spec 2004 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution is 271 hp (202 kW) at 6500 RPM with 273 ft.lbf (370 Nm) of torque at 3500 RPM. It has a cast iron engine block and aluminum DOHC cylinder heads. It uses MPI multi-point fuel injection, has 4 valves per cylinder, is turbocharged and intercooled and features forged steel connecting rods.

In the United Kingdom, a special Lancer Evolution, the FQ-400, produces 302.13 kW (405.2 hp), from a 4G63 engine. At 202.9 hp (151.3 kW) per liter, it has possibly the highest specific output per liter of any production engine.

Racing
Its turbocharged variant, 4G63T (also sometimes referred to simply as the 4G63), has powered Mitsubishi vehicles in World Rally Championships for years in the Galant VR-4, Lancer Evolution, Carisma GT and Lancer WRC04. It was the powerplant of the Lancer Evolution when Tommi Mäkinen won his four sequential WRC championships. The engine is also used in a variety of turbocharged 2-liter models of Galant and Eclipse.

Applications:
3.31x3.54 SOHC 2-barrel carburetor
1988-1989 Mitsubishi Mighty-Max
1988-1989 Dodge Ram 50
3.35x3.46 SOHC carburetor
1988 Mitsubishi Cordia
1988 Mitsubishi Tredia
3.35x3.46 SOHC MPFI
1988-1992 Dodge Colt Vista
1989-1992 Mitsubishi Galant
3.35x3.46 DOHC MPFI
1989-1992 Mitsubishi Galant
1990-1999 Mitsubishi Eclipse
1990-1999 Plymouth Laser
1990-1999 Eagle Talon
Mitsubishi Starion (Australia)

4G64
The longitudinal 4G64 was the largest variant, at 2.4 L (2350 cc). Early models were 8-valve SOHC, but a later 16-valve DOHC version was also produced. All used MPFI with a 3.41 in (86.5 mm) bore and 3.94 in (100 mm) stroke.

A later 4G64, built in Shiga, Japan, was used as recently as 2004 in transverse applications. It has an cast iron engine block and aluminum SOHC cylinder heads. It uses SFI fuel injection, has 4 valves per cylinder with roller followers and features a one-piece cast camshaft cast and aluminum intake manifold.

The version used in the Chrysler Sebring/Stratus coupes produced 147 hp (110 kW) at 5500 RPM with 158 ft.lbf (214 Nm) of torque at 4000 RPM. The Chrysler version features fracture-split forged powder metal connecting rods.

The Lancer Ralliart/Eclipse version uses forged steel connecting rods. Output is 162 hp (121 kW) at 5500 RPM with 162 ft.lbf (260 Nm) of torque at 4000 RPM.

Applications:
1988 Mitsubishi Galant
1988-1990 Mitsubishi Van
1990-1992 Mitsubishi Pick-Up
1990-1992 Dodge Ram 50
Mitsubishi Lancer Ralliart
Mitsubishi Eclipse/Chrysler Sebring/Dodge Stratus

4G67
The 16-valve DOHC 4G67 displaced 1.8 L (1836 cc).

Applications:
Mitsubishi Mirage

4G69
The 4G69 is a 2.4 L (2378 cc) version built in Shiga, Japan. Bore is 87 mm and stroke is 100 mm. Output is 160 hp (119 kW) at 5750 RPM with 162 ft.lbf (289 Nm) of torque at 4000 RPM. It has an cast iron engine block and aluminum SOHC cylinder heads. It uses MFI fuel injection, has 4 valves per cylinder with roller followers and features forged steel connecting rods, a one-piece cast camshaft, and a cast aluminum intake manifold.

Applications:
2004 Mitsubishi Galant
2004 Mitsubishi Outlander



MITSUBISHI 6A1X

The 6A1x series is a V6 piston engine from Mitsubishi Motors. The 1.6 L 6A10 holds the distinction of being the smallest modern production V6.

6A10
With the engine capacity of only 1.6 L (1597 cc), this is the smallest yet most powerful 1.6 L engine available on production car. With the configuration of 6 cylinders, dual overhead cam (DOHC), and 4 valves per cylinder, the 6A10 engine manages to output 140 hp (104 kW) @ 7000 rpm in stock condition.

Available in the Mitsubishi Lancer MX in 1992, this engine was once the most sought after engine for modification in Japan. In 1994, the Kotsumi's brothers from Kanagawa, Japan, managed to turn the 1.6 litre engine into a 'little monster' able to produce 430 bhp (320 kW) @ 6000 rpm without a forced induction system.

Specifications
Displacement: 1597 cc
Power: 140 PS (103 kW) @ 7000 rpm
Torque: 147 Nm @ 4500 rpm
Power density: 7.71
Engine type: V type 6 cylinder DOHC 24 valve
Fuel system: ECI multiple (electrically controlled gasoline injection)
Fuel type: Unleaded premium gasoline
Compression ratio: 10
Bore: 73 mm
Stroke: 63.6 mm
Fuel consumption at 10-15 modes: 8.3 L/100 km

6A12
The 2.0 L (1997 cc) 6A12 is less notable than its little brother. It was available with and without the MIVEC variable valve timing system and was a DOHC 24-valve engine.

Applications:
Mitsubishi FTO
Mitsubishi Eterna

6A13
Development continued with the 2.5 L (2498 cc) 6A13.



MITSUBISHI 6G7X

The 6G7x series is a V6 piston engine from Mitsubishi Motors. Three displacement variants have been produced with both SOHC and DOHC. MIVEC variable valve timing was also fitted. Modern versions feature a one-piece cast crankshaft and cast aluminum intake manifold.

6G72
The 6G72 is a 3.0 L (2972 cc) engine. Bore is 91.1 mm and stroke is 76 mm. SOHC 12-valve, SOHC 24-valve, and DOHC 24-valve versions have been produced.

The latest version is used in the Eclipse and Galant. Output in 2004 is 210 hp (157 kW) at 5500 RPM with 205 ft·lbf (278 N·m) of torque at 4000 RPM. It has an cast iron engine block and aluminum SOHC cylinder heads. It uses MFI fuel injection, has 4 valves per cylinder with roller followers and features fracture-split forged steel connecting rods.

Applications:
Mitsubishi 3000GT/Dodge Stealth
1988–1991 Plymouth Acclaim/Dodge Spirit
1990–1994 Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager
1990–1993 Dodge Ram 50
Dodge Dynasty
Chrysler LeBaron
Chrysler TC
Chrysler New Yorker
Dodge Daytona
Dodge Shadow ES
Plymouth Duster
2000-2005 Mitsubishi Eclipse
1999-2003 Mitsubishi Galant
1994-1998 Hyundai Sonata

6G73
The 6G73 displaces 2.5 L (2497 cc).

Applications:
1995-2000 Chrysler Sebring/Dodge Avenger
1995-2000 Chrysler Cirrus/Dodge Stratus
Mitsubishi Diamante (American Diamantes always used a 3.0 V6)

6G74
The 3.5 L (3497 cc) 6G74 is a 24-valve unit available with either SOHC, DOHC, or MIVEC DOHC. Bore is 93 mm and stroke is 85.8 mm. Output is 205 hp (153 kW) at 5000 RPM with 231 ft·lbf (313 N·m) of torque at 4000 RPM. It has an cast iron engine block and aluminum SOHC cylinder heads. It uses MFI fuel injection, has 4 valves per cylinder with and features forged steel connecting rods.

Applications:
1997-2004 Mitsubishi Diamante
Mitsubishi Montero Sport

6G75
6G75 engine in a 2005 GalantThe 6G75 is a 3.8 L (3828 cc) version with 95 mm bore and 90 mm stroke. Output is 230 hp (172 kW) at 5250 RPM with 250 ft·lbf (339 N·m) of torque at 4000 RPM. It has forged steel connecting rods.

Applications:
Mitsubishi Galant
Mitsubishi Montero
Mitsubishi Endeavor

The 4G9x series of straight-4 automobile engines is the latest Mitsubishi Motors design. All are 16-valve, though some use SOHC rather than DOHC heads, and some feature MIVEC variable valve timing.

4G92
The 4G92 displaces 1.6 L (1597 cc) and is available with either SOHC or plain or MIVEC DOHC versions.

Applications:
Mitsubishi Lancer
Mitsubishi Mirage

4G93
The 1.8 L (1834 cc) 4G93 is also available in both single- and dual-cam versions. Turbocharged variants are also produced. The SOHC 4G93 provides 86kw at 6000rpm and redlines at 6500rpm

Applications:
Mitsubishi Galant
Mitsubishi Lancer
Proton Satria GTi
Proton Putra

4G94
4G94 Engine in a Lancer OZ RallyThe 4G94 is a 2.0 L (1999 cc) version built in Japan. Bore is 81.5 mm and stroke is 95.8 mm. It is used in the Mitsubishi Lancer. Output is 120 hp (89 kW) at 5500 RPM with 130 ft.lbf (176 Nm) of torque at 4250 RPM. It has an cast iron engine block and aluminum SOHC cylinder heads. It uses MFI fuel injection, has 4 valves per cylinder and features forged steel connecting rods.

1969
The Mitsubishi Galant was launched in 1969 as a two- and four-door sedan, sold in some markets as the Colt Galant. It featured a choice of 1·3 or 1·5 L four-cylinder engines. It was sold in the United States as the Dodge Colt from 1971.

From 1970, a fastback coupé model, the Hardtop, was added. It was the first Japanese production passenger car without side pillars. The same year saw the release of the most powerful first-generation model, the GTO, with a 1·6 L, 125 PS engine.

1973
The second-generation Galant—in sedan and GTO forms—was more widely exported and was sold in Australia as the Chrysler Valiant Galant and in Europe as the Colt Galant. This model was more curvaceous, influenced by coke-bottle styling, and featured a larger, 1850 cm³ engine, as well as a new 2·0 'Astron' unit developing 125 PS. It was also offered as the Dodge Colt in the US.

1976
The third-generation Galant, dating from 1976, was divided into two models: the Galant Sigma (for the sedan and wagon) and the Galant Lambda (the coupé). The former was sold in many markets as the Mitsubishi Galant (without the word 'Sigma') and in Australia as the Chrysler Sigma (until 1980, after which it became the Mitsubishi Sigma). Strangely, in New Zealand it was badged as 'Galant Sigma' but colloquially referred to as the 'Sigma', a name it formally adopted after 1980.

Sapporo
The coupé was sold in Europe as the Mitsubishi Sapporo, in Australia as the Chrysler (and later Mitsubishi) Sigma Scorpion, and in the United States as the Plymouth Sapporo and Dodge Challenger from 1978 to 1983. On the Japanese home market, the car was known as the Mitsubishi Lambda. Initially available with Mitsubishi's Astron 2.0L 4cyl, the larger 2.6 4cyl was made a later option. 4 wheel disc brakes were standard.

1980
A substantial facelift took place in 1980, though the rear end of the wagon was retained. Mitsubishi officially considers this a new generation Galant. It was Car of the Year in New Zealand in 1981. Production of the wagon model continued in Australia till 1987, when the Magna wagon came on stream.

Lonsdale
From 1982 to 1983, some of the Australian Sigmas were exported to the United Kingdom with the Lonsdale badge, circumventing the voluntary 11 per cent market restriction adopted by Japanese manufacturers. The car was unsuccessful. For its final year, 1983 to 1984, it carried Mitsubishi Sigma badges in the UK before meeting its demise.

1983
A long-lived fifth-generation model shifted to front-wheel drive for the 1984 model year as a four-door sedan. This formed the basis of the widened Mitsubishi Magna in Australia for 1985, the same year in which Mitsubishi won the Golden Steering Wheel in Germany for the Galant and Wheels’ Car of the Year for the Magna. In 1988, the standard Galant was re-released in the New Zealand market as the V3000 with a 3·0 L V6 engine and continued alongside the sixth-generation Galant for many years.

1987
In 1987, the same platform was used for a sixth-generation model which adopted taller, rounded styling. This generation won Japanese Car of the Year in 1987 and the GS model became Motor Trend Import Car of the Year in 1989.

The Sigma designation disappeared but a new hardtop liftback model was added in 1988, called the Galant Eterna.

This generation was also sold in Canada as Dodge 2000GTX and Eagle 2000GTX.

VR-4
The four-wheel-drive, four-wheel-steer 1988 Galant VR-4 (E39A) was a respected competitor in the World Rally Championship and the engine from this amazing car, the 4G63 engine was carried over to the Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution series of winning rally cars. The current VR-4 model still retains the 4WD layout and high-revving engine and is considered by many to be a serious sports sedan.

1992
1992 Mitsubishi Galant A new-model Galant débuted in 1992, available as a four-door sedan and five-door liftback (Eterna). A Japan-only hardtop model, the Emeraude, was launched in 1992, too.

1996
1998 Mitsubishi GalantThe eighth-generation 1996 model continued the 1992 design themes but a station wagon (known in Japan as the Legnum) was added. The liftback was deleted. This model won the 1996–7 Japanese Car of the Year award. Despite it being superseded in the US from 2003, it remains on sale in numerous countries, including Japan itself as of May 2005. This arguably makes it one of the longest-running passenger cars currently on sale in Japan, with the exception of luxury models such as the Toyota Century. The Legnum wagon (which has recently ceased production) was a popular car with tuners. Cool car!!

2003
The United States has had the sedan-only ninth-generation PS platform model since 2003, announced at the New York International Auto Show in April of that year, for the 2004 model year. Other markets did not see it till much later. One of the first markets outside North America to get it was the Republic of China, which launched the Galant Grunder in December 2004.

Near future
It became apparent that the non-American Galants will get a front end that resembles that of the Lancer and Diamante. The new front end was designed by its former design chief Olivier Boulay. It is equipped with a 2·4 L engine producing 162 bhp.

The Middle East and eastern Europe will likely source its Galants from the United States from 2006.

In Australia, starting in the 2006 model year, Mitsubishi will be selling a highly modified larger version of the North American Galant as the 380. The 380 is a successor to the Magna and the Verada large cars that also formed the basis for the North American Diamante. The 380 is a crucial car for Mitsubishi because this is the car that will determine the future of Mitsubishi's Australian manufacturing operations.

United States production
1996 Mitsubishi Galant ES (7th-Generation US Model)In the United States, the Galant, along with the Mitsubishi Eclipse and the Eagle Talon and Plymouth Laser (the later two now discontinued), was one of the vehicles built by Diamond Star Motors, a joint venture between Chrysler (now DaimlerChrysler) and Mitsubishi, in Normal, Illinois. The plant has been wholly-owned by Mitsubishi since 1991.

The seventh-generation Galant's production was shifted to Normal, Illinois. The very first seventh-generation US-made 1994 Galant rolled off the assembly line on May 24, 1993. The eighth generation went into production there on July 7, 1998. The 2004 Galant began production on October 15, 2003.

Due to excess capacity at the plant, Mitsubishi will export Galants in 2006 to markets in the Middle East and eastern Europe. There had been a layoff at the plant in late 2004, and Mitsubishi hopes to utilize its capacity and rehire its former employees as soon as possible.

MIVEC (Mitsubishi Innovative Valve-timing-and-lift Electronic Control) is an automobile variable valve timing technology developed by Mitsubishi. MIVEC varies the lift of valves by using two different camshaft profiles. It is similar to Honda's VTEC system.


Hope above listings are informational and useful to you guys and find various source where Mitsubishi has been a platform in producing engines and parts swappable between some other manufacturers.




SakuraGuy
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luncai

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Bro,
Any "4G9x - 1.6 L to 2.0 L " info?:cool:

sakuraguy said:
Mitsubishi Motors uses a simple four-digit naming scheme for its automobile engines:

The first digit signifies the number of cylinders
The second is the fuel type; "G" for gasoline
The third is the engine family
The fourth is the engine model
The first digit is sometimes omitted, shifting the entire scheme by one to make room for another character, such as "T" for turbocharged or "B" for second-generation.

I4
Mitsubishi has developed five families of straight-4 engines:

4G1x "Orion" - 1.2 L to 1.5 L
4G3x "Saturn" - 1.2 L to 1.8 L
4G5x "Astron" - 2.0 L to 2.6 L "Silent Shaft"
4G6x "Sirius" - 1.6 L to 2.4 L
4G9x - 1.6 L to 2.0 L

There a future upcoming family of straight-4 engines in a joint-venture with DaimlerChrysler and Hyundai known as Global Engine Manufacturing Alliance (GEMA)

V6
Mitsubishi has two families of V6 engines:

6A1x - 1.6 L to 2.5 L
6G7x - 2.5 L to 3.5 L
 

kinki_kidz®

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4G64 too are used in certain Pajeros and Mitsubishi Grandis MPVs
old 4G64s are GDi, without mivec
new ones comes with Mivec, without GDi
 

elainenicklaus

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kl,malaysia
may i know which variant is evo 9 using?
n
what r the specs of the engines fer evo 9?
n is there any special parts of interest?
 

sakuraguy

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2006 Lancer Evolution IX gets MIVEC technology (variable valve timing), boosting official for power output to 286 hp (213 kW) and torque to 289 ft·lbf (392 N·m).



Evolution VIII MR goodies like Bilstein shocks, a 6-speed manual transmission, vortex generators, and an aluminium roof. Additional revisions from 2005 include a closer gear ratio for the 5-speed transmission and new lighter Enkei wheels on non-MR models.

Standard/GSR - revised 5-speed, standard model
-RS - revised 5-speed, aluminium roof, gauge pack, minimal interior
-MR - 6-speed, Bilstein monotube shocks, aluminium roof, gauge pack
-Three models will also be available in Europe and Japan. Although all models use the same 286 hp (213 kW) engine, the torque differs from one model to another. The GSR produces 295 ft·lbf (400 Nm) of torque while the RS and GT produce 300 ft·lbf (407 Nm).

-RS - revised 5-speed, aluminium roof, gauge pack, minimal interior, LSD and a titanium-magnesium turbine
-GT - revised 5-speed, this is basically the RS mechanically, but with some of the GSR's features (mainly interior pieces).
-GSR - 6-speed, Bilstein monotube shocks, aluminium roof, gauge pack, AYC (Active Yaw Control), and double-din radio (this is roughly equivalent to the MR)


Comparisons:






Cheers!
 

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Hi guys , recently my Wira car got some engine starting problem , whenever i started the engine , the engine will become weak , and failed to operate , this makes me everytime when starting the car , hv to accel 1st to warm up the engine it just will become stable , can somebody tell me what kind of things is spoil oledi in my car ??

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