BMC A-series engine

http://dbpedia.org/resource/BMC_A-series_engine an entity of type: Thing

The Austin Motor Company A series is a small straight-4 automobile engine. Launched in 1951 with the Austin A30, production lasted until 2000 in the Mini. It used a cast-iron block and cylinder head, and a steel crankshaft with 3 main bearings. The camshaft ran in the cylinder block, driven by a single-row chain for most applications, and with tappets sliding in the block, accessible through pressed steel side covers for most applications, and with overhead valves operated through rockers. The cylinder head for the overhead-valve version of the A-series engine was designed by Harry Weslake – a cylinder head specialist famed for his involvement in SS (Jaguar) engines and several F1-title winning engines. Although a "clean sheet" design, the A series owed much to established Austin engine de rdf:langString
Le moteur série-A est un moteur quatre cylindres en ligne, quatre temps, refroidi par eau, lancé en 1951 par la marque automobile Austin dans l'Austin A30, et produit jusqu'en 2000 dans la dernière Mini. Cette exceptionnelle longévité et son utilisation (dans des versions sans cesse améliorées) sur de nombreux modèles d'Austin, de BMC, du groupe British Leyland puis du , en font l'un des moteurs les plus célèbres et les plus répandus de l'histoire automobile britannique. rdf:langString
rdf:langString BMC A-series engine
rdf:langString Moteur BMC Série-A
rdf:langString BMC A series
rdf:langString BMC A series
xsd:integer 1376554
xsd:integer 1122448799
rdf:langString
<millimetre> 76.2
<millimetre> 81.4
<millimetre> 61.95
<millimetre> 68.26
<millimetre> 68.4
rdf:langString Shorrock and Eaton Supercharger in Racing only
rdf:langString Garrett T3
rdf:langString OHV 2 valves x cyl. in OEM versions, OHC 4 valves x cyl prototype and in Racing.
rdf:langString text-align:left;
rdf:langString center
xsd:integer 998
xsd:integer 1098
xsd:integer 1275
rdf:langString Rover MEMS ECU used in SPi and MPi versions.
rdf:langString Leonard Lord, Bill Appleby, Eric Bareham
rdf:langString Cast iron, Aluminium
xsd:integer 1977
xsd:integer 1990
rdf:langString Paul_Smith_003.JPG
rdf:langString Rover MEMS 1.6 ECU.jpg
rdf:langString BMC_cutaway_engine_at_Birmingham_Museum_Collection_May_2015_.jpg
rdf:langString Rover MEMS, Lucas, AE Brico, T.J Fuel Injection, Lucas CAV
rdf:langString Longbridge, Cowley in UK between 1951 - 2000;
rdf:langString Pamplona in Spain, NMQ between 1966 - 1975;
rdf:langString Blackheath, Gauteng in South Africa between 1960 - 1980
rdf:langString uk
rdf:langString Applications:
rdf:langString background:#88FF88; text-align:left;
rdf:langString The Austin Motor Company A series is a small straight-4 automobile engine. Launched in 1951 with the Austin A30, production lasted until 2000 in the Mini. It used a cast-iron block and cylinder head, and a steel crankshaft with 3 main bearings. The camshaft ran in the cylinder block, driven by a single-row chain for most applications, and with tappets sliding in the block, accessible through pressed steel side covers for most applications, and with overhead valves operated through rockers. The cylinder head for the overhead-valve version of the A-series engine was designed by Harry Weslake – a cylinder head specialist famed for his involvement in SS (Jaguar) engines and several F1-title winning engines. Although a "clean sheet" design, the A series owed much to established Austin engine design practise, resembling in general design (including the Weslake head) and overall appearance a scaled-down version of the 1200cc overhead-valve engine first seen in the Austin A40 Devon which would form the basis of the later B-series engine. The A-series design, along with particularly the B-Series, was licensed by Nissan of Japan. Many changes were made for the initial OHV Nissan E engine. An early change was to incorporate a 5 main bearing crank. The cylinder head was modified by swapping plugs and ports, plugs fitted between pushrods and 8 ports eliminated the Siamesed inlet and exhaust ports. Nissan modified the design into the later Nissan A engine that was launched in 1966 with an aluminium head and wedge combustion chambers. It became the basis for many of their following engines notably the later OHC Nissan E engine, was scaled up into Nissan CA engine and ultimately the DOHC 170 bhp (127 kW) CA18DET as well as scaled down into the Nissan MA engine. All these engines show their lineage by the characteristic un-skirted crankcase block of the BMC A series, but with the A and E having the camshaft moved to the right side allowing greater port areas, and a mounting on the right wall of the crankcase for the oil pump whereas the BMC A series had the oil pump at the back end of the left-side camshaft.
rdf:langString Le moteur série-A est un moteur quatre cylindres en ligne, quatre temps, refroidi par eau, lancé en 1951 par la marque automobile Austin dans l'Austin A30, et produit jusqu'en 2000 dans la dernière Mini. Cette exceptionnelle longévité et son utilisation (dans des versions sans cesse améliorées) sur de nombreux modèles d'Austin, de BMC, du groupe British Leyland puis du , en font l'un des moteurs les plus célèbres et les plus répandus de l'histoire automobile britannique. Le modèle Série-A a également été produit sous licence, entre autres, par Nissan au Japon. Cette évolution renommée Nissan A, lancée en 1966, servit également de base à de nombreux blocs du constructeur japonais.
rdf:langString Cast iron
rdf:langString
<millimetre> 57.92
<millimetre> 62.43
<millimetre> 62.9
<millimetre> 64.58
<millimetre> 70.6
xsd:double 7.5
rdf:langString Inline-four engine,
rdf:langString Euro 3 .
rdf:langString SU carburettor or fuel injection
<millimetre> 57.92 62.43 62.9 64.58 70.6
<cubicCentimetre> 803.0
<millimetre> 76.2 81.4 61.95 68.26 68.4
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 40927
<engineConfiguration> straight-four
xsd:double 0.000803
xsd:gYear 2000
xsd:gYear 1951
xsd:string 7.5:1, 8.3:1, 8.5:1, 8.8:1, 9.4:1, 10.5:1, 23.6:1 (Diesel)
xsd:double 0.05792 0.06243 0.0629 0.06458 0.0706
xsd:double 0.06195 0.06826 0.0684 0.0762 0.0814
<valvetrain> I-head

data from the linked data cloud