Mitsubishi 6G7 engine

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6G7
A 6G75 engine in a 2005 Mitsubishi Galant.
Manufacturer Mitsubishi Motors
Also called: Cyclone V6
Type: V6
Block alloy: Cast iron

The Mitsubishi 6G7 or Cyclone V6 engine is a series of V6 piston engines from Mitsubishi Motors. Five displacement variants have been produced with both single- and double- overhead camshaft layouts. MIVEC variable valve timing has also been implemented in some versions, and the 2.5 and 3.0 L versions were also available with gasoline direct injection. Modern versions feature a one-piece cast crankshaft and cast aluminum intake manifold.


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[edit] 6G71

The 6G71 is a 2.0 L (1998 cc) version with a 74.7x76 mm bore/stroke. It produced 88 kW (120 PS) at 5500 rpm and 172 N·m (127 ft·lbf) at 4500 rpm.

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[edit] 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 was used in the Eclipse and Galant. Output in 2004 was 210 hp (157 kW) at 5500 rpm with 205 ft·lbf (278 N·m) of torque at 4000 rpm. It has a cast iron engine block and aluminum SOHC cylinder heads. It uses MFI fuel injection, has four valves per cylinder with roller followers and features fracture-split forged steel connecting rods. In the older version, used in many Chrysler models since 1987 this V6 was a SOHC 12-valve developing 141 hp (105 kW) at 5000 rpm and 172 ft·lbf (233 N·m) of torque at 3600 rpm

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[edit] 6G73

The 6G73 displaced 2.5 L (2497 cc or 152 cid). It was a 24-valve SOHC design with 2 valves running off one cam lobe, with a smaller bore than the 3.0 liter version of the same block. Bore and stroke were 3.29 x 2.99 (83.5 x 76.0); it was a 60-degree V6 and weighed around 342 lb (155 kg). The engine had low-profile cast aluminum heads which helped it to fit into small engine bays, while pent-roof combustion chambers increased efficiency and made room for four valves per cylinder, arranged in a cross-flow pattern with a "tumble" intake port for both strong breathing and low emissions. Spark plugs were centered in the combustion chambers. The intake valves were 1.30 inches (33 mm) in diameter while exhaust valves were 1.14 inches (29 mm). A toothed timing belt was used. [1]

Applications:

[edit] 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 for the SOHC, 194 kW (260 hp) at 6000 and 324Nm (240 ft·lb) at 4500 rpm for the MIVEC. The most common 6G74 has a cast iron engine block and an aluminum cylinder head. It uses MFI fuel injection and uses forged steel connecting rods.

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[edit] 6G74 GDI

The gasoline direct injection version of the 6G74 was launched in April 1997 as the first GDI V6 engine ever produced. It differed from the basic 6G74 in many ways apart from its unique fuel injection system — it had a crown-curved rather than flat combustion chamber, upright intake ports rather than angled, and a 10.4:1 rather than 10.0:1 compression ratio. Mitsubishi claimed 30 percent better fuel economy, a 30 percent reduction in emissions, and higher power outputs than diesels.[2]

[edit] 6G75

The 6G75 is a 3.8 L (3828 cc) version with 95 mm bore and 90 mm stroke. Output varies from 230 hp (172 kW) and 250 ft·lbf (339 N·m) to 263 hp (197 kW) and 260 ft·lbf (353 N·m) depending on application. It has forged steel connecting rods.

Applications:

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