Suzuki G engine

The Suzuki G engine is a type of internal combustion engine manufactured by Suzuki Motor Corporation for various automobiles, primarily based on the GM M platform, including the:

As well as the following trucks:

G10

Suzuki G10/G10T

G10A engine in a SF310 Swift
Overview
Manufacturer Suzuki
Combustion chamber
Displacement 993 cc (61 in³)
Cylinder bore 73.9 mm (2.91 in)
Piston stroke 77.0 mm (3.03 in)
Cylinder block alloy Aluminum
Cylinder head alloy Aluminum
Valvetrain SOHC
Compression ratio from 8.3:1 to 9.8:1
Combustion
Turbocharger In G10T only
Fuel system Carburated or Fuel Injected (Model Dependent)
Fuel type Gasoline
Cooling system Watercooled
Output
Power output
  • 48 hp (36 kW) at 5,100 rpm
    up to
  • 82 PS (60 kW) at 5,500 rpm
Specific power 0.79 hp/in³ (36 kW/L)
Torque output

The G10 (sometimes referred to as the "G10A" to set it apart from the later G10B) is an inline 1.0 liter three-cylinder, four-stroke cycle gasoline engine utilizing aluminum alloy for the block, cylinder head and pistons. It is equipped with either a carburetor or electronic fuel injection and was also offered as the G10T with an IHI RHB31/32 turbocharger and either MPFI or a carburator. It has a single overhead camshaft driving six valves. Cylinder spacing is 84 mm (3.3 in), as for the four-cylinder G13/G15/G16 engines.

A 73.9 mm (2.91 in) bore and 77 mm (3.03 in) stroke give the engine a total of 1.0 L (993 cc/61 cuin) of displacement. It produces 48 hp (36 kW) at 5100 rpm and 77 N·m (57 lb·ft) at 3200 rpm with 9.5:1 compression in the carburated model, 55 hp (41 kW) at 5700 rpm and 79 N·m (58 lb·ft) at 3300 rpm in the fuel injected model. The original home market version originally offered a carburated 60 PS (44 kW) JIS at 5500 rpm, later power output fluctuated around 52-55 PS.

From 1984 to 1988 the standard G10 engine used a hemispherical head carbureted design with mechanical lifters. From 1989 to 2001 the engine received updates in the form of throttle body injection and hydraulic lifters. A detuned 49 hp (37 kW) unit, with a slightly different camshaft, two-ring pistons and differently tuned engine control unit, was used in the ultra-fuel-efficient Geo Metro XFi model, which delivered as much as 58 miles per gallon. In the US, the G10 in the 2000 Chevrolet Metro became the last engine available on an American-sold vehicle to use throttle body injection for fuel delivery.

Through the 1985-1991 model years a turbocharged MPFI version of the G10 was offered in some markets. This engine delivered 70 hp (52 kW) at 5500 rpm and 79 lb-ft (107 N m) at 3500 rpm. This turbocharged engine, with mechanical lifters, was available in both the US and Canadian Firefly/Sprint/Forsa from 1987-88. Only the Canadian Firefly/Sprint had this option, with hydraulic lifters, in the 1989-1991 model years. In the domestic Japanese market, the car was originally carburated (80 PS JIS at 5500 rpm, 118 N·m (87 lb·ft) at 3500 rpm) and went on sale in June 1984. In October 1987, along with a facelift, the home market Turbo received fuel injection and power output went up to 82 PS (60 kW) JIS, torque to 120 N·m (89 lb·ft). It was a short-lived version, however, as by September 1988 the car was no longer on sale in Japan.

As is inherent in the physics of the inline-triple engine, the G10 tends not to idle as smoothly as other engines such as a straight-six engine. This engine has a non-interference valvetrain design.

Applications:

Ultralight aircraft

G10B

G10B was an all-aluminium engine. It was a four-cylinder 993 cc (72 mm × 61 mm) SOHC 16-valve engine and is the first all-aluminum engine. It was sold in both carburetted and MPFI form. It was widely used in motorsport in India due to its light weight and tunability. The mounting points of the engine block were similar to that of the G13 and so an engine swap was a relatively easy task. It was phased out when production of Zen ceased in 2006. It was made only in India but was sold in all countries the Zen was sold. The G10B is currently installed in the 2007–present Suzuki Cultus for the Pakistani market.

G12

The G12B is an inline-four engine utilizing aluminum alloy for the block, cylinder head and pistons. It is derived from the G13BB engine by reducing the bore to 71 mm to displace 1.2 L (1196 cc). Stroke remains the same at 75.5 mm. It has a SOHC 16V head and the fuel delivery is by multi-point fuel injection. It is Euro-4 emissions compliant. It has lighter pistons and other detail improvements to be a more fuel efficient engine than the G13BB on which it is based. Maruti modified the engine to displace less than 1200 cc to take advantage of the reduced excise duty on such vehicles in India.

G13

The G13 is an inline-four engine utilizing aluminum alloy for the block, cylinder head and pistons. Displacing 1.3 L (1324 cc) for the G13A and (1298 cc/79 cu in) for all other G13 engines, fuel delivery is either through a carburetor, throttle body fuel injection or multi-point fuel injection.

This engine was made with different valvetrain designs: 8 or 16 valve SOHC or 16 valve DOHC. All G13 Engines have a bore size of 74 mm. G13A had 77 mm stroke versus 75.5 mm on all other G13 engines.

G13A

The SOHC 8-valve G13A has a non-interference valvetrain design. It was used in the following vehicles:

G13B

This DOHC 16-valve engine is well known, it uses the older distributor driven off the intake camshaft, and produces approximately 74 kW (100 hp) at 6500 rpm / 112Nm (83 ft·lb) at 5000 rpm. Redline is set at 7400-7600 rpm. Like many DOHC engines, this engine has an interference valvetrain design, making periodic timing belt changes vital to the engine's life.

It was used in the following vehicles:

G13BA

The SOHC 8-valve G13BA has single-point fuel injection and produces 50 kW (68 PS; 67 hp) and 74 lb·ft (100 N·m) of torque. It has a non-interference valvetrain design. 1995 to 1997 U.S. and Canadian-market engines gained hydraulic lash adjusters.

It was used in the following vehicles:

G13BB

The SOHC 16-valve G13BB (introduced in March 1995) has electronic MPFI Multi-point fuel injection, generating 56–63 kW (76–86 PS) and 104115 N·m (7785 lb·ft).[1] Later G13BBs have two coil packs bolted directly to the valve cover, although early models still had the coil packs mounted to the left side of the head - where the distributor was traditionally located. This engine uses a MAP sensor to monitor manifold pressure, unlike the G16 series. This engine has a non-interference valvetrain design. It uses the same G series block found in many other Suzuki models and so it is a popular conversion into the Suzuki Sierra/Samurai/Jimny 4WD, which uses either a G13A (85-88) or G13BA(88.5-98). This allows the engine to fit into the engine bay simply as engine and gearbox mounts are identical and both engines are mounted North-South.

It was used in the following vehicles:

G13K

The DOHC G13K was used in the following vehicles:

G15A

This engine is a 1.5L 16-valve (SOHC).(100HP Approx)

Applications:

G16

The G16 is an inline 4 cylinder displacing 1.6 L (1590 cc).

Applications:

G16A

Either 8 valve single over-head cam carb or 8 valve SOHC EPI before 1993 or 16 valve SOHC EPI after 1993

Applications:

G16B

The SOHC G16B was used in the following vehicles:

J18

This 1.8 L (1,840 cubic centimetres) DOHC 16-valve inline-four replaced Mazda's BP engine of the same size, which had been used in the Baleno/Cultus Crescent until then (1998). Bore and stroke (in the European Suzuki Baleno) are 84 and 83 mm and power is 121 PS (89 kW; 119 hp) at 6,200 rpm. Torque is 152 N·m (112 lb·ft) at 3,400 rpm.[2]

Applications:

See also

Notes

  1. "PKW Suzuki" (PDF). Victor Reinz. p. 1332 (p. 4 of pdf). Retrieved 2011-01-19.
  2. Nötzli, Max, ed. (7 March 2002). Automobil Revue 2002 (in German and French) 97. Berne, Switzerland: Büchler Grafino AG. p. 551. ISBN 3-905386-02-X.

References

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