Single-cylinder These were used in Mitsubishi's very first vehicles,
motor scooters and three-wheelers. •
A-series — A 744 cc air-cooled OHV engine installed as the 3A in the 1947 Mitsubishi TM3A three-wheeled truck. The TM6 three-wheeler of 1955 was equipped with an improved
6A engine. • 1952-196? —
ME10/12 — A development of the A family engine ("Mizushima Engine"). The
sidevalve ME10 displaces 886 cc (TM4 and TM5 three-wheeled trucks), while the later,
OHV ME12 is of 851 cc. :As fitted to the
Mitsubishi "Mizushima" TM14G three-wheeled truck, the ME12 developed at 3600 rpm. •
NE/NE1 — "Nagoya Engine," First introduced as the 112 cc
side-valve,
air-cooled 1.5 hp
NE10 for the famous
Silver Pigeon scooter. Later iterations included the
NE7, the enlarged 192 cc
NE9, and the
OHV 125 cc
NE8 and 175 cc
NE13. •
ME20 — This 309 air-cooled
OHV engine served in the three-wheeled
Leo.
Two-cylinder/inline 2 Mitsubishi's smallest powerplants, most commonly found in their earliest models in the 1960s: • 1955-1962 —
ME7/15/18 — This was Mitsubishi's first air-cooled OHV engine over one liter's displacement. In 1955, the 1276 cc
ME7 was developed for the
Mitsubishi TM7. The 1145 cc
ME15 and the 1489 cc
ME18 were premiered in 1958 for the TM15/16 and TM17/18 trucks; production of this engine series ended when Mitsubishi discontinued heavier three-wheeled trucks. • 1960-1962 —
NE19A — 0.5 L — The air-cooled 493 cc
OHV twin-cylinder engine in the
Mitsubishi 500, the first passenger car built by the company after the
Second World War. Bore and stroke were 70.0 x 64.0 mm • 1961-1965 —
NE35A — 0.6 L — a 594 cc iteration of the NE series, 72.0 x 73.0 mm. This engine was used in the
Mitsubishi 500 Super DeLuxe and
Mitsubishi Colt 600. • 1961-1976 —
ME21/24 — 0.36 L — This
air-cooled two-stroke first served in the
Mitsubishi 360 but was used in various
Minicas until 1972 and in
Minicabs until 1976. • 1968-1976 —
2G1 — 0.36 L — First introduced in late first generation
Minicas in October 1968 to gradually replace the
air-cooled ME24 powerplant. The water-cooled
2G10 was a
two-stroke engine like its predecessor. • 1972-1988 —
2G2 "Vulcan" — 0.36-0.8 L — a new
four-stroke OHC design introduced in 1972 to succeed the 2G1, fitted to Minicas and
Minicabs. 359 cc, 471 cc, 546 cc, 644 cc and 783 cc versions were produced. It also equipped the
Mazda Porter Cab.
Three cylinder/inline-3 • 1987–present —
3G8 — 0.55-0.8 L • 2005-? —
3B2 — 0.66-1.0 L • 2003–present —
3A9 — 1.0-1.2 L
Four-cylinder/inline-4 Gasoline: • 1963-1975 —
KE4 — 1.0-2.0 L :*
KE42, 1962 (Canter 1st generation 66kW, 2nd gen 66kW @ 4800 rpm, 3rd gen 1995cc, 70kW) or earlier til ???, on Canter replaced in January 1975 :*
KE47, 1968 (Canter 2nd gen 70kW @ 4500 rpm, 172Nm @ 2800 rpm, 3rd gen 2315cc, 74kW) or later til January 1975 (Canter) or later • 1969-1999 —
4G3 — 1.2-1.8 L — nick name
"Saturn" • 1971-1979 —
4G4 — 1.2-1.4 L — nick name
"Neptune" • 1972-? —
4G5 — 1.8-2.6 L — nick name
"Astron" • 1978-present —
4G1 — 1.2-1.6 L — nick name
"Orion" • 1980-present —
4G6 — 1.6-2.4 L — nick name
"Sirius" • late 1980s —
4G8 — 1.1 L • 1991-2007 —
4G9 — 1.5-2.0 L • 1993-? —
4A3 — 0.66-1.1 L • 2003–present —
4A9 — 1.3- 1.5 and 1.6 (2010–present) L • 2007–present —
4B1 — 1.8-2.4 L — nick name
"GEMA engine" • 2013–present —
4J1 — 1.8-2.4 L • 2017–present —
4B4 — 1.5 L • 2014–present —
4K1 — 1.8-2.4 L - Based on 4G6 block • 2017–present —
4K2 — 1.8-2.4 L - Based on 4G6 block Diesels: • 1963-? —
KE4 — 2.0 L • 1970-? —
4DR — 2,7 L : Two 2659 cc
straight-4 normally aspirated and
turbodiesels,
4DR5 and
4DR6, fitted to some Canter light trucks, and also fitted to the company's
Jeep which it built under licence from
Willys between 1953 and 1998. Also used in some larger forklift trucks. :*
4DR5: Bore x stroke 92.0mm x 100.0mm. Capacity 2659cc. Compression ratio 20.0:1. Naturally aspirated power output 80PS @ 3,800rpm. Torque output 18.0 kg/m @ 2,200rpm. The indirect injected 4DR5 produced from naturally aspirated , while the turbocharged and intercooled versions produced a torque of 22.5 kg/m (220.65 Nm) at 2000 RPM and had a compression ratio of 21.5:1, with a maximum power of at 3,300 rpm. :*
4DR6 with direct injection has a lower compression ratio of 17.5 producing a torque of 21.0 kgm (205.94 Nm) at 2000 rpm with a maximum power of at 3,500 rpm • 1980–present —
4D5 — 2.3-2.5 L — diesel versions of the
"Astron" engine • 1983-2008 —
4D6 — 1.8-2.0 L — diesel versions of the
"Sirius" engine • 1991-2019 —
4M4 — 2.8-3.2 L • 2010–present —
4N1 — 1.8-2.4 L
Six-cylinder/inline-6/V6 Mitsubishi has three families of
V6 engines, which have seen use in its midsize lines, coupés and compacts. • 1963-1970 —
KE6 — 2.0-3.5 L — A
straight-6 as gasoline or diesel engines. • 1970-1976 —
6G3 — 2.0 L —
"Saturn 6" straight-6 • 1986-2021 —
6G7 — 2.0-3.8 L —
"Cyclone V6" • 1992-2009 —
6A1 — 1.6-2.5 L • 2005–2021 —
6B3 — 3.0 L
Eight-cylinder/V8 • 1999-2008 —
8A8 — 4.5 L — For its Japan-only
Proudia and
Dignity models, Mitsubishi built an alloy-headed 4.5 L
V8 with
GDI. The vehicles proved unsuccessful, and were quickly discontinued. However, the range had been developed in conjunction with the
Hyundai Motor Company, whose
Hyundai Equus fared much better. ==See also==