Toyota Type C engine
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The Type A engine was a straight-six engine produced from 1935 through 1947 by
Toyota is a Japanese multinational automotive manufacturer headquartered in Toyota City, Aichi, Japan. It was founded by Kiichiro Toyoda and incorporated on . Toyota is one of the largest automobile manufacturers in the world, producing about 10 ...
. The Type B was a technically more advanced version of the Type A. There was an enlarged version of this, called the Type D, but it did not enter production. The Type C was a straight-four engine derived from the Type A. Many parts were interchangeable between the Type A, Type B and Type C engines (e.g. pistons, valves, rods). Many of the same parts were also interchangeable with the
Chevrolet Stovebolt engine The Chevrolet Stovebolt engine is a straight-six engine made in two versions between 1929 and 1962 by the Chevrolet, Chevrolet Division of General Motors. It replaced the company's Chevrolet Straight-4 engine, inline-four as their sole engine o ...
, from which it was derived. The Type E was a copy of a DKW engine. The Type S was a straight-four engine that replaced the Type A, B and C in Toyota's passenger cars.


Type A

The Type A engine was Toyota's first production engine, being produced from 1935 through 1947. This engine was a
pushrod A valvetrain or valve train is a mechanical system that controls the operation of the intake and exhaust valves in an internal combustion engine. The intake valves control the flow of air/fuel mixture (or air alone for direct-injected engines) ...
,
overhead valve An overhead valve (OHV) engine, sometimes called a ''pushrod engine'', is a piston engine whose valves are located in the cylinder head above the combustion chamber. This contrasts with earlier flathead engines, where the valves were located b ...
, 6-cylinder, three bearing engine copied from the 1929–36 Chevrolet Gen-1 3 bearing Stovebolt L6 OHV engine. By virtue of a modified intake manifold it produced , while the Chevrolet engine produced . GM used a number of local Japanese suppliers for the smaller engine parts (e.g. carburettors) while the Osaka Assembly location was open until appropriated by the Imperial Japanese Government. Toyota was able to use the same suppliers for its cars. The parts were identical enough that pistons, rods, valves, etc. could be used in both the Chevrolet and Toyota engines interchangeably. There are several recorded instances of parts intended for one being used to repair the other. Toyota had initially considered copying the Ford flathead V8 engine because it was the most popular engine in Japan at the time. However, the machining of two separate banks of cylinders would add too much to the production cost, so the Chevrolet engine was copied instead. The Ford Model T was also being manufactured in Japan beginning in March 1925, followed by the Ford Model A in 1927; both used the flathead
Ford Model T engine The Ford Model T used a sidevalve, reverse-flow cylinder head inline 4-cylinder engine. It was primarily a gasoline engine. It produced for a top speed of . It was built in-unit with the Model T's novel transmission (a planetary design), s ...
. Other references to the Chevy engine claim different power figures. Different manufactures used different measuring techniques (e.g. with or without the generator/alternator connected), engines differed from year to year and that some manufacturers simply lied. In this case, Toyota did back to back comparisons using the same techniques, so it is likely that the Toyota engine did in fact produce slightly more power than the Chevy engine on which it was based. Also, the Chevy engine was likely to be a year or two old, so the current Chevy engine may have produced even more power.


Applications

* A1 prototype car * AA sedan * AB cabriolet * G1 truck * GA truck


Type B

The Type B was a more technically advanced version of the Type A. Production commenced in November 1938 with the opening of Toyota's Koromo plant. The design was based on the Chevrolet 207 engine, and built under license but with metric dimensions and minor revisions to suit the local market. It had a four-bearing crank and shaft-mounted rocker arms, as did the Chevrolet engine. The type B engine remained in production until 1956 at least. The original output was at 3000 rpm. In January 1940 this was increased to at the same engine speed. Another bump, to occurred at the time of the BM truck's introduction in March 1947. A 1944 prototype for a large passenger car called "Toyota Large B" also received the B-series engine, although with a higher 6.9:1 compression ratio and producing . This was also the output of the improved engine fitted to the 4-ton BA and 2.5-ton BC trucks which were built until February and July 1956 respectively. The Type B was complemented and eventually supplanted by the similar 3.9 L Type F which first appeared in 1951. The Type F is based on the larger OHV GMC Straight-6 engine built from 1939 until 1963 in the same way that the Type A and Type B were based on the Chevrolet engines of their times. There was also an experimental 4-liter version called the Type D. An unrelated four-cylinder diesel engine introduced in the 1970s was also called the Type B.


Applications

* Toyota AC sedan * 1938-1942 Toyota GB truck * 1940-1941 Toyota HB truck, a shortened GB * 1942-1944
Toyota KB The Toyota G1 was the first truck built by the company that became Toyota. It was long, could carry 1.5 tons, and was loosely based on similar class Ford Motor Company, Ford and General Motors, GM trucks. The G1 was succeeded by a line of simila ...
truck * 1943-1947 Toyota KC/ KCY truck * 1947-1951 Toyota BM truck, also shorter wheelbase BS model from 1949 * 1949- Toyota BL bus * 1951-1955 BX/BZ truck (82 PS) * 1951-1955 BJ Jeep (predecessor to the Land Cruiser) * 1952- Toyota BQ 3/4-ton 4WD truck, reserved for security and police forces * Toyota BH26 Police Patrol Car (using a modified Toyopet Crown RS body) * Toyota BH28 Ambulance * 1954-1956 BA/BC truck (85 PS, improved BX type)


Type C

The Type C was produced from 1939 through 1941. It was formed by removing two cylinders from a Type A engine.


Applications

* AE sedan * AK 4WD


Type D

The Type D was a larger version of the B engine developed in early 1944, featuring an increased bore while retaining the same stroke. It was a direct response to a national order issued in 1940, instructing Toyota to develop a higher output engine based on the B. It did not enter series production, with Toyota instead developing the somewhat smaller Type F engine after the war. Output was .


Type E

The Type E was produced in 1938 only for the prototype EA sedan. It was a copy of the two-stroke engine used in the
DKW F7 The DKW F7 is a front-wheel-drive compact car, small family car launched by Auto Union’s DKW division in 1937 as a replacement for the DKW F5. The body Changes between the F5 and the F7 were mostly at a detailed level. However, the entry leve ...
.


Applications

* EA FWD sedan (a copy of the DKW F7) * EB RWD sedan


Type S

The Type S was produced from 1947"Fifty Years of Toyota Concept Cars", in "the wheel extended", vol 17, no.3, 1987, Toyota Motor Corporation, through 1959. It was unrelated to previous Toyota overhead valve engines, being designed by reverse-engineering a 1930s Adler Trumpf Junior's engine, and used the less sophisticated
flathead engine A flathead engine, also known as a sidevalve engine''American Rodder'', 6/94, pp.45 & 93. or valve-in-block engine is an internal combustion engine with its poppet valves contained within the engine block, instead of in the cylinder head, as ...
design which was short lived.


Applications

* SA sedan * SB light truck * SC sedan * SD sedan * SF sedan * SG light truck * Toyopet SH Custom sedan * Toyopet Light Truck SKB/SK20 Toyoace * ST10
Corona Corona (from the Latin for 'crown') most commonly refers to: * Stellar corona, the outer atmosphere of the Sun or another star * Corona (beer), a Mexican beer * Corona, informal term for the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, which causes the COVID-19 di ...
, ST16 Corona Van


See also

*
List of Toyota engines This is a list of piston engines developed, independently or with other car companies, by Toyota Motor Corporation. Engine codes Toyota has produced a wide variety of automobile engines, including four-cylinder and V6 engines. The company follows ...
* Toyota AA passenger car *
Toyota G1 The Toyota G1 was the first truck built by the company that became Toyota. It was long, could carry 1.5 tons, and was loosely based on similar class Ford and GM trucks. The G1 was succeeded by a line of similar Toyota trucks as technology progr ...
truck


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Toyota Type A Engine A Straight-six engines ja:トヨタ・A型エンジン (初代) ja:トヨタ・B型エンジン (初代) ja:トヨタ・C型エンジン (初代)