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The BL O-series engine is an
automobile A car, or an automobile, is a motor vehicle with wheels. Most definitions of cars state that they run primarily on roads, Car seat, seat one to eight people, have four wheels, and mainly transport private transport#Personal transport, peopl ...
straight-four engine family that was produced by the Austin-Morris division of
British Leyland British Leyland was a British automotive engineering and manufacturing Conglomerate (company), conglomerate formed in 1968 as British Leyland Motor Corporation Ltd (BLMC), following the merger of Leyland Motors and British Motor Holdings. It wa ...
(BL) as a development of the BMC B-series engine family. (See also another B-series successor, the BMC E-series engine.) Introduced by BL in 1978 in the rear wheel drive Series 3 Morris Marina and the smaller engined versions of the front-wheel-drive Princess, it was intended to replace the 1.8 L B-series unit. The main advance over the B series was that the new unit was of belt driven overhead camshaft configuration, with an
aluminium Aluminium (or aluminum in North American English) is a chemical element; it has chemical symbol, symbol Al and atomic number 13. It has a density lower than that of other common metals, about one-third that of steel. Aluminium has ...
cylinder head.


Design

Offered in the unusual capacity of 1.7 L as well as 2.0 L, it proved to be reliable and was widely used in BL vehicles. These included the rear wheel drive Morris Ital of 1980 (1.7 L or 2.0 L with an automatic gear box), the rear wheel drive Rover SD1 of 1982 (2.0 L only), and 1.7 L and 2.0 L in the front wheel drive Austin Ambassador – in fact the only engine offered in this model. In 1984, it was reworked for installation in high specification 2.0 L versions of the front-wheel drive Austin Maestro and
Austin Montego The Austin Montego is a British family car that was produced by British Leyland from 1984 until 1988, and then by Rover Group from 1988 until 1995. The Montego was the replacement for both the rear-wheel drive Morris Ital and the front-wheel dri ...
, where it was later optionally available with fuel injection or turbo-charging. This installation of the O-series was adapted for use with the Honda PG-1 end-on manual gearbox, replacing the gearbox-in-sump design traditionally used on British Leyland front-wheel-drive products. The 1.7 L O-series was not used in these vehicles, which featured R- and later S-series 1.6 L units instead. The cylinder blocks of the transmission-in-sump (Princess/Ambassador), rear wheel drive longitudinal (Marina/Ital/Rover SD1), and the transverse, end-on transmission (Maestro/Montego/Rover 800) versions are not interchangeable. A notable advantage of the 2-litre, petrol O-series engine is that the cylinder head does not require modification to run on unleaded petrol due to having hardened valve seats. Other O-series engines, however, cannot run on unleaded without modification of the cylinder head or use of an additive. By 1987, British Leyland (now known as the Rover Group) equipped the O-series with a 16-valve cylinder head for the Rover 800. This 2.0 L unit was known as the M series, and was further reworked into the T series in 1992. The 8-valve version of the O-series was also briefly used in budget versions of the Rover 800, although confusingly this was given the "M8" designation in official Rover service publications – implying it was an 8-valve version of the M Series engine, although it was identical to the O series used in the Maestro and Montego.


1.7 L petrol engine

The 1.7 L displaces . It is an 8-valve SOHC design with an aluminium head and iron block. The engine is a spark-ignition 4-stroke naturally aspirated petrol engine. Fuel system is via carburettor. Power is at 5150 rpm in the Morris Marina, and at 5200 rpm in the Austin Ambassador. Net torque is at 3500 rpm. When installed in the Sherpa van, it had a lowered compression ratio of 7.8 : 1 and could be run on lower octane, "two-star" petrol. Maximum power for this variant is at 4100 rpm, torque is at 3000 rpm. Bore x stroke:


Applications

* 1978 - 1980 Morris Marina * 1980 - 1984 Morris Ital * 1978 - 1981 Princess 2 * 1982 - 1984 Austin Ambassador * 1978 - 198x Leyland/Morris/Freight Rover Sherpa (200) * Naylor/Hutson TF 1700


2.0 L petrol engine

The 2.0 L displaces . It is an 8-valve SOHC design with an aluminium head and iron block. The engine is a spark-ignition, four-stroke naturally aspirated petrol engine. Fuel system is via carburettor. Power is at 5250 rpm in the Austin Ambassador. Net torque is at 3250 rpm. Maximum power for the lower compression variant installed in the Freight Rover (later Leyland DAF 200/400) is at 4250 rpm, torque is at 3500 rpm. Bore x stroke:


Applications

* 1980–1984 Morris Ital * 1982 Rover SD1 * 1978 - 1981 Princess 2 * 1982–1984 Austin Ambassador * 1985-1992 MG Maestro * 1984–1993 Austin/MG Montego * 1978 - 198x Leyland/Morris/Freight Rover Sherpa (200) * 1983 - 1989 Freight Rover Sherpa 300 series * 1989 - 1991 Leyland DAF 400 * 1988 - 1991 Rover 820


Diesel versions

In 1986, BL collaborated with Perkins to convert the O-series to run on diesel. The oil-burning versions, known as the Rover MDi or Perkins Prima, proved to be highly successful in the Maestro and Montego, and helped sustain the ailing mid-sized models into the 1990s. Perkins successfully marketed the engine under its own brand in the industrial and marine sectors. It was further developed by MG Rover to form their Rover L-series engine, which was manufactured until 2005. Examples of vehicles using the diesel version of the O-series engine: * Austin Maestro *
Austin Montego The Austin Montego is a British family car that was produced by British Leyland from 1984 until 1988, and then by Rover Group from 1988 until 1995. The Montego was the replacement for both the rear-wheel drive Morris Ital and the front-wheel dri ...
* 1987 - 1993 Freight Rover Sherpa 200/Leyland DAF 200/LDV 200


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Bl O-Series Engine O BMC engines Gasoline engines by model Straight-four engines