Fiat 124 series engine

Fiat 124/OHV engine
131 A1.000 1.6 L (1,585 cc) OHV engine
Overview
ManufacturerFiat / Fiat Automóveis[broken anchor] (Brazil)
Production1966–1999
Layout
ConfigurationInline-4
Displacement1.2–2.0 L (1,197–1,995 cc)
Cylinder bore73 mm (2.87 in)
76 mm (2.99 in)
78 mm (3.07 in)
80 mm (3.15 in)
84 mm (3.31 in)
Piston stroke71.5 mm (2.81 in)
90 mm (3.54 in)
Cylinder block materialCast iron
Cylinder head materialAluminium
ValvetrainOHV 2 valves x cyl.
SOHC 2 valve x cyl.
Combustion
TurbochargerIn some versions
Fuel systemCarburetor, Indirect injection
Fuel typeGasoline, Diesel
Cooling systemWater-cooled
Chronology
SuccessorFiat Twin-cam

Designed by Aurelio Lampredi, the Fiat 124 engine first appeared in the all-new Fiat 124 in April 1966. The in-line four-cylinder engine comprised an iron block with an aluminium cylinder-head with pushrod actuated valves. The belt-driven design was ahead of its time when introduced. European production of the petrol versions ended with the Fiat 131 in 1984, but later diesel derivatives continued to be built until 1999. It did have a longer life in its twin-cam iteration, which continued in production until 2000. While originally of an overhead valve design, an overhead cam version was added to the facelifted 131 in 1981. The capacity was initially 1.2 L (1,197 cc) (in the Fiat 124), but eventually ranged between 1.2 and 1.9 L (1,197 and 1,929 cc). There were also three SOHC diesel iterations of 1.4, 1.7, and 1.9 litres. The last versions of this engine to be built were the diesels. The 1.9 L (1,929 cc) direct-injected diesel version was the first direct-injection diesel to appear in a production passenger car, the Fiat Croma Turbo D i.d.