Ford I4 DOHC engine

Ford I4 DOHC
The cylinder head with camshafts
Overview
ManufacturerFord Motor Company
Production1989-2006
Layout
ConfigurationNaturally aspirated Inline-4
Displacement2.0–2.3 L (1,998–2,295 cc)
Cylinder bore86 mm (3.39 in)
89.6 mm (3.53 in)
Piston stroke86 mm (3.39 in)
91 mm (3.58 in)
ValvetrainDOHC 2 & 4 valves x cyl.
Compression ratio9.8:1, 10.0:1, 10.3:1
RPM range
Max. engine speed6050
Combustion
Fuel systemCarbureted (on N8A)
Multi-point fuel injection
Fuel typePetrol
Cooling systemWater-cooled
Output
Power output107–150 hp (80–112 kW)
Torque output171–210 N⋅m (126–155 lb⋅ft)
Emissions
Emissions control systemsCatalytic converter (on N9C/N9E/NSD/NSE/N9D)

The Ford I4 DOHC engine is a cast iron block 4-cylinder inline internal combustion engine with twin overhead camshafts, produced by the Ford Motor Company at Dagenham Engine Plant. It was initially available as a 2.0 litre 8-valve version, and later in 2.0 and 2.3 litre 16-valve versions from 1989 to the end of production of the MK2 Ford Galaxy in 2006. It powered various Ford models during this time, but was most well known in the rear-wheel drive "Twin Cam" variants of the Ford Sierra and Ford Scorpio. Despite being built for the company's larger RWD models, Ford also employed the engine in the front-wheel drive Galaxy and the Escort RS 2000 16v.