Simca Poissy engine

Simca Poissy engine
Overview
ManufacturerSimca
Also called1100
Production1961–1991
Layout
ConfigurationInline-4
Displacement
  • 0.8 L; 47.4 cu in (777 cc)
  • 0.8 L; 51.5 cu in (844 cc)
  • 0.9 L; 57.6 cu in (944 cc)
  • 1.1 L; 68.2 cu in (1,118 cc)
  • 1.2 L; 73.5 cu in (1,204 cc)
  • 1.3 L; 79.0 cu in (1,294 cc)
  • 1.4 L; 88.0 cu in (1,442 cc)
  • 1.6 L; 97.1 cu in (1,592 cc)
Cylinder bore
  • 74 mm (2.9 in)
  • 76.7 mm (3.02 in)
Piston stroke70 mm (2.8 in)
ValvetrainOHV 2 valves x cyl.
Combustion
Fuel systemSingle or double-barrel carburetors
Fuel typeGasoline
Oil systemCentrifugal oil filter
Cooling systemWater-cooled
Output
Power output34–120 PS (25–88 kW; 34–118 hp)
Chronology
PredecessorRush engine
SuccessorPSA TU engine

The Simca Poissy engine, commonly known as the Simca 1100 engine, was a four-cylinder overhead valve engine developed by Simca for use in its superminis and economy cars, designed by the engineer Georges Martin (V12 Matra Sports engine designer). In spite of its common name, the engine actually predates the Simca 1100 model, and debuted in 1961 in the Simca 1000. It was developed and produced by Simca (subsequently rebranded as Talbot) in the late 1960s at the manufacturer's factory in Poissy, hence its name.

The engine was first designed in a 944 cc (57.6 cu in) form, but was reduced and stretched in order to be used in a variety of models and versions, by Simca, the Rootes Group (its partner company in Chrysler Europe), Simca's final incarnation Talbot and its last parent company Peugeot, who used it until 1991 in its midsize model, the 309. The engine existed in displacements ranging from 0.8 to 1.6 L (777 to 1,592 cc), the biggest one on both sides of the Atlantic, powering the United States-market Dodge Omni/Plymouth Horizon.

Peugeot eventually dropped the engines, replacing them with their own TU family.