Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/BL_O-Series_engine> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 triples per page.
- BL_O-Series_engine abstract "The BL O-Series engine is a straight-4 automobile engine family that was produced by British Leyland (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 cylinder head. 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, 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. 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. 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 original 8-valve version of the O-Series was also briefly used in budget versions of the Rover 800.".
- BL_O-Series_engine thumbnail Oseries.jpg?width=300.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageExternalLink index.htm?engineoseriesf.htm.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageID "5433888".
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageLength "3972".
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageOutDegree "41".
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageRevisionID "671867511".
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Aluminium.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Austin_Ambassador.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Austin_Maestro.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Austin_Montego.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Automobile.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink BL_R-Series_engine.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink BL_S-Series_engine.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink BMC_B-Series_engine.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink BMC_E-Series_engine.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink British_Leyland.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Car.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Category:British_Leyland_engines.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Category:Gasoline_engines_by_model.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Diesel_fuel.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink File:Oseries.jpg.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Gearbox.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Honda.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Inline-four_engine.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink LDV_Pilot.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Leyland_Sherpa.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink MG_Maestro.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink MG_Montego.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Morris_Ital.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Morris_Marina.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Naylor_TF_1700.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Overhead_camshaft.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Perkins_Engines.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Princess_(Automobile).
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Princess_(car).
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Rover_800.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Rover_800_Series.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Rover_Group.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Rover_M-Series_engine.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Rover_SD1.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Rover_T-Series_engine.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Straight-4.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLink Transmission_(mechanics).
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLinkText "Austin Rover O series".
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLinkText "BL O-Series engine".
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLinkText "BL O-Series".
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLinkText "O-Series engine".
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLinkText "O-Series".
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageWikiLinkText "O-series".
- BL_O-Series_engine hasPhotoCollection BL_O-Series_engine.
- BL_O-Series_engine wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- BL_O-Series_engine subject Category:British_Leyland_engines.
- BL_O-Series_engine subject Category:Gasoline_engines_by_model.
- BL_O-Series_engine hypernym Family.
- BL_O-Series_engine comment "The BL O-Series engine is a straight-4 automobile engine family that was produced by British Leyland (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.".
- BL_O-Series_engine label "BL O-Series engine".
- BL_O-Series_engine sameAs m.0dlpct.
- BL_O-Series_engine sameAs Q4835918.
- BL_O-Series_engine sameAs Q4835918.
- BL_O-Series_engine wasDerivedFrom BL_O-Series_engine?oldid=671867511.
- BL_O-Series_engine depiction Oseries.jpg.
- BL_O-Series_engine isPrimaryTopicOf BL_O-Series_engine.