engine bay

The Saab H engine is a redesign of the Saab B engine, which in turn was based on the Triumph Slant-4 engine.
Despite the name it is not an H engine or horizontally opposed engine, but a slanted inline-4. The H engine was introduced in 1981 in the Saab 900 and was also used in the Saab 99 from 1982 onwards.
H stood for high compression; higher compression was part of the update from B to H engine. It continued in use in the 900/9-3, 9000, and 9-5. The 2003 GM Epsilon-based 9-3 switched to the GM Ecotec engine, leaving the 9-5 as the sole user of the H engine. The H family of engine was used in the first-generation 9-5 until it was discontinued in 2010. The tooling and know-how was sold to BAIC.
The latter B2X4 and B2X5 engines have in practice nothing in common with the early B engines except cylinder spacing.
All versions feature a grey cast iron block and an aluminum head with a single or double overhead chain driven camshafts. SOHC engines use two valves per cylinder and DOHC versions use four valves per cylinder with a pentroof chamber, the valve angle being 22 degrees from vertical. All engines use flat inverted bucket type valve lifters, hydraulic in the case of DOHC engines.
The engines were given numbers, for instance B201 is a 2.0-litre (20) engine with one camshaft.

View More On Wikipedia.org
  1. shiremail

    MG ZS EV - Strap with metal clip connected to battery tray?

    Hello, I noticed a loose strap with a metal clip in the engine bay (direct near the battery tray). Does somebody has any idea for what it is used? With the given length, it would only fit under the negative pole of the battery. However, it is not connected like this (from the factory). Bye.
Back
Top Bottom