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- | == A-series Nissan Engines == | + | The A14 and A15 engines fit in the 1200 with only minor changes. The A14 and A15 are by far the most popular swapping candidates since the bigger displacement of the A14 and A15 means both more power (peak HP) and more low-speed power (torque) than the A12 engine. Remember: "theres no substitute for cubic inches". |
- | The A14 and A15 engines are "tall deck" engines, and are 3/4 inch higher than A12s. However, they fit in the 1200 with only [http://datsun1200.com/modules/nsections/index.php?op=viewarticle&artid=13 minor changes]. This also applies to the 1974 A13 engine. The A14 and A15 are by far the most popular swapping candidates since the bigger displacement of the A14 and A15 means both more power (peak HP) and more low-speed power (torque) than the A12, A13 or A12A. | + | |
+ | = Overview = | ||
+ | The A14 and A15 are by far the most popular swapping candidates since the bigger displacement of the A14 and A15 means both more power (peak HP) and more low-speed power (torque) than the A12, A13 or A12A. As they say, "There is no replacement for displacement". | ||
- | [http://datsun1200.com/modules/myalbum/photo.php?lid=776 http://datsun1200.com/modules/myalbum/photos/thumbs/776.jpg] | + | A12: 68 hp, 70 lb ft torque |
- | A14 GX Engine | + | A14: 80 hp, 77-83 torque |
+ | A15: 80 hp | ||
- | [http://datsun1200.com/modules/myalbum/photo.php?lid=4779 http://datsun1200.com/modules/myalbum/photos/thumbs/4779.jpg] | + | A15 in 1200 |
- | A15 Engine deck | + | <br>{{Album|1409}} |
- | [http://datsun1200.com/modules/myalbum/photo.php?lid=4780 http://datsun1200.com/modules/myalbum/photos/thumbs/4780.jpg] | + | Note that there are 65 HP A14s and A15s too. While less powerful than an A12, they still have more torque so will be an improvement for easy driving. You can identify these by the [[ID]] plate in the engine compartment (with HP figures) or by noting if the intake manifold is round-port. Only the oval port engines are 80HP. Additionally, all 1981 and later engines are less than 80HP. |
- | A15 Engine (left side) | + | |
- | Like all 1974-up engines. the A14/A15 have the motor mount bosses in a different place compared to the 1971-1973 A12 engines. So the engine mounts are a bit different. This photos illustrates the difference: | + | The A14 and A15 engines are "tall deck" engines, and are 3/4 inch higher than A12. However, they fit in the 1200 with a change to the exhaust pipe due to the height. This also applies to the 1974 [[A13]] engine. |
- | <br>[http://datsun1200.com/modules/myalbum/photo.php?lid=1779 http://datsun1200.com/modules/myalbum/photos/thumbs/1779.jpg] | + | |
- | <br>Stock left-side mount in Datsun 1200, but Newer A12 engine. A better way is to move the brackets on the engine, to get the engine lower. You could also 1) use the 1974-up ute crossmember or 2) modify the crossmember. For more details, see [http://datsun1200.com/modules/nsections/index.php?op=viewarticle&artid=13 Fitting Datsun A14 & 15 Engine] | + | |
+ | With later 1200s (1974 and newer), newer engines bolt right in. With original 1970-1973 1200s, simple changes to the motor mounts will allow the newer A12, A14 or A15 to fit in. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Album|17994}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | = Swap Factors = | ||
+ | Take these factors into account when swapping: | ||
+ | * 1967-1973 motor mounts vs 1974-up mounts. Simple adapters can be used. | ||
+ | * increased deck height of A14/A15 raises exhaust pipe (ditto for the [[Old A13|1974 A13 engine]]) | ||
+ | * 3-bolt vs 2-bolt and single outlet vs twin outlet exhaust flange | ||
+ | * A14/A15 calls for stronger transmission. The late 1200 56A type is good, the smooth 60A is more ideal though | ||
+ | * A15 needs stronger differential than 1967-1974 [[H145]] type | ||
+ | * Legalities. Some states in Australia have a displacement limit for swaps (eg, more than 20% larger displacement requires certification) In that case, A14 can be swapped into 1200 as it is within 20% more displacement, but A15 requires certification as it has a 20% larger displacement. Using the A15 crank/rods/pistons in the A14 block gives you a legal 'A15' swap without needing certification. | ||
+ | |||
+ | = Exhaust Pipe = | ||
+ | The regular Datsun 1200 uses a 2-bolt exhaust pipe. A14/A15 use a 3-bolt exhaust flange. A12GX and A15E use a dual-outlet flange. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Tall deck engines (eg, tall deck A13/14/15) are ~20mm or 3/4" taller than their short decked counterparts (eg, A12) | ||
+ | |||
+ | So get a short section of the exhaust pipe, and have it welded to your exhaust system. Add 3/4" length so the pipe fits in the same location. If you don't have the pipe, any exhaust shop can fabricate the correct part. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Album|22852}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | <blockquote><b>Exhaust Pipe</b>: The section of pipe between the manifold and the muffler</blockquote> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Tri-bolt exhaust pipe | ||
+ | <br>{{Photo!|SAM_0269.jpg}} {{Album|22143}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | Also See: [[Exhaust Manifold#Gasket]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | Cut this portion of the exhaust pipe off an A14/A15 vehicle, weld to the 1200 exhaust pipe | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|22851}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | A15E [[EGI]] engine uses a twin outlet manifold similar to the A12GX/A12T, so a flange and merge setup will need to be sourced or fabricated similar to above to suit that setup | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|4084}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | = Transmission = | ||
+ | If upgrading a 1970-1972 Datsun 1200 to an A14 or A15, use the stronger 4-speed that comes with the A14 or A15. It is a '''bolt-in replacement'''. Be sure to get the matching set: Flywheel, clutch release sleeeve, engine plate and transmission. See [[60-Series Transmission#Swap Notes|Gearbox Swap Notes]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The early 1200 4-speed will work fine with an A14 if you drive it smoothly. But the A15 has a bit to much torque to be reliable. It may work for a long time, but it may give out. Chipped teeth is the normal problem. | ||
+ | |||
+ | If your 1200 already has the 56A 4-speed it is strong enough for an A15. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Peek under the car, on the right side of the gearbox for the letter 56A and you are golden: | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|21400}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | Or in this area (56A late ute super strong): | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|1680}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | = Differential = | ||
+ | The stock [[H145]] from a Datsun 1200 coupe/sedan/wagon is not rated for the torque of an A14 or A15. It can handle the horsepower, but not the torque. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * An A14 or low-torque A15 will be OK in front of an H145. A15 after 1981 is low torque. | ||
+ | * While some club members have had their H145 last behind an A15, many have had it break. It is the ring & pinion gears (CWP) that break, not the axles. | ||
+ | |||
+ | For upgrades you can either: 1) Fit an H150 diff center into your 1200 housing. See [[H150#Swap_Into_H145_Housing|H150 center swap]] or 2) Swap an entire rear axle assembly into your 1200. See [[Rear Axle Swaps]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | = Engine Location = | ||
+ | It is important to get the new engine in the same location as the original, so that the original [[driveshaft]] fits properly. (You can locate the engine further back if you want to customize the driveshaft.) | ||
+ | |||
+ | A14/A15 engine mounts are '''35 mm''' further back in location than early (B110) A12. If you locate the engine like this, it will be in the correct spot | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|1779}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | <blockquote>Note that late A12 (1974 and up) use exactly the same mounts as A14/A14.</blockquote> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Engine setback is approximately 2-1/2 inches from firewall to back of rocker cover | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|23550}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | = Engine Mounts = | ||
+ | A14/A15 bolts directly into newer 1200 (1974 & newer utes). | ||
+ | |||
+ | When fitting to older 1200s, the easiest thing to do is use simple flat plates to adapt the motor. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The most elegant way is to swap crossmembers. If you can find the right crossmember. For example: 1975 A12 with 1974-up crossmember. Or 1972 A12 with 1970-1973 crossmember. | ||
+ | |||
+ | 1974-up engines (including all A14/A15 engines) have the motor mount bosses in a different place compared to the 1971-1973 A12 engines. So the engine mounts are a bit different. This photos illustrates the difference: | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|1779}} | ||
+ | <br>Stock left-side mount in Datsun 1200, but Newer A12 engine. All it needs is a simple flat plate with two holes drilled in it. | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|26378|png}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Alternatively''', you could 1) use the 1974-up 1200 crossmember or 2) modify the crossmember or 3) modify the engine brackets. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Crossmember Swap == | ||
+ | Be sure to get a matched set: | ||
+ | * Late Engine + Late Engine mounting brackets + Late Engine Crossmember | ||
+ | OR | ||
+ | * Early Engine + Early Engine mounting brackets + Early Engine Crossmember | ||
+ | |||
+ | Early engines are 1967-1973, and late engines are 1974-up. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <b>Swap the crossmember?</b> Swapping crossmembers is fairly easy. There are two bolts on each side, plus the LCA bushing mount. But you don't have to swap crossmembers -- it's just one way of doing it. Perhaps the most elegant way. See [[Changing Crossmember]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Album|23609}} {{Album|20925}} {{Album|20924}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | Early vs Late Engine crossmembers | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|8487}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Late Engine onto Early Crossmember == | ||
+ | When fitting a 1974-or-newer engine into an orginal Datsun 1200, and using the original crossmber, modifications to the engine mount brackets are needed. | ||
+ | |||
+ | There is no need modify the crossmember, although that can be done. It is easy to modify the brackets. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Left Side Mount Location === | ||
+ | Left Side (manifold side) of A-series engine: change to 1974 and newer blocks: Engine mount bolt bosses were moved back 35mm (1-3/8") on the late blocks. | ||
+ | |||
+ | 154 mm: Early block front face to center of mount | ||
+ | <br>{{PhotoAlbum|19179.jpg|23475}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | 189 mm: Revised block front face to center of mount | ||
+ | <br>{{PhotoAlbum|6109.jpg|23474}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | 1. Remove this Late LH bracket, and discard | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|2564}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | 2. Obtain a duplicate late RH bracket, and then fit it to the LH side. Old A12 brackets won't fit, but new A12/A14/A15 brackets will: | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|20923}} B210 vs B310 Right Bracket | ||
+ | <br>Which is best for this swap? | ||
+ | |||
+ | 3. The new mounts are 35mm (1-3/8") further back. So drill two holes in a flat plate and mount it like this: | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|1779}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | If the engine is centered and the plate holes drilled correctly, it will fit straight as above. | ||
+ | |||
+ | If the engine is not centered, the plate can be skewed: | ||
+ | <br>{{PB2|h16|datsik1200||Photo-0283-1.jpg|}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | There are three different RH mounts, some allow the engine to sit higher or lower than the others. If the mount is now up too high, slot the bolt holes for the engine bracket, and slide the mount up on the block the thickness of the plate, then tighten. This will lower the engine a bit. | ||
+ | |||
+ | RH engine mount brackets (old) 55mm bolt center (new) 50 mm bolt center | ||
+ | <br>Lower bolt is 5mm higher on new engine, so mounts actually bolt at the same level. | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|23553}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | Perhaps a 3mm difference. | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|23552}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Alternatively''', you can put the mount on the last accessory boss, which is 26mm (1") farther forward than early blocks. With this choice, you will need to redrill the lower hole on the engine mount bracket, 8mm over. And you will still need to slot the mounts and use a flat plate. Nothing gained, but it takes a little more work this way. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Alternative mount location | ||
+ | <br>{{PhotoAlbum|6109_.jpg|23474}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | Re-drill the lower bracket hole, and re-drill the crossmember horn hole 26mm farther forward (no plate needed). Rubber sits to one side of horn. Aircon cannot be used with this choice, as the bolt boss is for the A/C compressor. | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|209}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Right Side Mount === | ||
+ | Right side (spark-plug/oil pump/starter side) engine mount bracket is practically the same Late vs Early. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Album|2563}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | Two types of right-side brackets: B210 vs B310 Right Bracket | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|20923}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | end result with flat plate | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|1779}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | The only thing you might need to do is Measure engine installed angle and if you need to lower it a little bit: | ||
+ | * try the other RH side bracket (not sure which one is best), OR | ||
+ | * slot the bracket bolt holes (where it bolts to the engine) so you can bolt it slightly higher on the block | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Custom Brackets === | ||
+ | For the cleanest look, instead of using adaper plates, you may cut and re-weld the brackets so they fit just so. You can fabricate the LH and RH brackets to have the 35mm offset and be a bit lower. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Album|8131}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Album|210|JPG}} {{Album|21058}} {{Album|21059}} {{Album|21060}} {{Album|21061}} {{Album|21062}} {{Album|21063}} {{Album|21064}} {{Album|21065}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Discussions and Details === | ||
+ | The simplest way to fit the motor mounts is a flat plate: | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|26378|png}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{PB2|h16|datsik1200||Photo-0283-1.jpg}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | If you use the correct engine bracket it will be very close to level, maybe about 4mm higher. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Three different Right Side engine brackets. Which is best for a swap? | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|20945}} | ||
- | = Discussions = | ||
* cheater_5 wrote up a detailed conversion here: [http://datsun1200.com/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=28919&forum=1 Cheaters a15 into 1200 conversion] | * cheater_5 wrote up a detailed conversion here: [http://datsun1200.com/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=28919&forum=1 Cheaters a15 into 1200 conversion] | ||
- | * An A14 installation Mildman undertook has been quite significantly detailed at the following web link. (Check the A14 Installation links) | + | * An A14 installation Mildman undertook has been quite significantly detailed at the following web link: [http://mildman.datsunprojects.org/Blue_index.htm Mildman's A14 Installation] |
- | [http://mildman.datsunprojects.org/Blue_index.htm Mildman's A14 Installation] | + | |
- | * There is also a technical article at the datsun1200.com site that discusses this installation too. | + | == Early Engine onto Late Crossmember == |
- | [http://datsun1200.com/modules/nsections/index.php?op=listarticles&secid=2 Datsun1200.com Tech Section] | + | To fit an early (1970-1973) engine into a later 1200, you can either [[#Crossmember_Swap|swap crossmembers]], OR just use simple adapter plates on each side as explained below. |
+ | |||
+ | === Use Newer Mounts === | ||
+ | <b>Or use newer engine mounts?</b> You can modify the engine mount brackets to fit an early A12 engine (GX, anyone?) into your later 1200. The only trick is to drill a flat plate to bridge the 35mm difference in back-to-front location. | ||
+ | |||
+ | # Use Datsun 1200 RH mount | ||
+ | # Use 120Y A12 or B210 A14, or any B310 LH mount with a longer bolt | ||
+ | # Drill two holes in 4mm flat plates | ||
+ | |||
+ | 4mm thick plates. The mount bracket overlaps the insulator so it is partially supported by it -- in other words, it is plenty strong and doesn't stress the rubber insulator. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Right Side | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|23572}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | Left Side | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|23573}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | Use the B110 [[Radiator#Lower_Radiator_Hose|lower radiator hose]] to clear the alternator. The new A12 places the alternator on the other side of the engine compared to the original A12. You'll also need to extend the alternator wires to go to the other side. | ||
+ | {{Album|23597}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Right Mount Bracket === | ||
+ | The original A12 RH bracket is very similar to the newer bracket -- but the newer RH bracket doesn't fit the original A12 engine. So use the RH bracket that matches the engine. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Left Mount Bracket === | ||
+ | On the LH side, use a LH engine bracket from a late engine. The newer LH bracket will match the newer or older LH crossmember horn. The height is perfect and no adjustment is needed. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Old A12 uses stepped bracket (upper boss is set back). To fit New A12 bracket, remove the stud and use a longer stud, or a bolt. | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|23554}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | To fit the new A12 bracket, use 19mm worth of washers and a longer bolt or stud. Bolt centers are the same for the original A12 stepped bracket and the revised A12 flat bracket, so it fits just right | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|23555}} | ||
- | === What's Better? A14 or A15? === | + | = Swap Notes = |
- | It depends on what you mean by 'better':<ul><li>A14 often have better availability, meaning you can find one at an inexpensive price. <li>A15 has 7% more capacity than the A14, meaning an automatic power increase in low and mid-range RPMs, all else being equal | + | * 1200 wiring will reach either Distributor (under #1 or under #3) |
- | <li>A14 and A15 stock bottom ends can both rev to [http://datsun1200.com/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=14157&forum=1 8,500 rpm] so there's no advantage there. With modified short blocks, both can rev to 10,000 rpm<li>Since both use the same cylinder head, there is little top-end power advantage with either engine (both will put out the same top-end power, but the A15 has additional power at lower speeds)</ul> | + | * Alternator fits on opposites sides. Late engines have right-side alternator. |
+ | ** Can refit alternator to other side, but not necessary | ||
+ | ** use extension wires to reach across (Ground, Battery, and FN/LS wires). Be sure to use the same thickness (gauge) wire as original. | ||
+ | ** Newer engine may have an alternator marked S-L. If so, simple wiring mods can be done. | ||
+ | * Radiator hoses are different for the original 1200 low-mount alternator. | ||
+ | = Datsun 1000 = | ||
+ | When fitting an A12 into Datsun 1000, use 3mm spacer on the engine mounts so that the deeper pan will clear the 1000 crossmember. Reference: [{{Post|480339}} 1000 vs 1200 oil pans] | ||
- | Remember: "There is no replacement for displacement" (aka "theres no substitute for cubic inches"). | + | {{UploadPost|174_57a000cf5cbb0.jpg|480296|width=0}} {{UploadPost|174_57a000efe74f3.jpg|480296|width=0}} |
+ | When fitting late A-series (1974-up) you can unpick the crossmember uprights, then weld on the late-model uprights | ||
+ | <br>{{Album|16210}} {{Album|16211}} {{Album|16209}} {{Album|16208}} | ||
- | '''But isn't the A15 stroke to long to rev high?''' | + | = HB210 = |
- | <br>If you drive an A15-powered car, you will see the tachometer rev up. No worries. | + | North American B210 came with A14 fitted with mid-sump engine pan. |
- | A long stroke determines fast wear occurs at a given RPM. But with even longer stroke Chevrolet smallblock V8s running at 10,000 rpm, the A15 stroke looks small by comparison. A15s could rev even higher, but just like the A14 would need special valve train modifications and a scavenging oil pump with dry sump to make it worthwhile. | + | * if swapping this HB210 engine into 1200, swap the pan and pickup tube with the newer B310 A14 pan and pickup tube. |
+ | * If swapping an engine into a North America B210, see [[B210 Engine Swaps#North America]] | ||
- | Since A14s and A15s run the same cylinder head and valve train, maximum horsepower is for all practical purposes equal. All things being equal, with both the A14 and A15 using the same well-prepared and flowed cylinder head, they'll make the same top-end power. | + | = B310 = |
+ | B310 fits all A-series engines from 1974 on. There is no bolt-in crossmember for the early A-series engine. | ||
- | === Rod length-to-stroke ratio === | + | {{Photo|B310-crossmember-3.jpg|Datsun%20Misc/B310}} {{Photo|B310-crossmember-1.jpg|Datsun%20Misc/B310}} {{Photo|B310-crossmember-2.jpg|Datsun%20Misc/B310}} |
- | A long rod-length-to-stroke ratios is more efficient. To get this, you need longer rods to match a longer stroke. However, A14 and A15 use the same length rod. From previous discussion, an optimal rod-to-stroke ratio is good for about 1% power. The A14 doesn't have an optimal ratio but would need a longer rod itself. But either way the A15 is 7% larger displacement across the entire RPM range. | + | |
+ | = Questions = | ||
+ | * What's Better? A14 or A15? | ||
+ | * But isn't the A15 stroke too long to rev high? | ||
+ | * Aren't the rods too short in the A14? | ||
+ | For answers, see: [[Engine Swaps]], section "A-series Nissan Engines" | ||
- | [[Category:Engine Modifications]] | + | [[Category:Engine Modifications]] [[Category:Engine Swaps]]{{End}} |
Current revision
The A14 and A15 engines fit in the 1200 with only minor changes. The A14 and A15 are by far the most popular swapping candidates since the bigger displacement of the A14 and A15 means both more power (peak HP) and more low-speed power (torque) than the A12 engine. Remember: "theres no substitute for cubic inches".
Contents |
Overview
The A14 and A15 are by far the most popular swapping candidates since the bigger displacement of the A14 and A15 means both more power (peak HP) and more low-speed power (torque) than the A12, A13 or A12A. As they say, "There is no replacement for displacement".
A12: 68 hp, 70 lb ft torque A14: 80 hp, 77-83 torque A15: 80 hp
Note that there are 65 HP A14s and A15s too. While less powerful than an A12, they still have more torque so will be an improvement for easy driving. You can identify these by the ID plate in the engine compartment (with HP figures) or by noting if the intake manifold is round-port. Only the oval port engines are 80HP. Additionally, all 1981 and later engines are less than 80HP.
The A14 and A15 engines are "tall deck" engines, and are 3/4 inch higher than A12. However, they fit in the 1200 with a change to the exhaust pipe due to the height. This also applies to the 1974 A13 engine.
With later 1200s (1974 and newer), newer engines bolt right in. With original 1970-1973 1200s, simple changes to the motor mounts will allow the newer A12, A14 or A15 to fit in.
Swap Factors
Take these factors into account when swapping:
- 1967-1973 motor mounts vs 1974-up mounts. Simple adapters can be used.
- increased deck height of A14/A15 raises exhaust pipe (ditto for the 1974 A13 engine)
- 3-bolt vs 2-bolt and single outlet vs twin outlet exhaust flange
- A14/A15 calls for stronger transmission. The late 1200 56A type is good, the smooth 60A is more ideal though
- A15 needs stronger differential than 1967-1974 H145 type
- Legalities. Some states in Australia have a displacement limit for swaps (eg, more than 20% larger displacement requires certification) In that case, A14 can be swapped into 1200 as it is within 20% more displacement, but A15 requires certification as it has a 20% larger displacement. Using the A15 crank/rods/pistons in the A14 block gives you a legal 'A15' swap without needing certification.
Exhaust Pipe
The regular Datsun 1200 uses a 2-bolt exhaust pipe. A14/A15 use a 3-bolt exhaust flange. A12GX and A15E use a dual-outlet flange.
Tall deck engines (eg, tall deck A13/14/15) are ~20mm or 3/4" taller than their short decked counterparts (eg, A12)
So get a short section of the exhaust pipe, and have it welded to your exhaust system. Add 3/4" length so the pipe fits in the same location. If you don't have the pipe, any exhaust shop can fabricate the correct part.
Exhaust Pipe: The section of pipe between the manifold and the muffler
Also See: Exhaust Manifold#Gasket
Cut this portion of the exhaust pipe off an A14/A15 vehicle, weld to the 1200 exhaust pipe
A15E EGI engine uses a twin outlet manifold similar to the A12GX/A12T, so a flange and merge setup will need to be sourced or fabricated similar to above to suit that setup
Transmission
If upgrading a 1970-1972 Datsun 1200 to an A14 or A15, use the stronger 4-speed that comes with the A14 or A15. It is a bolt-in replacement. Be sure to get the matching set: Flywheel, clutch release sleeeve, engine plate and transmission. See Gearbox Swap Notes.
The early 1200 4-speed will work fine with an A14 if you drive it smoothly. But the A15 has a bit to much torque to be reliable. It may work for a long time, but it may give out. Chipped teeth is the normal problem.
If your 1200 already has the 56A 4-speed it is strong enough for an A15.
Peek under the car, on the right side of the gearbox for the letter 56A and you are golden:
Or in this area (56A late ute super strong):
Differential
The stock H145 from a Datsun 1200 coupe/sedan/wagon is not rated for the torque of an A14 or A15. It can handle the horsepower, but not the torque.
- An A14 or low-torque A15 will be OK in front of an H145. A15 after 1981 is low torque.
- While some club members have had their H145 last behind an A15, many have had it break. It is the ring & pinion gears (CWP) that break, not the axles.
For upgrades you can either: 1) Fit an H150 diff center into your 1200 housing. See H150 center swap or 2) Swap an entire rear axle assembly into your 1200. See Rear Axle Swaps.
Engine Location
It is important to get the new engine in the same location as the original, so that the original driveshaft fits properly. (You can locate the engine further back if you want to customize the driveshaft.)
A14/A15 engine mounts are 35 mm further back in location than early (B110) A12. If you locate the engine like this, it will be in the correct spot
Note that late A12 (1974 and up) use exactly the same mounts as A14/A14.
Engine setback is approximately 2-1/2 inches from firewall to back of rocker cover
Engine Mounts
A14/A15 bolts directly into newer 1200 (1974 & newer utes).
When fitting to older 1200s, the easiest thing to do is use simple flat plates to adapt the motor.
The most elegant way is to swap crossmembers. If you can find the right crossmember. For example: 1975 A12 with 1974-up crossmember. Or 1972 A12 with 1970-1973 crossmember.
1974-up engines (including all A14/A15 engines) have the motor mount bosses in a different place compared to the 1971-1973 A12 engines. So the engine mounts are a bit different. This photos illustrates the difference:
Stock left-side mount in Datsun 1200, but Newer A12 engine. All it needs is a simple flat plate with two holes drilled in it.
Alternatively, you could 1) use the 1974-up 1200 crossmember or 2) modify the crossmember or 3) modify the engine brackets.
Crossmember Swap
Be sure to get a matched set:
- Late Engine + Late Engine mounting brackets + Late Engine Crossmember
OR
- Early Engine + Early Engine mounting brackets + Early Engine Crossmember
Early engines are 1967-1973, and late engines are 1974-up.
Swap the crossmember? Swapping crossmembers is fairly easy. There are two bolts on each side, plus the LCA bushing mount. But you don't have to swap crossmembers -- it's just one way of doing it. Perhaps the most elegant way. See Changing Crossmember.
Early vs Late Engine crossmembers
Late Engine onto Early Crossmember
When fitting a 1974-or-newer engine into an orginal Datsun 1200, and using the original crossmber, modifications to the engine mount brackets are needed.
There is no need modify the crossmember, although that can be done. It is easy to modify the brackets.
Left Side Mount Location
Left Side (manifold side) of A-series engine: change to 1974 and newer blocks: Engine mount bolt bosses were moved back 35mm (1-3/8") on the late blocks.
154 mm: Early block front face to center of mount
189 mm: Revised block front face to center of mount
1. Remove this Late LH bracket, and discard
2. Obtain a duplicate late RH bracket, and then fit it to the LH side. Old A12 brackets won't fit, but new A12/A14/A15 brackets will:
B210 vs B310 Right Bracket
Which is best for this swap?
3. The new mounts are 35mm (1-3/8") further back. So drill two holes in a flat plate and mount it like this:
If the engine is centered and the plate holes drilled correctly, it will fit straight as above.
If the engine is not centered, the plate can be skewed:
There are three different RH mounts, some allow the engine to sit higher or lower than the others. If the mount is now up too high, slot the bolt holes for the engine bracket, and slide the mount up on the block the thickness of the plate, then tighten. This will lower the engine a bit.
RH engine mount brackets (old) 55mm bolt center (new) 50 mm bolt center
Lower bolt is 5mm higher on new engine, so mounts actually bolt at the same level.
Alternatively, you can put the mount on the last accessory boss, which is 26mm (1") farther forward than early blocks. With this choice, you will need to redrill the lower hole on the engine mount bracket, 8mm over. And you will still need to slot the mounts and use a flat plate. Nothing gained, but it takes a little more work this way.
Re-drill the lower bracket hole, and re-drill the crossmember horn hole 26mm farther forward (no plate needed). Rubber sits to one side of horn. Aircon cannot be used with this choice, as the bolt boss is for the A/C compressor.
Right Side Mount
Right side (spark-plug/oil pump/starter side) engine mount bracket is practically the same Late vs Early.
Two types of right-side brackets: B210 vs B310 Right Bracket
The only thing you might need to do is Measure engine installed angle and if you need to lower it a little bit:
- try the other RH side bracket (not sure which one is best), OR
- slot the bracket bolt holes (where it bolts to the engine) so you can bolt it slightly higher on the block
Custom Brackets
For the cleanest look, instead of using adaper plates, you may cut and re-weld the brackets so they fit just so. You can fabricate the LH and RH brackets to have the 35mm offset and be a bit lower.
Discussions and Details
The simplest way to fit the motor mounts is a flat plate:
If you use the correct engine bracket it will be very close to level, maybe about 4mm higher.
Three different Right Side engine brackets. Which is best for a swap?
- cheater_5 wrote up a detailed conversion here: Cheaters a15 into 1200 conversion
- An A14 installation Mildman undertook has been quite significantly detailed at the following web link: Mildman's A14 Installation
Early Engine onto Late Crossmember
To fit an early (1970-1973) engine into a later 1200, you can either swap crossmembers, OR just use simple adapter plates on each side as explained below.
Use Newer Mounts
Or use newer engine mounts? You can modify the engine mount brackets to fit an early A12 engine (GX, anyone?) into your later 1200. The only trick is to drill a flat plate to bridge the 35mm difference in back-to-front location.
- Use Datsun 1200 RH mount
- Use 120Y A12 or B210 A14, or any B310 LH mount with a longer bolt
- Drill two holes in 4mm flat plates
4mm thick plates. The mount bracket overlaps the insulator so it is partially supported by it -- in other words, it is plenty strong and doesn't stress the rubber insulator.
Use the B110 lower radiator hose to clear the alternator. The new A12 places the alternator on the other side of the engine compared to the original A12. You'll also need to extend the alternator wires to go to the other side.
Right Mount Bracket
The original A12 RH bracket is very similar to the newer bracket -- but the newer RH bracket doesn't fit the original A12 engine. So use the RH bracket that matches the engine.
Left Mount Bracket
On the LH side, use a LH engine bracket from a late engine. The newer LH bracket will match the newer or older LH crossmember horn. The height is perfect and no adjustment is needed.
Old A12 uses stepped bracket (upper boss is set back). To fit New A12 bracket, remove the stud and use a longer stud, or a bolt.
To fit the new A12 bracket, use 19mm worth of washers and a longer bolt or stud. Bolt centers are the same for the original A12 stepped bracket and the revised A12 flat bracket, so it fits just right
Swap Notes
- 1200 wiring will reach either Distributor (under #1 or under #3)
- Alternator fits on opposites sides. Late engines have right-side alternator.
- Can refit alternator to other side, but not necessary
- use extension wires to reach across (Ground, Battery, and FN/LS wires). Be sure to use the same thickness (gauge) wire as original.
- Newer engine may have an alternator marked S-L. If so, simple wiring mods can be done.
- Radiator hoses are different for the original 1200 low-mount alternator.
Datsun 1000
When fitting an A12 into Datsun 1000, use 3mm spacer on the engine mounts so that the deeper pan will clear the 1000 crossmember. Reference: POST 1000 vs 1200 oil pans
When fitting late A-series (1974-up) you can unpick the crossmember uprights, then weld on the late-model uprights
HB210
North American B210 came with A14 fitted with mid-sump engine pan.
- if swapping this HB210 engine into 1200, swap the pan and pickup tube with the newer B310 A14 pan and pickup tube.
- If swapping an engine into a North America B210, see B210 Engine Swaps#North America
B310
B310 fits all A-series engines from 1974 on. There is no bolt-in crossmember for the early A-series engine.
Questions
- What's Better? A14 or A15?
- But isn't the A15 stroke too long to rev high?
- Aren't the rods too short in the A14?
For answers, see: Engine Swaps, section "A-series Nissan Engines"