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[Datsun 1200 encyclopedia]

A12GX Engine

Revision as of 22:40, 25 December 2008; view current revision
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Category: Engine Mechanical

The Datsun A12GX Engine is legendary. While it may not be a powerful as a racing A14, this was a stock package offered in Japanese Domestic Model 1200 GX Sedans and Coupes and has more horsepower than the Standard A12 engine. The GX engine featured a matched pair Hitachi HJE38W carburetors, larger cam, giant intake ports, and streamlined exhaust.

Also see: Hitachi Twin Carb engine

1003.jpg A12 GX Engine

A12 68 horsepower
A12GX 83 horsepower

Contents

GX Cylinder Head

1002.jpg GX cylinder head and intake

 Main article: A-series_Cylinder_Heads

Compare to the A12 and A14 intakes

Compare to the various intakes
  • heart shaped combustion chambers<li>Extra-large oval ports (like the standard A15 cylinder head, but taller/larger)<li>double valve springs<li>valves. Compare to A14/A15 with 37 mm inlets & 30 mm exhaust valves<li>1200 & A12 GX heads have four coolant outlet holes under the ports of approx 5mm or 6mm diameter, for heating the inlet manifold runners<li>intake ports shaped differently for flow and swirl</ul>A ported and polished standard A12 head with larger valves fitted flows about the same as a standard GX head. Also see head trivia. The head bolts on an A14/A15, but is very similar to the oval port A15 head (might even use the same casting). The A12 heads and later head provided oil to the rocker shafts in different locations so you may need to redrill the oil passage. There is apparently an A14 Oval Port GX head which flows more than the A12GX head.
    reference: GX Head or A15 The A15 GX head was used by Nissan for racing. There are several different chamber shapes and sizes but just the improved flow though the oval ports is better than the stock round ones. The valve sizes should be larger and some were fitted with dual valve springs.

    Engine Block

      <li>Balanced crank<li>Flat top pistons for 10:1 compression ratio in some engines. Standard dished pistons have been identified in some other engines<li>Slightly longer duration cam than stock 1200.<li>Water pump inlet pipe at front of block has additional hose fitting to recieve manifold coolant outlet hose.
    Otherwise the block crank and rods are the same as the standard A12.

    Induction

    See: Hitachi Twin Carb


      <li>This featured a matched pair of left- and right- hand Hitachi HJE38W carbs. Twin semi-sidedraft Hitachi carbs (Variable Venturi/SU-type) -- 38mm bore (~1.5 inches)<li>Oval port inlet manifold with or without water jackets to match the cylinder heads<li>Intake manifold has 2 studs at the top of each pair of inlet ports (cylinder head matches this). Standard A12 has only one stud per pair of intake ports.

    British vehicle SU carburetors (H4 or HS4 1.5 inch carbs) will fit the manifold, with some linkage creativity.

    Exhaust

    main article: Exhaust Piping

    Word has it this works as good as common extractors (headers), though not as good as the best tuned-length extractors. The factory 1200/B110 Competition Tune-up manual recomends the GX manifold for Rally competition use instead of extractors.

    Extractors may not clear the GX inlet manifold.

    Identification

    For the cylinder head, the best way to tell a GX head is to check the casting number in the valve train area.

      <li>1200 GX frequently have no casting numbers at all <li>A12 should have "180" or "H10" <li>A12 GX should have "H23" [very early A12 GX engines used 1200 GX head castings without the extra drillings for rocker oiling] <li>A13 should have "H62" <li>A14 could have several different ones, such as "H72", "H74", "H98" depending upon year and emission control equipment.

    The casting number will be the first 3 digits of the last half of the part number, as all cylinder head part numbers begin with the same 5 digits reference: Various cylinder heads

    Rocker Cover

    The Rocker cover is unique to the A12GX engine:
    14415.jpg

    • accelerator clip is on front pad, not rear
    • fuel line clip boss is on rear left side, not front left side
    • Datsun logo (not Nissan)


    17453.jpg
    Arrows: Accelerator cable clip

    • GX: center feed
    • A12: rear feed accelerator cable


    Circles: Left side threaded boss for fuel line

    • GX: rear
    • A12: front and rear

    Specifications

    • Nominal Rev Limit: 6800 RPM
    • Actual Rev limit: reported fine at 8,000, float at 8,150 rpm

    references:

    • FIA Amendment March 1970

    Datsun 1200 group 1 FIA recognition

    Comparison
    part A12GX Engine A12 Engine
    Carb Hitachi HJE38W side-draft (two carbs) Carb Hitachi DCG306-1 down-draft
    Carb Venturi  ? Primary: 26 mm, Secondary: 30mm
    compression ration 10.0  ?
    combustion chamber 29.1 cm3 36.6 cm3
    valve opens BTDC 20 degrees +- 7 degrees  ?
    valve closes ABDC 56 degrees +- 7 degrees  ?
    valve opens BBDC 58 degrees +- 7 degrees  ?
    valve closes ATDC 18 degrees +- 7 degrees  ?
    In. Valve dia. 29 mm 1.14 in  ?
    valve lift 9 mm 0.35 in  ?
    exhaust ports 27w x 29h +- 1.5 mm  ?
    intake ports 30 mm circle with 4.5 mm elongated section (30 x 34.5 oval?)  ?
    exhaust ports 26w x 28h with 3 mm radius +- 1.5 mm  ?
    center ex port 69w x 28h  ?
    intake ports 28/27 mm circle  ?
    Flywheel weight  ? 9.5 kg
    Flywheel with all turning parts  ? 13.1 kg
    hp 83ps @ 6,400 rpm hp 68ps JIS @ 6,000 rpm
    max rpm 6,800 rpm (80 ps) hp 68ps JIS @ 6,000 rpm
    max torque 10.0 kg-m at 4,400 rpm 9.7 kg-m at 3,600 rpm
    max speed car 160 km/hour 150 km/hour


    B210 A12 GX Engine

    The B210 GX engine was basically the same as the B110 twin carb (1200 GX Engine), but based on the newer cylinder block. The head was no longer drilled for the oil gallery that was unique to the A10 & 1200, & a revised induction was used. This involved the flat top [or square top if you prefer] carbs & the inlet mnifold had proovision for a few more fittings to allow compliance with newer smog laws. There was also provision for a vacuum takeoff for the brake booster.

    The B210 GX induction seems to be the most commonly encountered twin-carb A engine setup in Australia.

    The exhaust manifold was the same as the 1200 one, but the fuel pump was of course the newer type for the new cylinder block. GX pumps had a slightly stronger spring under the diaphram to boost fuel delivery pressure a smidgen.

    The air filter housing base plate was revised a little to accomodate more fittings too, but the main cover piece was unchanged, other than for the change in colour from red to blue. It seems that L series SSS air filters went from red to orange.

    In the USA, a B210 "GX" car model was offered, but this referred to the car only and did not include a twin-carb engine as did GX models sold in Japan.

    Photo Index

    568.gif 776.jpg 954.jpg 955.jpg

    1002.jpg 1003.jpg 1132.jpg 1234.jpg 1488.jpg 1504.jpg 1855.jpg 1933.jpg 1973.jpg 2585.jpg 2845.jpg 2892.jpg 3771.jpg 3384.jpg 3947.jpg 4441.jpg 5212.jpg 6223.jpg 6442.jpg 6723.jpg 6724.jpg 6725.jpg 8355.jpg 8995.jpg 9028.jpg 9261.jpg 9262.jpg 10728.jpg 10907.jpg 11077.jpg 12778.jpg