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Unveiling the Truth Behind the S20 Engine: Nissan’s Skyline GT-R Legacy Explored

The truth about the S20 engine

The Nissan ‘Skyline 2000GT-R’ (PGC10, known as the ‘Hakosuka’) is a car that created a legend, a myth. It was the first mass-produced car in the world to be equipped with the S20 engine, a four-valve DOHC engine, and achieved a remarkable 50 victories in domestic races between May 1969 and March 1972. How was the engine refined and perfected to win races?

The S20 engine was designed for mass production

If we talk about the S20 engine used by the Nissan Skyline 2000 GT-R, we must mention the GR8 unit, the in-line six-cylinder engine of the prototype racing car Nissan R380. This is because the S20 engine was designed as a production version of the GR8 engine.

According to one theory, when the Skyline 2000GT-R was first announced, the S20 engine, the unit in which it was mounted, was announced to be a detuned version of the GR8 engine. However, according to one of the designers, it was quite different in terms of parts and there were many newly designed parts, and there was also the opinion that it was a different product.

On the other hand, some many developers and mechanics say that the basic concept, thinking, and direction of the GR8 engine were inherited from the GR8 and that it was definitely a mass-production version of the racing engine. In any case, there is no doubt that both engines were models with excellent performance produced by Nissan.

The first six-cylinder SOHC engine for a Japanese passenger car

While the fact remains that the S20 engine was based on the GR8 engine, that GR8 engine was also based on an engine. This was the GR7 engine installed in the first generation “Skyline 2000GT-A/GT-B”. This engine was originally installed in the Prince “Gloria Super 6” and was the first six-cylinder SOHC engine for domestic passenger cars.

The engine mounted in the first generation “Skyline 2000GT-A/GT-B” was a tuned version of that GR7 engine. What had been a counter-flow SOHC engine for racing purposes was evolved into the GR7B engine, which was converted to a rocker-arm DOHC V-type valve arrangement cross-flow. Records show that various port configurations were also tested here to further optimize air flow.

The GR8 engine was created by improving the efficiency of this GR7 engine and evolved as a higher-performance engine. It was tuned for higher efficiency and performance by securing rigidity for higher revs, reviewing the counterweight and fuel supply system, changing the carburetor, and increasing the precision of each part. In the latter half of the Nissan R380’s life, the maximum output was raised to over 220 hp. This was 10 hp more than the rival Porsche Carrera at the time.

The maximum output of the race-spec version was 255 hp

The S20 engine was introduced as a mass-production model based on the GR8 engine, which was built to refine high performance. The main changes were the cylinder head, camshaft drive system, and wet sump, while the cylinder head was integrated with the cam carrier to improve production and increase rigidity.

Also, the GR8 engine used small-diameter lifters stacked on top of the valve springs to reduce the weight of the valve lifters, while the S20 engine used larger lifters to lower the cylinder head. The valve diameter was also enlarged.

The integrated cam carrier made the upper surface of the cylinder head parallel to the lower surface, and the cylinder cover was designed with the intake and exhaust sides integrated. This led to Nissan’s first headcover sculpting designer. The idea of focusing on the head cover as the face of the engine was also born here.

There are many other differences between the GR8 and S20 engines. One example is that the stroke was shortened by 0.2 mm, so that the GR8 engine had a displacement of 1996 cc, while the S20 engine had a displacement of 1989 cc. However, the idea is that this is designed to give more room for boring. It can be said that the engine was prepared in advance so that it could be oversized when tuning was carried out.

The GR8 engine had a Weber carburetor, but the S20 engine used a Solex carburetor, which was successfully mass-produced by Mikuni Kogyo, partly to reduce procurement costs. Incidentally, the same Lucas fuel supply system as the GR8 engine was used in the race, and it is said that the maximum output of the race-spec S20 engine was eventually raised to 255 hp.

translated by DeepL

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