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Ford Essex V6 engine (UK)

The Ford Essex V6 engine is a 60° V6 engine built between 1966 and 1988 by the Ford Motor Company in the United Kingdom and until 2000 in South Africa although mostly in the Ford engine plant of Dagenham, Essex, which gave the engine its name. It is closely related to the Ford Essex V4 engine produced in displacements of 1.7 L and 2.0 L. Both engines share many parts since the Essex V6 was directly derived from the Essex V4; the 2.0 L Essex V4 and the 3.0 L Essex V6 in fact have exactly the same bore and stroke and share various components.[5] In the same era, the Ford Cologne V6 engine was produced.

Ford Essex V6
Overview
ManufacturerFord Motor Company
Production1966 – 1988 UK
1982 – 2000 SA
Layout
Configuration60° V6
Firing order: 1-4-2-5-3-6
(Even Firing)
Displacement2.5 L; 152.3 cu in (2,495 cc)
3.0 L; 182.7 cu in (2,994 cc)
3.1 L; 189.1 cu in (3,098 cc)
3.4 L; 206.0 cu in (3,375 cc)
3.4 L; 208.2 cu in (3,412 cc)
Cylinder bore
  • 93.67 mm (3.688 in)
  • 94.67 mm (3.727 in) (3.4 L)
  • 95.25 mm (3.750 in) (3.1 L)
  • 100 mm (3.94 in) (GAA)
Piston stroke
  • 60.19 mm (2.370 in) (2.5 L)
  • 72.42 mm (2.851 in) (3.0 L)
  • 80 mm (3.15 in) (3.4 L)
Cylinder block materialCast iron
Cylinder head materialCast iron
LM 25 Aluminium alloy
(Cosworth GAA)
ValvetrainOHV 12 valve (2 per cylinder)
Solid flat tappet lifters
41.1 mm (1.62 in) inlet valves
37 mm (1.5 in) exhaust valves
SA 3.4 L:
43 mm (1.7 in) inlet valves
37 mm (1.5 in) exhaust valves
Capri X pack:
44.5 mm (1.75 in) inlet valves
41.3 mm (1.63 in) exhaust valves [1]
DOHC 24 valve (4 per cylinder) – Cosworth GAA
Valvetrain drive systemGears
Compression ratio
  • 8.0:1 (TVR 3000S turbo)
  • 8.9:1 (standard pre-1971)
  • 9.0:1 (standard after 1971)
  • 9.1:1 (Ford Capri X-Pack 3.0)
  • 9.5:1 (Ford Sierra 3.0 Sapphire)
  • 10.0:1 (Cosworth 3.4 GAA)[2][3]
Combustion
SuperchargerAftermarket
TurbochargerBroadspeed single Roto-Master (TVR 3000M & aftermarket)
Fuel system2.5 L :
Ford 1250 1bbl carburetor
3.0 L :
Ford 1250 1bbl carburetor
40 DFAV 2bbl Weber carburetor
38 DGAS 2bbl Weber carburetor
40 DFI 5 2bbl Weber carburetor
Electronic fuel injection
x3 42 DCNF 2bbl Weber carburetors
3.1 L :
38 DGAS 2bbl Weber carburetor
SA 3.4 L :
38 DGAS 2bbl Weber carburetor
Cosworth GAA 3.4 L :
Lucas Mechanical fuel injection
Fuel typeGasoline (leaded)
Oil systemWet sump (stock)
Dry sump (Cosworth GAA)[4]
Cooling systemJacketed block (stock)
Output
Power output118–462 hp (88–345 kW; 120–468 PS)
Torque output132–300 lb⋅ft (179–407 N⋅m)
Dimensions
Dry weight170 kg (370 lb)

History edit

The Essex V4 and V6 were mainly designed to replace the outdated and ageing inline-four and six-cylinder Ford Zephyr engines. It was produced in four capacities: 2.5 L; 152.3 cu in (2,495 cc), 3.0 L; 182.7 cu in (2,994 cc), 3.1 L; 189.1 cu in (3,098 cc), 3.4 L; 208.2 cu in (3,412 cc), with the 3.0-litre version being the most common and widely used. These engines were fitted to a wide range of vehicles, from Ford Transit vans to sedans, coupés like the Ford Capri and sports cars like TVRs and Marcos.

The earlier versions of engine were rated at 128 hp (95 kW; 130 PS) and 173 lb⋅ft (235 N⋅m) of torque, around October 1971 the engine was revised by modifying the camshaft and cylinder heads which improved the power and torque to produce 157 hp (117 kW; 159 PS) SAE or 138 hp (103 kW; 140 PS) DIN at 5000 rpm and 192 lb⋅ft (260 N⋅m) SAE or 174 lb⋅ft (236 N⋅m) DIN of torque at 3000 rpm.[6] At the same time, the oil dipstick was moved from the front of the engine to the side, the inlet manifold was improved from earlier models, and the compression ratio was raised slightly from 8.9:1 to 9.0:1 due to a change of the piston design.[7]

The shape of the inlet ports was also changed from an O-port design to a D-port design which improved the flow characteristics of the heads, the old 40 DFAV Weber carburetor that was prone to over-fueling and resulting bore wash was replaced by the 38 DGAS Weber carburetor, the air filter housing was also changed and later around 1976 a hot air intake was added consisting of a metal pipe running from the top of a plate welded on the exhaust manifold or header to an opening in the air intake to prevent the carburetor from icing and making the engine warm up more quickly. The carburetor was also modified again, a return-style fuel system was adopted and a vacuum-operated choke in the air filter housing were also added. This, and a positive crankcase ventilation (PCV) system were also early forms of emissions control.[8]

The camshaft gear was also made slightly stronger by using steel with nylon teeth instead of being completely made from nylon as on previous ones. Aftermarket steel, aluminium, and alloy gears have been produced as replacements to prevent the gear from stripping its teeth: this is commonly due to overheating causing the nylon to weaken.[8][9] This is one of the two major weak points of the Essex V-engines, the other being the hexagonal oil pump spindle / shaft which can round off, or even break.[10]

The 2.5 L engine was rated at 137 hp (102 kW; 139 PS) SAE gross or 120 hp (89 kW; 122 PS) DIN and peak torque was rated at 145 lb⋅ft (197 N⋅m) SAE gross or 132 lb⋅ft (179 N⋅m) DIN.[6] The 2.5-litre version ended production in 1977 along with the Essex V4 engine.[11] The 3,098 cc (3.1 L; 189.1 cu in) V6 engine as used in the Ford Capri RS 3100 was essentially a 3.0 L engine bored out by 1.6 mm (0.06 in) or 60 thousands of an inch from 93.6 mm (3.69 in) to 95.25 mm (3.75 in). It was capable of 148 bhp (150 PS; 110 kW) at 5000 rpm and 187 lb⋅ft (254 N⋅m) of torque at 3000 rpm.[12] It featured blue rocker covers in order to distinguish the engine from the usual 3.0 L engine and it also featured hand-polished and ported inlet and exhaust ports. Only 250 RS 3100s were produced for homologation purposes, making original 3.1-litre engines very rare, although modified engines bored +0.60 are common, one of the first 50 engines which was in a RS 3100 that was free for car magazines to review and test in fact had 165 hp (123 kW; 167 PS) instead of the 148 hp (110 kW; 150 PS) of the rest of road going RS 3100s, this was achieved with a higher lift camshaft.[13][14][15][16] These figures vary somewhat depending on the source.[17][18]
The Essex V6 also formed the base for the 3.4 L Cosworth GAA born in May 1972 and designed by Mike Hall, also responsible for designing Cosworth's famous DFV Engine.[15] The GAA had the benefit of 100 mm (3.94 in) bores, DOHC aluminium alloy heads, Lucas mechanical fuel injection, a dry sump oiling system and a steel crankshaft and generated 462 bhp (345 kW; 468 PS) at 9,000 rpm and 300 lb⋅ft (407 N⋅m) of torque. Mike Hall's intention was to design the cylinder heads so that 3 spark plugs per cylinder could be fitted, but this idea was dropped since there was no appreciable increase in power or torque. The original objective was an engine with a minimum of 400 bhp (298 kW; 406 PS); this objective was exceeded, with the engine making 420 bhp (313 kW; 426 PS) in the first test run. This engine was used in the racing version of the Capri RS 3100, competing successfully in the European Touring Car Championship, as well as in Formula 5000 single-seaters. One hundred kits were also sold by Ford Motorsport.

[19]

 
Pre-October 1971 version of the Essex V6

Ford RS dealerships also offered a number of performance modifications for the Essex V6, called the "GP1" (Group 1) and "Series X", the GP1 package offered a 40 DFI5 Weber carburetor, a camshaft kit, larger, 44.5 mm (1.75 in), inlet and 41.3 mm (1.63 in) exhaust valves, double valve springs, specially selected connecting rods and forged high compression pistons giving a power output of around 170 bhp (127 kW; 172 PS). The Series X modifications offered the same larger inlet and exhaust valves as the GP1, but also offered a new inlet manifold designed for three twin-choke 42 DCNF Weber carburetors fed by an electric fuel pump which boosted power up to 185 bhp (138 kW; 188 PS) and 195 lb⋅ft (264 N⋅m), however the standard camshaft was retained. [20][21]

 
Post-October 1971 version of the Essex V6

Earlier versions of the 3.0-litre engine (pre-October 1971) were fueled by a twin-choke 40 DFAV Weber carburetor, which had some inherent faults in its design which caused it to run too rich and cause bore wash. It was subsequently replaced by a more modern twin-choke 38 DGAS Weber carburetor which effectively solved the problems of the earlier carburetors, and was used for the 3-litre V6 until the end of its production.[2] The 2.5-litre V6 used a single barrel Ford carburetor which was also used in the low-compression variants of the 3.0-litre Essex V6 used in the Ford Transit. Unusually, the Essex V6 was designed so that the same block could serve in both diesel (compression ignition) and petrol applications, although the diesel version never reached production. Traces of its diesel design lie in the very heavy construction using Heron cylinder heads and the necessity for dished pistons to decrease compression for the petrol engine. The cast iron Essex V6 is a heavy engine due to its sturdy design, weighing 170 kg (370 lb), 56 lb (25 kg) more than the aluminium alloy Rover V8, for example,[22] the Essex V6 also has a very heavy yet sturdy four-main bearing crossplane crankshaft with large 63.52 mm (2.501 in) main journals,[23] and a heavy flywheel in order to smooth out the power delivery, sometimes Essex V6 engines are referred to as an "Essex lump" referring to the weight of these engines. In spite of its heaviness, the Essex V6 was used as the main workhorse and a high performance option for medium to full-sized cars like the Capri the Granada and Transit. Ford supplied Essex V6-powered Transit vans to the police and ambulance services in the UK from the late 1960s until 1989, when it was replaced by more modern engines such as the fuel injected 2.8 and 2.9 L Ford Cologne V6 engine although the Essex V6 was even used until April 2000 in South Africa.

TVR contracted the company Broadspeed to develop a turbocharging system for their TVR 3000S turbo. In lieu of fuel injection, the carburettor was run inside a pressurized box atop the engine, and the turbocharger itself was mounted low and forward in the engine compartment, requiring the exhaust manifolds to exit forward. The compression ratio was lowered from 9.0:1 to 8.0:1 to reduce the engine's internal stresses. Turbocharging substantially increased horsepower, from 138 to 230 hp (140 to 233 PS; 103 to 172 kW) and torque from 182 to 273 lb⋅ft (247 to 370 N⋅m).

Broadspeed also designed a turbocharging system for the Mk1 Ford Capri 3.0, available since early 1970[24] these Capris were known as "Broadspeed Bullet Capris". The engine was heavily modified and included modified cylinder heads, a high-lift camshaft, a re-jetted carburetor, a completely blueprinted rotating assembly, lowered 8.2:1 compression ratio, a modified inlet manifold and exhaust system using a single turbocharger.[25] Their power was substantially increased (by 63%) from 138 to 218 hp (140 to 221 PS; 103 to 163 kW). Similar to the TVR 3000S' turbocharging system, it used a "blow-through carburettor" system in which the standard but re-jetted 38 DGAS Weber carburetor was run inside a pressurised airbox. Performance figures further increased with the uprated post-October 1971 versions of the engine.[24] The company Janspeed, well known for their high performance exhaust systems, also designed a turbocharging system for the Ford Essex 3.0 L and 1.6 – 2.0 L OHC engines, although these were much simpler than the turbocharging system offered by Broadspeed, Janspeed promised a 25% increase in horsepower, boosting the engine's power output from 138 hp (140 PS; 103 kW) to around 172 hp (174 PS; 128 kW) using a single Roto-Master turbocharger mounted directly on top of the left bank of the engine providing 5 psi (0.34 bar) of boost.[26]

The 2.5 L and 3.0 L engines share the same block, connecting rods and 93.66 mm (3.69 in) bore, differing only in crank throw and pistons, 3.0 L pistons have a length of 95 mm (3.74 in) and 2.5 L pistons have a length of 100 mm (3.94 in) / 101 mm (3.98 in) .[7]

Companies like Specialised Engines, Essex engines and Ric Wood have professionally built and developed large displacement 3.2 L, 3.4 L and even 4.0 L conversions and forced induction conversions for the Essex V6 with power outputs reaching as high as 390 hp (395 PS; 291 kW). [27][28][29]

US emissions certification edit

In 1977, Californian company Olson Engineering, Inc. was contracted by TVR to design modifications to the Essex V6 such that it could be emissions-certified for use in the United States. This allowed TVR to sell its Essex-engined M Series cars in that market for the 1978 and 1979 model years. An owner's handbook supplement for US Federal models indicates that the emissions control system used a catalytic converter, exhaust gas recirculation, and secondary air injection. A shipment of approximately twenty 3000Ss arrived in September 1979, and were marked by the import company as being emissions compliant without the Olson Engineering emissions kit actually having been fitted. Dealers were made aware of this fact, but were each apparently coerced into buying at least two of the non-compliant cars with the threat of withholding spare parts for other TVR models. One dealer explained the situation to a customer who happened to work for the US government in an emissions-regulation capacity, and he reported the violation to the authorities. The cars were then impounded. During the long period of time during which Martin Lilley attempted to communicate with US customs officials to resolve the situation, the cars were neglected and stored outside, where they deteriorated and were vandalized. The cars were eventually re-exported, repaired, and sold in Germany, but the short-term financial impact of the unsalable cars (worth over £100,000 in total) was damaging to the development of the M Series replacement, the Tasmin.[30][31][32]

South Africa edit

In South Africa, the engine continued in production from 1982 up to April 2000 for use in the Sapphire Saloon and Sierra vehicles, and Courier pick-ups. Late in its production life it was fitted with Lucas controlled electronic fuel injection designed by SAMCOR (South African Motor Corporation – now Ford SA) in co-operation with the University of Pretoria's engineering department. This conversion resulted in a power increase from 103 kW (140 PS; 138 bhp) to 110 kW (150 PS; 148 bhp) of the standard 3.0 version, and 117 kW (159 PS; 157 bhp) for the fuel injection version, plus a useful boost to fuel economy. Only about 1,600 of the EFI variants were produced during 1992 and 1993. In October 1997, the 3.0L was enlarged to 3.4L by boring the cylinders 1 to 94.6 mm (0.039 to 3.724 in) and a new crankshaft with a stroke of 80 mm (3.15 in) giving a displacement of 3.4 L (3,375 cc), this was done for the engine to be better suited to 4x4 vehicles where torque is needed. The 3.4 version produced 108 kW (147 PS; 145 bhp) and 260 N⋅m (192 lb⋅ft). All 3.4 variants used the 38DGAS Weber carburetor with 29 mm (1.1 in) venturis. Production tooling at the factory was scrapped and sold in 2000, to make way for the production of a new four cylinder OHC engine, the remaining old stock of 3.4 L Engines started to be sold as assembled crate engines, these engines had some differences from the 2.5 3.0 and 3.1 L Dagenham built engines such as: Ford Cologne 2.8 / 2.9 V6 forged connecting rods, German made pistons with moly coating, 14 in (6.4 mm) smaller crank journals which reduced bearing speed, more aggressive camshaft timing and higher lift, larger 43 mm (1.7 in) inlet valves, shaft mounted rockers from Ford's Cologne 2.8 / 2.9 V6 engine, unique cylinder head castings with extra oil galleries, solid pushrods with no oiling holes, unique exhaust manifold bolt pattern due to the head castings also being unique to the 3.4-litre engine and an improved inlet manifold with larger runners and an improved plenum chamber.[33] From 1966 to 1998, the 3.0L was also used in industrial applications such as generator plants, airport vehicles, milk vans, jet boats (Hamilton jet) and even river barges.

Vehicles using the Essex V6 edit

The Essex V6 was fitted to a wide variety of cars, both from Ford and from smaller specialist manufacturers that used Ford engines. Among these were the following:

United Kingdom edit

Custom installations

[34][35][36]

South Africa edit

  • Ford Zephyr and Zodiac (Mk4)
  • Ford Cortina Perana (Mk2)
  • Ford Capri 3.0 L Perana V6

[34]

  • Ford 17M and 20M (Taunus)
  • Ford Transit van V4 + V6
  • Ford Capri (Mk1)1970 to 1973.
  • Ford Cortina (Mk3, Mk4, Mk5)
  • Ford Granada (Mk1, Mk2)
  • Ford Sierra hatch 1984 to 1993.
  • Ford Sierra/Sapphire 1989 to 1993.
  • Ford Sapphire Ghia (EFI engined Sapphire) 1992 to 1993
  • Ford Sierra/sapphire 3.0i RS (EFI engined Sierra produced alongside the Sapphire Ghia)
  • Ford 1 ton pickup (Cortina Mk3+ Mk4 + Mk5 based) 1974 to 1985.
  • Ford Courier/Mazda Drifter 1 ton pickup 1986 to 2000
  • Also fitted by a number of companies as aftermarket conversions in VW Kombi and Toyota Hiace
  • Ferrino Sports car, based on Ferrari Dino, using a tubular chassis and glassfibre body.
  • Lynx Roadster, based on Ford Cortina chassis with glassfibre body.

Netherlands edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Project 200 hp". Ford Capri. Retrieved 2015-02-19.
  2. ^ a b "Technical data Ford Capri Mk I – 3000 E / GT / GXL (1971–1973)".
  3. ^ "Technical data Ford Capri Mk III (II/78) – 3000X (1978–1980)".
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2004-11-17.
  5. ^ "Technical data Ford Capri Mk I – 2000 GT (1969–1973)".
  6. ^ a b "1972 MK1 Ford Granada Estate / FA 700EC/7210/DOM". 7 March 2010.
  7. ^ a b "Red Block – DuttonOwners".
  8. ^ a b Beijner, Hans. "The Essex engine". Hans Pages. Retrieved 2015-04-09.
  9. ^ "Timing Belts & Gears – Ford Capri".
  10. ^ "Minifix: TVR M Series Engine Technical Directory".
  11. ^ "Detailed specs review of 1974 Ford Consul 2500 model for Europe".
  12. ^ "1973 Ford Capri RS 3100". Carfolio.com. 2013-02-28. Retrieved July 8, 2018.
  13. ^ "Photobucket".
  14. ^ "All sizes | Ford X Pack Capri Advert 1977 | Flickr – Photo Sharing!".
  15. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2017-06-09. Retrieved 2017-05-17.
  16. ^ "Technical data Ford Capri Mk I – RS3100 (1973–1974)".
  17. ^ "Technical data Ford Capri Mk II – 3000 GT / Ghia / S (1974–1978)".
  18. ^ "Technical data Ford Capri Mk I – 3000 E / GT (1970–1971)".
  19. ^ "Capri Power on Facebook". Facebook. Archived from the original on 2022-04-27.[user-generated source]
  20. ^ "Capri Power Forum". Capri Power Forum.
  21. ^ "Ford Capri RS Parts catalogue | Lauri Lind | Flickr". 16 November 2015.
  22. ^ "engine weights".
  23. ^ "Crankshaft main bearing set std with std OD housing Ford Essex V6".
  24. ^ a b "Mk1 Capri Register – History".
  25. ^ "Ford Capri Broadspeed Turbo 3.0 – Test Report – Hot Car Ma… | Flickr". 29 August 2016.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-01-19. Retrieved 2015-09-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  27. ^ "Camshaft , Valves , Valve Springs , Timing Gear/Ford Essex 3.4 litre V6 Engine.htm".
  28. ^ "3.0 Essex Capri , Consul , Granada , Zephyr and Zodiac | Specialised Engines". 7 January 2014.
  29. ^ "Home – Ric Wood".
  30. ^ Hayes, Russel (August 2009). TVR: Ever the Extrovert. Haynes Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84425-507-8.
  31. ^ Tipler, John (1994). TVR: The Complete Story. The Crowood Press Ltd. ISBN 1-85223-796-1.
  32. ^ Filby, Peter (July 2012). TVR: A Passion to Succeed. Autocraft Books. ISBN 978-0-9545729-2-1.
  33. ^ "ScimitarWeb – RSSOC Online – Login and Natter – Login".
  34. ^ a b "Capri Perana V6 :: Perana.org".
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-04.
  36. ^ "Uren Savage V6 Mk2 Cortina | The Creator".
  • Musselwhite, B. . Classic Ford Magazine, reproduced at .
  • About the Essex engine.The V4 essex

ford, essex, engine, confused, with, ford, essex, engine, canadian, ford, essex, engine, engine, built, between, 1966, 1988, ford, motor, company, united, kingdom, until, 2000, south, africa, although, mostly, ford, engine, plant, dagenham, essex, which, gave,. Not to be confused with Ford Essex V6 engine Canadian The Ford Essex V6 engine is a 60 V6 engine built between 1966 and 1988 by the Ford Motor Company in the United Kingdom and until 2000 in South Africa although mostly in the Ford engine plant of Dagenham Essex which gave the engine its name It is closely related to the Ford Essex V4 engine produced in displacements of 1 7 L and 2 0 L Both engines share many parts since the Essex V6 was directly derived from the Essex V4 the 2 0 L Essex V4 and the 3 0 L Essex V6 in fact have exactly the same bore and stroke and share various components 5 In the same era the Ford Cologne V6 engine was produced Ford Essex V6OverviewManufacturerFord Motor CompanyProduction1966 1988 UK1982 2000 SALayoutConfiguration60 V6Firing order 1 4 2 5 3 6 Even Firing Displacement2 5 L 152 3 cu in 2 495 cc 3 0 L 182 7 cu in 2 994 cc 3 1 L 189 1 cu in 3 098 cc 3 4 L 206 0 cu in 3 375 cc 3 4 L 208 2 cu in 3 412 cc Cylinder bore93 67 mm 3 688 in 94 67 mm 3 727 in 3 4 L 95 25 mm 3 750 in 3 1 L 100 mm 3 94 in GAA Piston stroke60 19 mm 2 370 in 2 5 L 72 42 mm 2 851 in 3 0 L 80 mm 3 15 in 3 4 L Cylinder block materialCast ironCylinder head materialCast iron LM 25 Aluminium alloy Cosworth GAA ValvetrainOHV 12 valve 2 per cylinder Solid flat tappet lifters 41 1 mm 1 62 in inlet valves 37 mm 1 5 in exhaust valves SA 3 4 L 43 mm 1 7 in inlet valves 37 mm 1 5 in exhaust valves Capri X pack 44 5 mm 1 75 in inlet valves 41 3 mm 1 63 in exhaust valves 1 DOHC 24 valve 4 per cylinder Cosworth GAAValvetrain drive systemGearsCompression ratio8 0 1 TVR 3000S turbo 8 9 1 standard pre 1971 9 0 1 standard after 1971 9 1 1 Ford Capri X Pack 3 0 9 5 1 Ford Sierra 3 0 Sapphire 10 0 1 Cosworth 3 4 GAA 2 3 CombustionSuperchargerAftermarketTurbochargerBroadspeed single Roto Master TVR 3000M amp aftermarket Fuel system2 5 L Ford 1250 1bbl carburetor 3 0 L Ford 1250 1bbl carburetor 40 DFAV 2bbl Weber carburetor 38 DGAS 2bbl Weber carburetor 40 DFI 5 2bbl Weber carburetor Electronic fuel injection x3 42 DCNF 2bbl Weber carburetors 3 1 L 38 DGAS 2bbl Weber carburetor SA 3 4 L 38 DGAS 2bbl Weber carburetor Cosworth GAA 3 4 L Lucas Mechanical fuel injectionFuel typeGasoline leaded Oil systemWet sump stock Dry sump Cosworth GAA 4 Cooling systemJacketed block stock OutputPower output118 462 hp 88 345 kW 120 468 PS Torque output132 300 lb ft 179 407 N m DimensionsDry weight170 kg 370 lb Contents 1 History 2 US emissions certification 3 South Africa 4 Vehicles using the Essex V6 4 1 United Kingdom 4 2 South Africa 4 3 Netherlands 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory editThe Essex V4 and V6 were mainly designed to replace the outdated and ageing inline four and six cylinder Ford Zephyr engines It was produced in four capacities 2 5 L 152 3 cu in 2 495 cc 3 0 L 182 7 cu in 2 994 cc 3 1 L 189 1 cu in 3 098 cc 3 4 L 208 2 cu in 3 412 cc with the 3 0 litre version being the most common and widely used These engines were fitted to a wide range of vehicles from Ford Transit vans to sedans coupes like the Ford Capri and sports cars like TVRs and Marcos The earlier versions of engine were rated at 128 hp 95 kW 130 PS and 173 lb ft 235 N m of torque around October 1971 the engine was revised by modifying the camshaft and cylinder heads which improved the power and torque to produce 157 hp 117 kW 159 PS SAE or 138 hp 103 kW 140 PS DIN at 5000 rpm and 192 lb ft 260 N m SAE or 174 lb ft 236 N m DIN of torque at 3000 rpm 6 At the same time the oil dipstick was moved from the front of the engine to the side the inlet manifold was improved from earlier models and the compression ratio was raised slightly from 8 9 1 to 9 0 1 due to a change of the piston design 7 The shape of the inlet ports was also changed from an O port design to a D port design which improved the flow characteristics of the heads the old 40 DFAV Weber carburetor that was prone to over fueling and resulting bore wash was replaced by the 38 DGAS Weber carburetor the air filter housing was also changed and later around 1976 a hot air intake was added consisting of a metal pipe running from the top of a plate welded on the exhaust manifold or header to an opening in the air intake to prevent the carburetor from icing and making the engine warm up more quickly The carburetor was also modified again a return style fuel system was adopted and a vacuum operated choke in the air filter housing were also added This and a positive crankcase ventilation PCV system were also early forms of emissions control 8 The camshaft gear was also made slightly stronger by using steel with nylon teeth instead of being completely made from nylon as on previous ones Aftermarket steel aluminium and alloy gears have been produced as replacements to prevent the gear from stripping its teeth this is commonly due to overheating causing the nylon to weaken 8 9 This is one of the two major weak points of the Essex V engines the other being the hexagonal oil pump spindle shaft which can round off or even break 10 The 2 5 L engine was rated at 137 hp 102 kW 139 PS SAE gross or 120 hp 89 kW 122 PS DIN and peak torque was rated at 145 lb ft 197 N m SAE gross or 132 lb ft 179 N m DIN 6 The 2 5 litre version ended production in 1977 along with the Essex V4 engine 11 The 3 098 cc 3 1 L 189 1 cu in V6 engine as used in the Ford Capri RS 3100 was essentially a 3 0 L engine bored out by 1 6 mm 0 06 in or 60 thousands of an inch from 93 6 mm 3 69 in to 95 25 mm 3 75 in It was capable of 148 bhp 150 PS 110 kW at 5000 rpm and 187 lb ft 254 N m of torque at 3000 rpm 12 It featured blue rocker covers in order to distinguish the engine from the usual 3 0 L engine and it also featured hand polished and ported inlet and exhaust ports Only 250 RS 3100s were produced for homologation purposes making original 3 1 litre engines very rare although modified engines bored 0 60 are common one of the first 50 engines which was in a RS 3100 that was free for car magazines to review and test in fact had 165 hp 123 kW 167 PS instead of the 148 hp 110 kW 150 PS of the rest of road going RS 3100s this was achieved with a higher lift camshaft 13 14 15 16 These figures vary somewhat depending on the source 17 18 The Essex V6 also formed the base for the 3 4 L Cosworth GAA born in May 1972 and designed by Mike Hall also responsible for designing Cosworth s famous DFV Engine 15 The GAA had the benefit of 100 mm 3 94 in bores DOHC aluminium alloy heads Lucas mechanical fuel injection a dry sump oiling system and a steel crankshaft and generated 462 bhp 345 kW 468 PS at 9 000 rpm and 300 lb ft 407 N m of torque Mike Hall s intention was to design the cylinder heads so that 3 spark plugs per cylinder could be fitted but this idea was dropped since there was no appreciable increase in power or torque The original objective was an engine with a minimum of 400 bhp 298 kW 406 PS this objective was exceeded with the engine making 420 bhp 313 kW 426 PS in the first test run This engine was used in the racing version of the Capri RS 3100 competing successfully in the European Touring Car Championship as well as in Formula 5000 single seaters One hundred kits were also sold by Ford Motorsport 19 nbsp Pre October 1971 version of the Essex V6Ford RS dealerships also offered a number of performance modifications for the Essex V6 called the GP1 Group 1 and Series X the GP1 package offered a 40 DFI5 Weber carburetor a camshaft kit larger 44 5 mm 1 75 in inlet and 41 3 mm 1 63 in exhaust valves double valve springs specially selected connecting rods and forged high compression pistons giving a power output of around 170 bhp 127 kW 172 PS The Series X modifications offered the same larger inlet and exhaust valves as the GP1 but also offered a new inlet manifold designed for three twin choke 42 DCNF Weber carburetors fed by an electric fuel pump which boosted power up to 185 bhp 138 kW 188 PS and 195 lb ft 264 N m however the standard camshaft was retained 20 21 nbsp Post October 1971 version of the Essex V6Earlier versions of the 3 0 litre engine pre October 1971 were fueled by a twin choke 40 DFAV Weber carburetor which had some inherent faults in its design which caused it to run too rich and cause bore wash It was subsequently replaced by a more modern twin choke 38 DGAS Weber carburetor which effectively solved the problems of the earlier carburetors and was used for the 3 litre V6 until the end of its production 2 The 2 5 litre V6 used a single barrel Ford carburetor which was also used in the low compression variants of the 3 0 litre Essex V6 used in the Ford Transit Unusually the Essex V6 was designed so that the same block could serve in both diesel compression ignition and petrol applications although the diesel version never reached production Traces of its diesel design lie in the very heavy construction using Heron cylinder heads and the necessity for dished pistons to decrease compression for the petrol engine The cast iron Essex V6 is a heavy engine due to its sturdy design weighing 170 kg 370 lb 56 lb 25 kg more than the aluminium alloy Rover V8 for example 22 the Essex V6 also has a very heavy yet sturdy four main bearing crossplane crankshaft with large 63 52 mm 2 501 in main journals 23 and a heavy flywheel in order to smooth out the power delivery sometimes Essex V6 engines are referred to as an Essex lump referring to the weight of these engines In spite of its heaviness the Essex V6 was used as the main workhorse and a high performance option for medium to full sized cars like the Capri the Granada and Transit Ford supplied Essex V6 powered Transit vans to the police and ambulance services in the UK from the late 1960s until 1989 when it was replaced by more modern engines such as the fuel injected 2 8 and 2 9 L Ford Cologne V6 engine although the Essex V6 was even used until April 2000 in South Africa TVR contracted the company Broadspeed to develop a turbocharging system for their TVR 3000S turbo In lieu of fuel injection the carburettor was run inside a pressurized box atop the engine and the turbocharger itself was mounted low and forward in the engine compartment requiring the exhaust manifolds to exit forward The compression ratio was lowered from 9 0 1 to 8 0 1 to reduce the engine s internal stresses Turbocharging substantially increased horsepower from 138 to 230 hp 140 to 233 PS 103 to 172 kW and torque from 182 to 273 lb ft 247 to 370 N m Broadspeed also designed a turbocharging system for the Mk1 Ford Capri 3 0 available since early 1970 24 these Capris were known as Broadspeed Bullet Capris The engine was heavily modified and included modified cylinder heads a high lift camshaft a re jetted carburetor a completely blueprinted rotating assembly lowered 8 2 1 compression ratio a modified inlet manifold and exhaust system using a single turbocharger 25 Their power was substantially increased by 63 from 138 to 218 hp 140 to 221 PS 103 to 163 kW Similar to the TVR 3000S turbocharging system it used a blow through carburettor system in which the standard but re jetted 38 DGAS Weber carburetor was run inside a pressurised airbox Performance figures further increased with the uprated post October 1971 versions of the engine 24 The company Janspeed well known for their high performance exhaust systems also designed a turbocharging system for the Ford Essex 3 0 L and 1 6 2 0 L OHC engines although these were much simpler than the turbocharging system offered by Broadspeed Janspeed promised a 25 increase in horsepower boosting the engine s power output from 138 hp 140 PS 103 kW to around 172 hp 174 PS 128 kW using a single Roto Master turbocharger mounted directly on top of the left bank of the engine providing 5 psi 0 34 bar of boost 26 The 2 5 L and 3 0 L engines share the same block connecting rods and 93 66 mm 3 69 in bore differing only in crank throw and pistons 3 0 L pistons have a length of 95 mm 3 74 in and 2 5 L pistons have a length of 100 mm 3 94 in 101 mm 3 98 in 7 Companies like Specialised Engines Essex engines and Ric Wood have professionally built and developed large displacement 3 2 L 3 4 L and even 4 0 L conversions and forced induction conversions for the Essex V6 with power outputs reaching as high as 390 hp 395 PS 291 kW 27 28 29 US emissions certification editIn 1977 Californian company Olson Engineering Inc was contracted by TVR to design modifications to the Essex V6 such that it could be emissions certified for use in the United States This allowed TVR to sell its Essex engined M Series cars in that market for the 1978 and 1979 model years An owner s handbook supplement for US Federal models indicates that the emissions control system used a catalytic converter exhaust gas recirculation and secondary air injection A shipment of approximately twenty 3000Ss arrived in September 1979 and were marked by the import company as being emissions compliant without the Olson Engineering emissions kit actually having been fitted Dealers were made aware of this fact but were each apparently coerced into buying at least two of the non compliant cars with the threat of withholding spare parts for other TVR models One dealer explained the situation to a customer who happened to work for the US government in an emissions regulation capacity and he reported the violation to the authorities The cars were then impounded During the long period of time during which Martin Lilley attempted to communicate with US customs officials to resolve the situation the cars were neglected and stored outside where they deteriorated and were vandalized The cars were eventually re exported repaired and sold in Germany but the short term financial impact of the unsalable cars worth over 100 000 in total was damaging to the development of the M Series replacement the Tasmin 30 31 32 South Africa editIn South Africa the engine continued in production from 1982 up to April 2000 for use in the Sapphire Saloon and Sierra vehicles and Courier pick ups Late in its production life it was fitted with Lucas controlled electronic fuel injection designed by SAMCOR South African Motor Corporation now Ford SA in co operation with the University of Pretoria s engineering department This conversion resulted in a power increase from 103 kW 140 PS 138 bhp to 110 kW 150 PS 148 bhp of the standard 3 0 version and 117 kW 159 PS 157 bhp for the fuel injection version plus a useful boost to fuel economy Only about 1 600 of the EFI variants were produced during 1992 and 1993 In October 1997 the 3 0L was enlarged to 3 4L by boring the cylinders 1 to 94 6 mm 0 039 to 3 724 in and a new crankshaft with a stroke of 80 mm 3 15 in giving a displacement of 3 4 L 3 375 cc this was done for the engine to be better suited to 4x4 vehicles where torque is needed The 3 4 version produced 108 kW 147 PS 145 bhp and 260 N m 192 lb ft All 3 4 variants used the 38DGAS Weber carburetor with 29 mm 1 1 in venturis Production tooling at the factory was scrapped and sold in 2000 to make way for the production of a new four cylinder OHC engine the remaining old stock of 3 4 L Engines started to be sold as assembled crate engines these engines had some differences from the 2 5 3 0 and 3 1 L Dagenham built engines such as Ford Cologne 2 8 2 9 V6 forged connecting rods German made pistons with moly coating 1 4 in 6 4 mm smaller crank journals which reduced bearing speed more aggressive camshaft timing and higher lift larger 43 mm 1 7 in inlet valves shaft mounted rockers from Ford s Cologne 2 8 2 9 V6 engine unique cylinder head castings with extra oil galleries solid pushrods with no oiling holes unique exhaust manifold bolt pattern due to the head castings also being unique to the 3 4 litre engine and an improved inlet manifold with larger runners and an improved plenum chamber 33 From 1966 to 1998 the 3 0L was also used in industrial applications such as generator plants airport vehicles milk vans jet boats Hamilton jet and even river barges Vehicles using the Essex V6 editThe Essex V6 was fitted to a wide variety of cars both from Ford and from smaller specialist manufacturers that used Ford engines Among these were the following United Kingdom edit AC ME3000 3 0 L Ford Capri 3 0 L and 3 1 L Ford Granada 2 5 L and 3 0 L Ford Consul Granada Mk1 Based 2 5 L and 3 0 L Ford Transit 3 0 L only police and ambulance services Ford A series Ford Zephyr 2 5 L and 3 0 L Ford Zodiac 2 5 L and 3 0 L Gilbern Genie 2 5 L and 3 0 L Gilbern Invader 3 0 L Marcos various models 3 0 L Reliant Scimitar 2 5 L and 3 0 L TVR 3000M 3 0 L TVR 3000S 3 0 L TVR Taimar 3 0 L TVR Tuscan V6 3 0 LCustom installationsFord Escort Apache 3 0 L Ford Corsair Crayford 3 0 L Ford Cortina Savage 3 0 L Ford Cortina Cheetah 2 5 L Ford Escort Superspeed Mk1 3 0 L Ford Capri Broadspeed 3 0 L Ford Capri Broadspeed 3 0 L turbo Ford Capri Comanche 3 0 L Ford Transit Easipower 3 0 L Ford Granada Seneca 3 0 L Ford Capri 3 0 L Perana V6 34 35 36 South Africa edit Ford Zephyr and Zodiac Mk4 Ford Cortina Perana Mk2 Ford Capri 3 0 L Perana V6 34 Ford 17M and 20M Taunus Ford Transit van V4 V6 Ford Capri Mk1 1970 to 1973 Ford Cortina Mk3 Mk4 Mk5 Ford Granada Mk1 Mk2 Ford Sierra hatch 1984 to 1993 Ford Sierra Sapphire 1989 to 1993 Ford Sapphire Ghia EFI engined Sapphire 1992 to 1993 Ford Sierra sapphire 3 0i RS EFI engined Sierra produced alongside the Sapphire Ghia Ford 1 ton pickup Cortina Mk3 Mk4 Mk5 based 1974 to 1985 Ford Courier Mazda Drifter 1 ton pickup 1986 to 2000 Also fitted by a number of companies as aftermarket conversions in VW Kombi and Toyota Hiace Ferrino Sports car based on Ferrari Dino using a tubular chassis and glassfibre body Lynx Roadster based on Ford Cortina chassis with glassfibre body Netherlands edit Spijkstaal mobile supermarket See also editList of Ford enginesReferences edit Project 200 hp Ford Capri Retrieved 2015 02 19 a b Technical data Ford Capri Mk I 3000 E GT GXL 1971 1973 Technical data Ford Capri Mk III II 78 3000X 1978 1980 Pictures of my car Archived from the original on 2004 11 17 Technical data Ford Capri Mk I 2000 GT 1969 1973 a b 1972 MK1 Ford Granada Estate FA 700EC 7210 DOM 7 March 2010 a b Red Block DuttonOwners a b Beijner Hans The Essex engine Hans Pages Retrieved 2015 04 09 Timing Belts amp Gears Ford Capri Minifix TVR M Series Engine Technical Directory Detailed specs review of 1974 Ford Consul 2500 model for Europe 1973 Ford Capri RS 3100 Carfolio com 2013 02 28 Retrieved July 8 2018 Photobucket All sizes Ford X Pack Capri Advert 1977 Flickr Photo Sharing a b Capri RS3100 1973 Ford RS Owners Club Australia Archived from the original on 2017 06 09 Retrieved 2017 05 17 Technical data Ford Capri Mk I RS3100 1973 1974 Technical data Ford Capri Mk II 3000 GT Ghia S 1974 1978 Technical data Ford Capri Mk I 3000 E GT 1970 1971 Capri Power on Facebook Facebook Archived from the original on 2022 04 27 user generated source Capri Power Forum Capri Power Forum Ford Capri RS Parts catalogue Lauri Lind Flickr 16 November 2015 engine weights Crankshaft main bearing set std with std OD housing Ford Essex V6 a b Mk1 Capri Register History Ford Capri Broadspeed Turbo 3 0 Test Report Hot Car Ma Flickr 29 August 2016 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2016 01 19 Retrieved 2015 09 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Camshaft Valves Valve Springs Timing Gear Ford Essex 3 4 litre V6 Engine htm 3 0 Essex Capri Consul Granada Zephyr and Zodiac Specialised Engines 7 January 2014 Home Ric Wood Hayes Russel August 2009 TVR Ever the Extrovert Haynes Publishing ISBN 978 1 84425 507 8 Tipler John 1994 TVR The Complete Story The Crowood Press Ltd ISBN 1 85223 796 1 Filby Peter July 2012 TVR A Passion to Succeed Autocraft Books ISBN 978 0 9545729 2 1 ScimitarWeb RSSOC Online Login and Natter Login a b Capri Perana V6 Perana org Cortina Savage mkIII pics Retro Rides Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Uren Savage V6 Mk2 Cortina The Creator Musselwhite B Tuning the Essex V6 Classic Ford Magazine reproduced at The MkIV Zephyr amp Zodiac About the Essex engine The V4 essex Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ford Essex V6 engine UK amp oldid 1191656991, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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