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Wednesday, July 4, 2018

Size Doesn't Matter: The Tale of The Chevy II/Nova 153 IL-4 Engine ...
src: www.oldcarmanualproject.com

The 153-cubic-inch (2.5 L) 153 was an inline-four engine which was designed for use in the entry-level Chevy II/Nova. It is a four-cylinder version of the Chevrolet 230 inline-six. Usage of the 153 lasted through 1970 because of low demand (the motor was used as standard equipment with the Kaiser Jeep DJ-5A which was used by the United States Postal Service until 1971 where the 153 was replaced with the AMC inline six after Kaiser Jeep was purchased by American Motors), after which the inline-six was made the base powerplant with the Chevy II/Nova. Currently, descendants of the 153 are used with industrial (forklifts or generators) or marine applications.

The 153 has a bore of 3.875 inches (98.4 mm) and a stroke of 3.25 inches (82.6 mm). The firing order is 1-3-4-2. A later variant of the 153, the 181, used a larger 4-inch (101.6 mm) bore and a longer 3.6-inch (91.4 mm) stroke. The 181 (branded by GM as the Vortec 3000 for marine or industrial usage) was never installed in passenger cars in the United States (later variants of the Vortec 3000 had modified cylinder heads where machined bosses were drilled for use with multipoint fuel injection). The 153 engine is entirely different from the later Pontiac 151-cubic-inch (2.5 L) Iron Duke, but the two are often confused today.


Video Chevrolet 153 4-cylinder engine



South Africa

This engine was a mainstay for GMSA, who built it in their Aloes Plant (on the northern edge of Port Elizabeth) for installation in a wide range of cars. Several smaller displacement versions of this engine were also built there. The larger one has a displacement of 2,319 cc (2.3 L; 141.5 cu in), and a stroke of 3 in (76.2 mm) with the same bore. There was also a narrow-bore 1,960 cc (2.0 L; 119.6 cu in) engine which has a bore of 3 9/16 in (90.5 mm). This is also the bore used for Chevrolet's closely related "194" six-cylinder engine.

Applications:

  • 1962-1970 Chevy II
  • 1967-1971 Postal Jeep
  • 1968-1991 Chevrolet Opala (Brazil)
  • 1964 Chevrolet Van
  • 1971-1975 Chevrolet Firenza (2.5, South Africa)
  • 197?-1978 Chevrolet 2500 (2.5, South Africa)
  • 1975-1978 Chevrolet 1900 (2.0, South Africa)
  • 1976-1982 Chevrolet Chevair (2.0 and 2.3, South Africa)
  • 1978-1982 Chevrolet Rekord (2.3, South Africa)

Maps Chevrolet 153 4-cylinder engine



Marine versions

GM produced a 3-liter for Mercury Marine, based on the 153 (4-inch bore/3.60 stroke), but using the Chevrolet V8 bellhousing bolt pattern. The 3-liter is manufactured in Mexico where 1992-to-present engines have a one-piece rear seal similar to the one used with the Chevrolet small-block and 90-degree V6 (the flywheel bolt pattern for the later-production 3-liter does not interchange with the earlier 153 or 181 which uses the small-block and inline-six's 3.58" bolt-circle, and does not use the 1986-present one-piece rear-seal flywheels since the bolt pattern is larger).


Cut-Down Engine of the Week: GM Iron Duke | Autoweek
src: hanabi.autoweek.com


References

Source of article : Wikipedia