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BMW E30 6 cylinder Engines




The straight-6 (also inline-6, I-6, or I6) is an internal combustion engine with six cylinders aligned in a single row. The name slant-6 is sometimes used when the cylinders are at an angle from the vertical.
Usually a straight-6 was used for engine displacements between about 2.5 and 4.0 L. It was also sometimes used for smaller engines but these, although very smooth running, tended to be rather expensive to manufacture and they were inevitably physically longer than alternative layouts. The smallest production straight-6 was found in the Benelli 750 Sei motorcycle, displacing 747.7 cc (0.75 L / 45.6 cu in). The largest are used to power ships and have displacements of 1,000 L or more.
Straight-6 engines were historically more common than V6s, mainly because the length of such engines was not such a concern in rear wheel drive vehicles, but also because V6s (unlike the crossplane V8) of the time were difficult to run smoothly. The widespread use of front-wheel-drive and transverse engine ("east-west") configurations in smaller cars saw that the shorter engine length of the V6 became highly desirable, and currently most six-cylinder engines are made in the V configuration.
M20 - Straight 6 cylinder SOHC 12V. Baby Six. 1977-1992. 117kg 258lbsUsed in E21 320, E21 320i/6, E28, E30, E34, E21/30 323i, E30 325e and E28 528e2.0i (129bhp), 2.3i (143bhp), 2.5i (170bhp), 2.7e (125bhp)

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