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Mazda Z engine | |
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Overview | |
Manufacturer | Mazda |
Production | 1995-2014 |
Layout | |
Configuration | Inline 4 |
Displacement |
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Cylinder bore |
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Piston stroke |
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Cylinder block material | Cast iron, Aluminum |
Cylinder head material | Aluminum |
Valvetrain | DOHC 4 valves x cyl. with VVT |
Combustion | |
Fuel system | Fuel injection |
Fuel type | Gasoline |
Oil system | Wet sump |
Cooling system | Water-cooled |
Output | |
Power output | 88 hp (66 kW; 89 PS) 90 hp (67 kW; 91 PS) 91 hp (68 kW; 92 PS) 92 hp (69 kW; 93 PS) 105 hp (78 kW; 106 PS) 110 hp (82 kW; 112 PS) 111 hp (83 kW; 113 PS) 130 hp (97 kW; 132 PS) |
Chronology | |
Predecessor | Mazda B engine |
Successor | Mazda SKYACTIV-G engine |
The Mazda Z-series is a smaller gasoline inline-four engine ranging in displacements from 1.3 L to 1.6 L. They are the evolution of the cast-iron block B-engine.
The Z-engine has 16-valves operated by dual overhead camshafts, which are in turn driven by a timing chain (ZJ/Z6/ZY only). The block of the 98-02 Z5, ZM and ZL engine is cast iron same as the earlier B series of engines.
Other Z engines have aluminum alloy block and head, with cast-iron cylinder liners. The block features split upper and lower block assembly for added strength and rigidity, special long intake manifold for added torque, S-VT continuous variable valve timing, and a stainless steel 4:1 exhaust header.
In 2011, Mazda started to introduce the SkyActiv-G as a new, more economical option for vehicles that were equipped with the Mazda Z-engine. Production of the Z-series halted in 2014, being the last year of the Mazda2, Verisa as well as Mazda3 of their generations. Mazda moved on to the full SkyActiv architecture in their vehicle lineup, including running only the aforementioned SkyActiv-G engine, now offered in larger displacements, alongside a new SkyActiv-D turbo-diesel engine.