AMC straight-4 engine


The AMC straight-4 engine is a 2.5 L inline-four engine developed by American Motors Corporation that was used in a variety of AMC, Jeep, and Dodge vehicles from 1984 to 2002.
Note: Although the GM Iron Duke was a predecessor I4 engine in some AMC vehicles, it shares nothing in common with the AMC 2.5 L.

Development

American Motors devoted three years to the development of a new four-cylinder engine. The brand new engine was designed to use AMC's existing spacing between the cylinder bores so that the tooling remained the same. The location of other major components, such as the distributor, oil filter, and starter, were also kept the same so as to use the machine tools for the AMC straight-6 engine.
According to Jeep's chief engineer, Roy Lunn, "unlike most engines available today was not designed for passenger cars and then adapted for trucks. We specifically developed it with our Jeep vehicles and Eagle in mind. That's the reason that performance and durability were of such prime consideration from the very beginning." Although some of components were interchangeable between the AMC six-cylinder and the new engine, the four-cylinder was not a cut down version of the big six. Noted Roy Lunn, "There are some common parts, but the 4-cylinder includes many unique items such as its own electronics systems. It also has a shorter stroke and larger bore. The valves are larger and the pistons are new." Roy Lunn recalled: "We wanted as much displacement - for power and torque - as possible within the confines of bore centers of the tooling. The only parameter we could influence substantially was stroke. So we picked the largest bore and stroke in order to get 2.5 Liters."

Design

The AMC engine has a bore x stroke of for an overall displacement of. The head features a combustion chamber and port design that was later used on the 4.0 L — the 2.5 L I-4 head lost two cylinders in its center, opposed to the six-cylinder engines. The 2.5 engine also features five main bearings and eight overhead valves.
Instead of the standard AMC bell housing bolt pattern, AMC/Jeep engineers adopted the General Motors small V6 and four-cylinder bolt pattern for their new engine, because the new AMC 2.5 replaced the four-cylinder engines that had been purchased from GM; and because AMC continued to buy the 2.8 L V6 from GM until the 4.0 L I6 was introduced in 1987. The four-cylinder and V6 shared the same drivetrain components, whereas stronger transmissions were needed for the new 4.0 L. The 2.5 L also shared an 18mm threaded oil filter used with the GM 2.8 L to 1986; when the 4.0 L was phased into production with the XJ the oil filter was changed over to a 20mm thread size shared with Renaults until 1991.
The AMC I4 first appeared in 1984 model year with the new XJ Cherokee. In 1986 the head went under a minor revision, the head bolts were increased from 7/16 to 1/2 inch. From 1997 to 2002 it was marketed as the "Power-Tech I4". It was produced through 2002 for the Jeep Wrangler, as well as for the Dodge Dakota pickup that also featured the AMC/Jeep designed four-cylinder as its standard engine on regular cab rear-wheel drive models from 1996 through 2002.
This lightweight engine is similar to its "big brother" 4.0 L, and although not powerful, it is durable with no reliability issues.
Output the final year was at 5400 rpm and of torque at 3250 rpm using sequential multiple-port fuel injection. For comparison, the 258 I6 provided at 3200 rpm and of torque at 2000 rpm in its final year with the computer-controlled carburetor.
For several years, the engine was detuned for the Wrangler; from at least 1992-1995, it produced and of torque with 9.2:1 compression ratio in the Cherokee and Comanche.
AMC Compression ratioHorsepowerTorque
One-barrel carburetor 9.2:1 at 5,000 at 2,800
Throttle body injection 9.2:1 at 5,000 at 3,500
Multi-point fuel injection 9.1:1 at 5,250 at 3,250


Note that the TBI system was made by Renix and used from mid-1986-August 1990.

Applications

The AMC engine was used in the following vehicles:
AMC's Chinese joint venture Beijing Jeep Corporation also manufactured the 150 cubic-inch inline-four for installation in the locally built XJ Cherokee, originally called the Beijing Jeep BJ213 Cherokee. Local manufacture began in 1984 and the engine's name was C498QA in China. A wide variety of variants and code names were applied to the Cherokee over the years, with the most drastic change being the facelifted Beijing Jeep 2500 which arrived in 2002. Beijing Jeep also developed a stroked 2.7-liter version called the C498QA3, which entered production in about 2003. This fuel injected engine displaces, produced at 4800 rpm and was installed in a fairly short-lived variant of the 2500 called the Jeep 2700.
From the beginning of the Jeep joint venture, Beijing had envisioned installing the C498QA engine in the original Beijing Jeep, with trial installation taking place in 1986. However, the first derivative of the old Beijing Jeep to be fitted with the American engine was the facelifted BJ 2020 V of 1999. Beijing's BJ 752 prototype sedan was also fitted with the Jeep Cherokee engine, but only three examples were built in 1987 and 1988. After the joint venture was dissolved in 2009, manufacture of the Cherokee continued under the Beijing Auto Works name, although BAW only installed the C498QA engine in their Cherokee-based BJ2025 Leichi SUV from 2004 until 2008.