It is a metric measurment of engine size. An example is the 350 Cubic Inch Chevy engine. It is also called a 5.7 Liter engine. This measurment is the bore of the cylinder and the distance it travels. Take the engines bore X stroke X the #of cylinders=liters
it means a 2.3 litre engine
If you mean the 3.2 litre V6,engine, no- 6VDI then it's Isuzu's Own engine and NOT a GM earlier type.
If it's a V6 it is a 4.3 litre vortec engine. If it is a four cylinder engine it is a 2.2 litre engine.
the L stands for litre or displacement. As in 1.9 litre engine. Another way to say it is 1900 CC
Either a 300tdi which is a 2.5 litre turbo diesel intercooled engine or a 4.2 litre petrol engine.
In a 1995 Ford Windstar : Either the 3.0 litre V6 engine or the 3.8 litre V6 engine
They came with a 2.2 litre 140hp engine from 1995-1997 and came with a 2.3 litre 150hp engine in 1998
it is a 1.3 litre which is 81 cid 1.1 litre = 1,100cc
FORD shows their 6.2L gasoline engine as being ( 379 cubic inches ) * 6.2 liter / litre is using the metric system
The Toyota Allion can go 16.4 km/litre with the 1.5-litre engine, or 16.0 km/litre with the 1.8-litre engine. In terms of miles per U.S. gallon, that is 38.6 and 37.6 mpg, respectively.
According to the 2003 Lincoln LS Owner Guide : For the 3.0 litre V6 engine and the 3.9 litre V8 engine ( 5W-20 ) * with engine oil filter change The 3.0 litre V6 engine takes ( 6.9 U.S. quarts of 5W-20 engine oil ) The 3.9 litre V8 engine takes ( 6.5 U.S. quarts of 5W-20 engine oil )
For a 1999 Ford Ranger : Either the : 2.5 litre four cylinder engine The 3.0 litre V6 engine ( and it's flex fuel version ) The 4.0 litre EFI , V6 engine ( which is an Over Head Valve / pushrod design )