Volvo kad43p

Based on past wisdom from this forum I believe the kad43 and related engines were developed for marine use.
Some ancillary parts may have automotive equivalents.
 
I'm talking about a 2005 engine and volvo never made engines they just rebadged them and painted them green,
but thanks for your reply.
 
I always understood the bigger D12 and 74 were from there truck, coach and plant side of the empire and made in house .
Sure odd bits of tech may be shared in collaborative efforts with other players in diesels .Eg cylinder head internal design .
Also other bits bought off the self like injector units .

Having said all this they are essentially Volvo units .

The KAD series the op refers to as said was specifically designed for marine it does not have a vehicle application .
The D series blocks like D3 I suspect have a x over with automotive, but not all the smaller D series.

So based on that and considering the amount of IC Diesel engines across the whole empire I suspect they have taken 95 % control of there engine manufacturing so can call them truly Volvo .
I don’t think they have asked another player for example Mitsubishi ( or who ever ? ) to make them and paint them green / white ( big ones theses days ) and stick a logo on .

I,am guessing they will have there own technology R+D team constantly refining and improving them .
They may even sub that work out , in the sense licence a deemed innovation to other players in exchange for a return piece of tech back deal .
All the marine IC diesel manufacturers enter into time limited tech share deals .When the times up that contract ends .Life carry’s on .
 
the Marine 40 series was first used in the 1977s producing around 100 HP it morphed into something developing 285 HP from the same 6 cylinder 3.6 litre design.
Do not not believe prior to that it was ever in any road vehicle ?
 
I'm talking about a 2005 engine and volvo never made engines they just rebadged them and painted them green,
but thanks for your reply.

That's not true. Some Volvo penta engines are rebranded, but many are made by Volvo.
 
The Volvo Penta 40, 41, 42, 43 and 300 series engines are all based on the 3.6 litre Volvo designed engine purely for the Marine Market in the late 1970s. The cylinder blocks and head were all cast in the Volvo Group foundry at Skovde, been there, very impressive. The nominally 4 litre engine was briefly tried in Volvo Trucks, labelled F40 however was not impressive, poor torque performance and was quickly dropped.

The same block / engine combo was also fitted to many road sweeping trucks and suffered crankshaft failures due to torsional vibration issues.

The 42 / 43 version imho gives the most "bullet proof" mechanical controlled diesel VP have produced.

In 1980s through to 2010s all 6 litre and larger engines were derived form the Volvo Truck Division and modified to Marine use, some more successfully than others.

Since then a variety of base engines have been used for a variety of sources.

Springer
 
I'm talking about a 2005 engine and volvo never made engines they just rebadged them and painted them green,
but thanks for your reply.
I would suggest that you are way off the mark and basing your remarks on a small sector of their output.
Most engines developed by Volvo have basic input from their various divisions ie truck bus construction marine and power plant.
They have had collaborated with many other manufacturers over the years such as) Duetz And as you infer bought in specific engines from other manufacturers and rebrand them
And your argument falls when they supply them in the factory option white paint.
 
I'm talking about a 2005 engine and volvo never made engines they just rebadged them and painted them green,
but thanks for your reply.
Sorry but your well out of touch , Volvo do make there own engines .
The KAD 43 is a pure marine engine , not used in any other applications.
The engine is oversquare which means it has very little torque low down without forced induction .
It would be useless in an industrial application .
 
I always understood the bigger D12 and 74 were from there truck, coach and plant side of the empire and made in house .
Sure odd bits of tech may be shared in collaborative efforts with other players in diesels .Eg cylinder head internal design .
Also other bits bought off the self like injector units .

Having said all this they are essentially Volvo units .

The KAD series the op refers to as said was specifically designed for marine it does not have a vehicle application .
The D series blocks like D3 I suspect have a x over with automotive, but not all the smaller D series.

So based on that and considering the amount of IC Diesel engines across the whole empire I suspect they have taken 95 % control of there engine manufacturing so can call them truly Volvo .
I don’t think they have asked another player for example Mitsubishi ( or who ever ? ) to make them and paint them green / white ( big ones theses days ) and stick a logo on .

I,am guessing they will have there own technology R+D team constantly refining and improving them .
They may even sub that work out , in the sense licence a deemed innovation to other players in exchange for a return piece of tech back deal .
All the marine IC diesel manufacturers enter into time limited tech share deals .When the times up that contract ends .Life carry’s on .

Other base units derived from ,

Peugeot / Idenor firbthe MD21 and MD32 . 1970s era .
From then on volvos own units 40 series .
60 series from volvos own industrial engines.
D4/6 in conjunction with Deutz .
D9/11/12/13 industrial,
Latest D8 is actually a Daewoo power unit .

I’m not sure what’s to come next .
 
fuel filter, micron filter, oil filter, plus the three belts 2 flat 1 v belt

The cost of these units are so low comparatively speaking it simply doesn't warrant going off piste to aftermarket or cheaper and usually ends in dissatisfaction anyway.
 
The cost of these units are so low comparatively speaking it simply doesn't warrant going off piste to aftermarket or cheaper and usually ends in dissatisfaction anyway.

I have found useful cross references for filters for my kad 32 and made substantial savings, The most starting of which is air filters around £5 each compared to around £25 each for a Volvo Penta labelled item. With twin engines a very worthwhile saving. Also I get fuel and oil filters a round half the VP prices.
However I agree belts are one thing I would always but the VP items as they have proven to be long lived and trouble free so worth the expense .
 
Top