Rover 2600 engine

General non-technical questions and comments about the cars.
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sprint95m
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Ah, the Rover SD1, I remember them......

#11 Post by sprint95m »

When they ran well they did indeed run well offering good economy (35mpg on four star).
They definitely needed regular servicing including flushing out the radiator if not every year, certainly every second year.
Many ran up huge mileages reliably but were defeated by structural rust.



Now, here is an understatement........
sorbs wrote: I think there were issues with oil supply to the camshaft too.
Camshafts used to seize in the head (with catastrophic results) because of oil starvation when the oil feed became closed.
I have heard this being blamed on a lack of servicing but don't know how correct that is.
My late father considered buying an SD1 2600 but didn't like the low seating or the exterior colour. That particular car had a brand new engine despite a total mileage of less than 20,000 :shock: .
Owner of a 1979 Dolomite Sprint (EFI),
previously ran for nine years a Dolomite (1850), a 2500S (for 4 years), a Dolomite 1500HL (for a few months),
a Dolomite Sprint (for 10 years) and a second 2500S (for 5 years until 2007).
Alex Spooner
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Re: Rover 2600 engine

#12 Post by Alex Spooner »

Well its nice to have sparked some debate! But fear not, if I decide to upgrade the engine, it will be a good 2.5 litre Triumph engine going in there. I find the Rover engine design intriguing however, and it was a sort of look as to what was to come, and as always it would have seriously benefitted from further development. I read somewhere that the 2.6s were actually detuned because in their 'raw' state they were producing more power than the V8. I wouldn't have minded running around in a Triumph 2600 mkIII however!
1971 Triumph 2000 in North Dorset
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wrighty
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Re: Rover 2600 engine

#13 Post by wrighty »

im in a debate myself right now alec

im thinking (and you will all hate me for it) of dropping a nissan engine in mine as a project

either a sr20 (2ltr turbo) 220bhp standard but capable of 350+ easlily

or

rb25 (2.5 straight six turbo) these are 260bhp standard but if you through a grand it goes up to 450+

be a big project but a load of fun, and one of a kind
Dan Wright

1973 2.5pi
1986 E28 bmw 5 series
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Alec
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Re: Rover 2600 engine

#14 Post by Alec »

Hello Dan,

what can I say?

Talking of power of that magnitude means a radical suspension, transmission and brake upgrade so all you are left with is a façade of a 2000?

Alec
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Jaguar MK 2 (Long term restoration, nearing completion.)
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wrighty
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Re: Rover 2600 engine

#15 Post by wrighty »

This is true but it would still look like one , gorgous car with awsome running gear

Be alot of cutting and welding , but you would never find another car like it
Dan Wright

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1986 E28 bmw 5 series
Charles H
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Re: Rover 2600 engine

#16 Post by Charles H »

Charles Harrison
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mikeyb
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Re: Rover 2600 engine

#17 Post by mikeyb »

OOOOh I want :mrgreen:

Might have to take the bumpers of mine, they do look nice without them.
1977 2500s Saloon

1977Triumph on CT forum, mikeyb TSSC forum. and now you can read the blog! http://2500s.blogspot.com
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Re: Rover 2600 engine

#18 Post by Rob B »

wrighty wrote:This is true but it would still look like one , gorgous car with awsome running gear

Be alot of cutting and welding , but you would never find another car like it
Good luck insuring it...........

Dont discount the potential of the original engine, their are a lot of gains that can be made with a lot less work
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Re: Rover 2600 engine

#19 Post by Al Williams »

The Triumph designed 2.3 and 2.6, 6 cylinder engines were designed by Mike Loasby as far back as 1970, as a developed version of the 2.5 block with overhead cam... Initially!

It was initially planned to fit in the MK II 2000 shell and SD1 and with a bore of 86mm could have gone as far as 2.9...

The final re-design happened in 1973 and the block became 20mm longer than the original 2.5 straight six that we know and love, thus fitting one of these Triumph engines into a MK II shell would be no problem!

Spen King did detune the engine's in both 2.3 and 2.6 forms (123Bhp @ 5.5k and 136bhp @ 5K respectively) with 150 Bhp easily achievable by altering carburation.

A 3 litre 24 and also a diesel version were planned, as the bottom end is exceptionally strong.

A sad fact is that Triumph were not the best in alloy head production with varying levels of success in the quality control departments, which lead to early head gasket failures and indeed oil feed problems. Sounds familiar... :D

If you can cure these malidies, port, polish, flow, fit bigger valves, a set of HS 8 carbs and a decent exhaust manifold, 200 Bhp would be easy to see from the 2.6 Triumph designed engine as used in the SD1!

Good luck and catch me if you can! :D
1967 Triumph 2500
1971 Triumph Spitfire
1980 Triumph Dolomite
1981 Opel Manta
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