Cylinder Heads

2482001G01 - : Speedometer Head for Nissan Image

Speedometer Head

Nissan 24820-01G01
Pathfinder. Without clock. Pick-up. From 11/85. E model.
Discontinued
2485040A11 - : Speedometer Head for Nissan Image

Speedometer Head

Nissan 24850-40A11
Sentra. Gas. With deluxe. From 01/85. To 01/85.
Discontinued
2485038E01 - : Speedometer Head for Nissan Image

Speedometer Head

Nissan 24850-38E01
Maxima. From 12/84.
Discontinued
2482075P03 - : Speedometer Head for Nissan Image

Speedometer Head

Nissan 24820-75P03
Pick-up. 4 cylinder. With tachometer. Pathfinder. Pick-up. 6 cylinder.
Discontinued
2482070P02 - : Speedometer Head for Nissan Image

Speedometer Head

Nissan 24820-70P02
Pick-up. 4 cylinder. With tachometer. Pathfinder. Xe model.
Discontinued
2482061A44 - : Speedometer Head for Nissan Image

Speedometer Head

Nissan 24820-61A44
Sentra. Gas. Coupe. With tachometer.
Discontinued
24820D3580 - : Speedometer Head for Nissan Image

Speedometer Head

Nissan 24820-D3580
Stanza. Without wagon. E & xe.
Discontinued
2482140F80 - : Speedometer Head for Nissan Image

Speedometer Head

Nissan 24821-40F80
240SX. Digital.
Discontinued
2482061A02 - : Speedometer Head for Nissan Image

Speedometer Head

Nissan 24820-61A02
Sentra. Gas. Coupe. Without tachometer. Std.
Discontinued
248206E300 - : Speedometer Head for Nissan Image

Speedometer Head

Nissan 24820-6E300
Maxima. Analog. Gle & gxe.
Discontinued

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The Critical Role of Cylinder Heads in Your Nissan Engine

At Empire Nissan of Hillside, we understand the importance of keeping your cylinder heads in good condition. Cylinder heads cap the top of your engine block and form the upper boundaries of the combustion chambers where fuel ignites to create power. These castings house the complete valvetrain assembly including valves, springs, camshafts, and related hardware that controls airflow in and out of each cylinder. Without a properly sealed and functioning cylinder head, your engine cannot generate compression, maintain proper combustion, or regulate temperature effectively. The cylinder head's complex internal passages and precisely machined surfaces make it one of the most engineered components in your entire vehicle.

Understanding Cylinder Head Function and Design

Cylinder heads bolt securely to the engine block and contain machined valve seats where intake and exhaust valves seal during compression and power strokes. In your Nissan Versa or Nissan Maxima, the head incorporates intake ports that route air-fuel mixture into cylinders and exhaust ports that direct spent gases toward the exhaust system. Internal coolant passages surround the combustion chambers to absorb heat and prevent localized overheating that could damage the head material. The combustion chamber shape cast into the head's underside directly influences compression ratio, flame propagation speed, and emissions characteristics. Camshaft bores or towers in the head support the camshaft that operates the valves through rocker arms or direct contact. Genuine Nissan cylinder heads maintain exact port flow characteristics, valve angles, and chamber volumes calibrated for your specific engine, while generic replacements often feature dimensional variations that affect performance and reliability.

Primary Causes of Cylinder Head Damage

Cylinder heads fail predominantly through thermal stress and mechanical damage. Overheating episodes from coolant loss, failed thermostats, or clogged radiators cause aluminum heads to expand beyond their design limits, creating warped sealing surfaces that leak compression and coolant. Localized hot spots from restricted coolant flow crack the casting between valve seats or through coolant passages. Detonation from improper fuel octane or faulty ignition timing creates pressure waves that fracture combustion chamber walls. Incorrect head bolt torque during installation produces uneven clamping that warps the head over multiple heat cycles. Freezing coolant expands and cracks internal passages in cold climates. Valve-to-piston contact from broken timing belts bends valves and damages valve seats. Aftermarket cylinder heads frequently use lower-quality aluminum alloys with different thermal expansion properties that make them more susceptible to warping under normal operating temperatures.

Signs Your Cylinder Head Needs Replacement

Replace your cylinder head when white exhaust smoke indicates coolant burning in cylinders through cracks or gasket failures. External coolant leaks at the head-to-block interface combined with oil contamination in coolant suggest head gasket failure typically accompanied by head warpage. Compression testing revealing low or unequal cylinder pressures points to sealing problems. Persistent overheating that continues after repairing the cooling system may indicate internal head cracks allowing combustion gases into coolant passages. Metal debris in the oil or unusual valve train noises suggest internal head component failure requiring replacement.

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