Ok many thanks
@300bhp/ton and
@Nodge68, much appreciated.
A shame as I like a DS. I'll stick with my early 2.2 then, which recently has been out of action, see other posts on here.
Looks like it's a Defender then!
Are you in the UK and have you ever taken an engine out of a vehicle before or done an engine swap?
I only ask, as I'd assume anyone who has worked on a vehicle and done engine swaps (even if just doing a clutch or a like for like engine replacement). Would know what is involved in fitting an engine.
I really do mean this to try and be helpful. An engine swap is a pretty major thing to do. If you have time and experience, then it is amazing what engine conversions there are out there. But they will normally need quite a lot of R&D and fabrication, unless there is already a scene and market in doing said swap. But even then it can still be a lot of work and usually not exactly plug & play...
On a basic level, does the engine even fit in the engine bay? If not, can you make it fit? If it fits, is there room to have things like radiators, intercoolers, pipework and all the other things you find in an engine bay normally?
I have no idea on the Discovery Sport, but as a transverse engine platform with small engines, a straight 6 sounds like a large engine to physically fit.
Does the engine then mate up to the existing gearbox?
If it doesn't, can it be made to fit with an adapter? Do such things exist or would you require a one off bespoke one being made?
Can the transmission even handle the expected power/torque of the intended engine. Are there different transmission options? Can they be made to fit the vehicle?
Considering the Discovery Sport uses a complex and advanced 4wd system and is a transverse engine, I'd guess transmission options might be hugely limited.
Can you get the engine to play ball with the rest of the vehicle? Does the BECM need inputs from the engine in order to work correctly?
If you aren't planning on doing the work yourself, this would likely be a major project to pay someone to undertake. As they will still have all the same questions and require answers to them.
Lots of engine swaps will be based on engines from the same engine family as the original or something done by the manufacturer at some point on that platform or using the major components.
Depending on which country you are in, there may also be legal restrictions and limitations on what you can or can't do.