Trivia questions - just for fun.
I'll post the answers soon.
1. What was the first American car company to produce an overhead cam engine? 2. What was the second? 3. What American car holds the record for number of carburetors as delivered from the factory? Have fun. |
Trivia questions - just for fun.
Lhead wrote:
> I'll post the answers soon. > > 1. What was the first American car company to produce an overhead cam > engine? Who knows- that's kinda lost in the mists of antiquity. I know Duesenberg used a "modern by modern standards" DOHC 32-valve inline 8 (in normally aspirated and supercharged versions) in the 1920s. But I doubt it was the first. There was an awful lot of experimentation with engine configurations (OHC, L-head, T-head, OHV, etc.) in the 19-teens and 20s before things settled in on the OHV cam-in-block setup in the 50s thru late 70s. > > 2. What was the second? No idea. > > 3. What American car holds the record for number of carburetors as > delivered from the factory? No idea. |
Trivia questions - just for fun.
Lhead wrote:
> 3. What American car holds the record for number of carburetors as > delivered from the factory? My father had a Ford Pinto that had about a dozen carburetors until the dealer could find one that actually worked right. Then it turned out it was also delivered from the factory with a cracked block as well. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
Trivia questions - just for fun.
"Lhead" > wrote in message
oups.com... > I'll post the answers soon. > > 1. What was the first American car company to produce an overhead cam > engine? > > 2. What was the second? > > 3. What American car holds the record for number of carburetors as > delivered from the factory? > > Have fun. > 1. Pontiac LeMans 2. Ford Pinto 3. TriPower GTO |
Trivia questions - just for fun.
Irwin Corey wrote: > "Lhead" > wrote in message > oups.com... > > I'll post the answers soon. > > > > 1. What was the first American car company to produce an overhead cam > > engine? > > > > 2. What was the second? > > > > 3. What American car holds the record for number of carburetors as > > delivered from the factory? > > > > Have fun. > > > > 1. Pontiac LeMans > > 2. Ford Pinto > > 3. TriPower GTO I'm not going to post my answers just yet, but as to the LeMans, Pinto and GTO - no, no, and no. |
Trivia questions - just for fun.
Irwin Corey wrote: > "Lhead" > wrote in message > oups.com... > > I'll post the answers soon. > > > > 1. What was the first American car company to produce an overhead cam > > engine? > > > > 2. What was the second? > > > > 3. What American car holds the record for number of carburetors as > > delivered from the factory? > > > > Have fun. > > > > 1. Pontiac LeMans > > 2. Ford Pinto > > 3. TriPower GTO Believe the 53 Corvette, striaght 6 had three carbs. |
Trivia questions - just for fun.
"Lhead" > wrote in message oups.com... > I'll post the answers soon. > > 1. What was the first American car company to produce an overhead cam > engine? I think it was Scott in about 1906. > > 2. What was the second? No clue > > 3. What American car holds the record for number of carburetors as > delivered from the factory? Shelby Cobra 4 Webers. > > Have fun. > |
Trivia questions - just for fun.
Irwin Corey wrote:
> "Lhead" > wrote in message > oups.com... > >>I'll post the answers soon. >> >>1. What was the first American car company to produce an overhead cam >>engine? >> >>2. What was the second? >> >>3. What American car holds the record for number of carburetors as >>delivered from the factory? >> >>Have fun. >> > > > 1. Pontiac LeMans Impossible- both the Duesenberg and the Willys OHC engines predated that by 40 and 5 years, respectively. > > 2. Ford Pinto See above. > > 3. TriPower GTO That's 3, but that's only a tie with the 440 and 340 "six-pack" Dodge and "six barrel" Plymouths. And I think Chevy had a tiple-deuce setup at some point too. |
Trivia questions - just for fun.
Plymouth roadrunners had the "6-pack" set up, three two barrel carbs, synced to each other to open in stages as throttle compressed. They were a bear to keep sync'ed, but when they were, they were awesome. -- Knifeblade_03 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Knifeblade_03's Profile: http://www.automotiveforums.com/vbul...?userid=262826 View this thread: http://www.automotiveforums.com/vbul...d.php?t=609348 http://www.automotiveforums.com |
Trivia questions - just for fun.
Steve wrote:
> Lhead wrote: > > 1. What was the first American car company to produce an overhead cam > > engine? > Who knows- that's kinda lost in the mists of antiquity. I know > Duesenberg used a "modern by modern standards" DOHC 32-valve inline 8 > (in normally aspirated and supercharged versions) in the 1920s. But I > doubt it was the first. There was an awful lot of experimentation with > engine configurations (OHC, L-head, T-head, OHV, etc.) in the 19-teens > and 20s before things settled in on the OHV cam-in-block setup in the > 50s thru late 70s. The 1910 Jackson used a shaft driven OHC, so might be a 1st for that, rather than using a chain, which was a pre 1900 maker. Wilks? Motor Company or something > > 3. What American car holds the record for number of carburetors as > > delivered from the factory? Miller had an eight carb motor for racecars, but I don't know if that counts as 'Factory' ** mike ** |
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