What's your favourite engine?

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Bonefish Blues

Banging donk
Location
52 Festive Road
 

Tail End Charlie

Well, write it down boy ......
VW flat four, as fitted to the Beetle. So simple to work on (at least when I was in my 20's and didn't mind lying on my back under them). Managed to do a clutch change in an hour and a half. Try that on a modern vehicle! Spare parts never a problem.
 

TheDoctor

Noble and true, with a heart of steel
Moderator
Location
The TerrorVortex
Merlin.
I was at Great Gransden in 2014 for the two Lancasters display. One Merlin sounds great, but eight was incredible.
RR Olympus.
Saw XH558 display at Shuttleworth a few times, including the last display flight.
RR Snecma Olympus 593
I was near the end of the runway when G-AXDN landed at Duxford in 1977.
 
Sulzer XLDA28 series. Father worked on them on the Vickers “ Golden Mile”* so they paid for all my expensive childhood interests, and look at their record in service home and abroad.

* so called because of all the overtime they worked.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
I'd have to flop them over my shoulder and tuck one each in my rear trouser pockets.

I've ridden some lairy bikes in my time, but even I would take a respectful step backwards if offered a go on a 250MPH jet turbine powered widowmaker.
 

PapaZita

Guru
Location
St. Albans
I always liked Citroen‘s flat twin and flat four from the 2CV and GS respectively.

But the one that always fascinated me was their Type P1, an experimental engine from the 1960s. An 1800cc two stroke V4, with a supercharger driven by a separate 200cc four stroke engine in the same block. With the boost controlled independently of the main engine it was sufficiently torquey that it only needed one forward gear and a torque converter. It can’t have been quite as brilliant as it sounds, as it obviously never went into production.
 
1. Napier ‘Deltic’
When l was at secondary school, it stood alongside the Leeds -Wakefield- Doncaster line, so the ‘55’ was a regular sound, before the HST took over


View: https://youtu.be/_7rod4DuCr4?si=4iNYv3lqlFmIVIgb


2. Magnum’ V8
440 cubic inch (circa 7.5 litre)
Walk directly behind a car, with one of those & appropriate tail-pipes, & you feel it, as much as hear it!


View: https://youtu.be/KuWhE-skt_s?si=sFfSTjByQz-axcRW


3. Rover V8 (a Buick design)
In most varients
The 101FC, & TVR Griffith 500, are the best sounding of the bunch to me


View: https://youtu.be/5g8NTTwipfA?si=DIxif0o5oSNxg4K2



View: https://youtu.be/krTuoVE05OY?si=MUEipKd-zCnH-lVn
 
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