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Quoted: 1940's Chevy GM Tech is the replacement for Mopar Hemi in the 21st Century? But I look at stuff Daimler-Benz has been able to do, far from the days when More Horsepower = More C.I. Or far cry from putting the same Maybach engine from 40+ ton tanks into 50+ ton tanks. View Quote What straight six had twin turbos and fuel injection in the 40's? |
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will you have to pull the intake manifold just to replace spark plugs like on the pentastar?
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CSB for today . I know many will think I’m lying , but this is a true story . I am a true texas redneck amateur gearhead that was around a family of mopar people in my early years of mid teens through now . My buddy’s dad had a mopar graveyard on his “farm” . There was an old Plymouth sent to the graveyard because it was rusted out and the tranny was fucked . While drinking beer and feeding the hogs we decided to get the slant six running for an experiment ! We charged up a battery , topped off the oil and water , and put fresh fuel in it . After cleaning the points and adjusting them the old girl fired up . We let her run for awhile to get to temp and then shut it off . We was outta beer so we waited . Coupla days later we had to feed hogs again so we loaded the feed in the truck and made damn sure we had plenty of cold beer . And a brick . We fed the hogs and went and fired the old girl up . Buddy took the brick , put it on the gas pedal, and we sat on the truck tailgate and drank beer . We waited and bet how many beers it would take before it had a cast iron fit . It lived . Out of mercy I removed the pbrick and shut her down . She fired right back up . No shit , this actually happened !
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Quoted: By wheel diameter (big vs Small) Which turbine wheel sees exhaust gas first and which compressor wheel dis charges to the cylinders? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: It’s pretty common to have a smaller charger feeding a larger charger. It reduces lag. The only thing better than a big turbo is a big turbo being fed by a smaller turbo. By wheel diameter (big vs Small) Which turbine wheel sees exhaust gas first and which compressor wheel dis charges to the cylinders? Smaller high pressure charger sees exhaust first. Both compressor wheels go to intake independently. |
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Quoted: Smaller high pressure charger sees exhaust first. Both compressor wheels go to intake independently. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: It’s pretty common to have a smaller charger feeding a larger charger. It reduces lag. The only thing better than a big turbo is a big turbo being fed by a smaller turbo. By wheel diameter (big vs Small) Which turbine wheel sees exhaust gas first and which compressor wheel dis charges to the cylinders? Smaller high pressure charger sees exhaust first. Both compressor wheels go to intake independently. Got an example of that system? The series systems I’m familiar with have the large/low pressure CW feeding the small/HP CW. |
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Quoted: Got an example of that system? The series systems I’m familiar with have the large/low pressure CW feeding the small/HP CW. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: It’s pretty common to have a smaller charger feeding a larger charger. It reduces lag. The only thing better than a big turbo is a big turbo being fed by a smaller turbo. By wheel diameter (big vs Small) Which turbine wheel sees exhaust gas first and which compressor wheel dis charges to the cylinders? Smaller high pressure charger sees exhaust first. Both compressor wheels go to intake independently. Got an example of that system? The series systems I’m familiar with have the large/low pressure CW feeding the small/HP CW. A normal sequential turbo setup is plumbed thusly: On the exhaust side, Exhaust Manifold>Small Turbo>Big Turbo>Atmosphere. On the intake side, Atmosphere>Big Turbo>Small Turbo>Intake. |
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Quoted: A normal sequential turbo setup is plumbed thusly: On the exhaust side, Exhaust Manifold>Small Turbo>Big Turbo>Atmosphere. On the intake side, Atmosphere>Big Turbo>Small Turbo>Intake. View Quote We’re saying the same thing. It’s the LP & HP compressors (of a series turbine stage) independently feeding the inlet plenum that I haven’t seen. Unless I’m missing something the compressor discharge pressures will be different and you’re going to have a bit of an issue. |
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WILD SLANT SIX - 225 Chrysler Build and Dyno | Iconic Engine Series |
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https://www.stellpower.com/news-2022/gme-t6-tornado-engine-may-be-coming-to-new-york-this-year/
Is “Tornado” inline six coming to New York? February 10, 2022 by David Zatz Years ago, Allpar broke the news of a new inline six-cylinder planned for trucks and coded “Tornado,” after the plane—though there was a Jeep Tornado engine. Nobody at Stellantis has gone on record about the new straight-six engine until very recently, though the turbocharged “Tornado” six was briefly listed in the company’s list of plants. As Stellpower had already reported weeks earlier, the engine was listed as being made in Saltillo, currently home of every Hemi V8. Autoblog reported today that the GME T6 will likely be coming to the New York Auto Show, under the hood of the Grand Cherokee. This is based on a media event where their reporter asked Jim Morrison, head of Jeep, about the engine, and Morrison asked them, “Are you coming to New York?” It’s a good hint. The new inline six-cylinder engine will have standard and high output versions. It is slated for every vehicle now sporting the 5.7 Hemi—the Ram 1500, Wrangler, Gladiator, Grand Cherokee, and Wagoneer, joining the Dodge Challenger when, in 2023 or 2024, a new generation hits the streets. The GME T6 will likely exceed Hemi peak output (395 horsepower and 410 pound-feet), but that’s not as important as one would think, since it will reach peak torque earlier and maintain it longer, providing stronger acceleration than the normally aspirated V8. Based on 4xe acceleration in the Jeep Wrangler, a hybrid version of the T6 could outrun the 392 and perhaps challenge, if not match, the original Hellcats. More on the GME T6 “Tornado”… Original source: Allpar. This update: Autoblog View Quote |
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Quoted: I’ll be interested . The slant 6s were damn near bombproof View Quote A large part of that is that the slants were designed to be an open deck aluminum engine using the (crappy) aluminum of the era, and when they went to cast iron closed deck, they didn't shrink the dimensions, they left all the beef there. |
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Quoted: Well, it also underperforms its competition. People want more hp, more tq, and better mpg. Time moves on. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: The EPA is the only reason they killed it. Probably could have designed a modern crossflow head to meet emissions, tho. Well, it also underperforms its competition. People want more hp, more tq, and better mpg. Time moves on. Now go do the vegan one. Than the crossfit one. |
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Quoted: Ford 6.2 & Penstar are over a decade old. My point being though DI is present on a majority of engines, you can't dismiss EGR+ DI issues as uncommon. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Name the modern engines that are NOT DI No DI period? Off the top of my head, the Chrysler Pentastar family and Hemi family, the Ford 6.2 and 7.3 in the Super Duty line, the older Toyota stuff (1GR and 3UR), and some random Korean engines that are still holding on. But that's only part of the picture... Quoted: There are plenty that are dual injected using both direct and port injection. His point was that those engines who utilize both tend to have less issues with carbon than direct injection only engines. Exactly. Dual injection systems were a little slow to gain traction, but they've really proliferated the last 4-5 years. Toyota opened that door with Lexus products around 2006 or so, but at this point, most of the Toyota corp portfolio and a whole lot of Ford's products (including the ones they really care about) use dual injection. Ford 6.2 & Penstar are over a decade old. My point being though DI is present on a majority of engines, you can't dismiss EGR+ DI issues as uncommon. If EGR had been successfully implemented for ~20 years or so before the widespread adoption of DI, is it really an EGR problem? The other problem with this discussion is, EGR is far from being the only source of intake valve fouling. Oil leaking down the valve seals, oil residue from the PCV, and contamination from valve overlap are all major potential contributors of fouling depending upon the specific engine and how it's used. It's hard to single out any one of these as the primary cause. Regardless of which combination of these is causing the problems, we know what a really good solution is: port injection. |
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Quoted: Chrysler and “good transmission” are words that NOBODY associates with each other. I was a proud 48RE victim, twice. Maybe they’ve improved recently but historically their transmissions have been junk View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: More mains per rod too, so theoretically the bottom end can take more boost than a V6, all else being equal. Not really, 90% of torque is available from 1,800 to 6,350 rpm. It isn't a peaky engine at all, and the 845RFE makes it even better. Mitsubishi would have been closer. When you compare the fact that Chrysler has been using some of the best transmissions on the market in their vehicles for the better part of a decade with the fact that Nissan has had a penchant for using disposable transaxles over the same period, your comment reveals itself to be nonsensical. Chrysler and “good transmission” are words that NOBODY associates with each other. I was a proud 48RE victim, twice. Maybe they’ve improved recently but historically their transmissions have been junk *raises hand* But than, it's still 904s and 727s here, so ... |
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Quoted: Chrysler and “good transmission” are words that NOBODY associates with each other. I was a proud 48RE victim, twice. Maybe they’ve improved recently but historically their transmissions have been junk View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: More mains per rod too, so theoretically the bottom end can take more boost than a V6, all else being equal. Not really, 90% of torque is available from 1,800 to 6,350 rpm. It isn't a peaky engine at all, and the 845RFE makes it even better. Mitsubishi would have been closer. When you compare the fact that Chrysler has been using some of the best transmissions on the market in their vehicles for the better part of a decade with the fact that Nissan has had a penchant for using disposable transaxles over the same period, your comment reveals itself to be nonsensical. Chrysler and “good transmission” are words that NOBODY associates with each other. I was a proud 48RE victim, twice. Maybe they’ve improved recently but historically their transmissions have been junk Yes, Chrysler's history with in-house transmissions is pretty bad. But... Chrysler doesn't use their own transmissions in most applications anymore. They source the designs from ZF, and the ZF 8HP in particular is probably the very best torque converted auto transmission on the market right now. Those ZF transmissions are one of the very best things to ever happen to Chrysler. |
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There's a lot to take in there. I don't think I've ever heard the Aussie pronunciation of carburetor before. It's certainly different. That engine sounds glorious. I suspect the induction noise from six open intakes like that is a big part of the magic there. That's a LOT of time and money to make less than 300/300. |
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Quoted: A large part of that is that the slants were designed to be an open deck aluminum engine using the (crappy) aluminum of the era, and when they went to cast iron closed deck, they didn't shrink the dimensions, they left all the beef there. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I'll be interested . The slant 6s were damn near bombproof A large part of that is that the slants were designed to be an open deck aluminum engine using the (crappy) aluminum of the era, and when they went to cast iron closed deck, they didn't shrink the dimensions, they left all the beef there. |
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Quoted: Euroweenies simply do not understand the American market. Nobody here is going to buy a muscle car with a 6 in it unless it is for their girlfriend or wife. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: I'm not a car guy, but even I know that American muscle cars come in one flavor, and that's V8. Customers aren't asking for this, you have to wonder what kind of visit from the Bad Idea Fairy caused them to make this self-inflicted wound...? To make V8s they have to pay a tax and buy credits from Tesla, because the fuel economy is poor. Euroweenies simply do not understand the American market. Nobody here is going to buy a muscle car with a 6 in it unless it is for their girlfriend or wife. Yep. The Challenger was "the least good track car" of the big 3, the "oldest", it was "too big" and all that. Attached File And Jay Leno loved his. And they sell well. They have great power where you can actually use it every day, it's comfortable on long drives, yada yada. I believe the words Leno used, "It's sort of like the supercar you can drive and live with every day". I'm not into the small displacement turbo engines in muscle cars or big trucks. Everything else, not that bothered In a big truck? Big lazy V8 or a diesel - one not tapco-fucked by the EPA, but that's the world we live in. Muscle car? Big V8 with a good roar. A "sporty" car or a porsche or something? Doesn't have to be a V8. Midsize truck? same. But in 2 genres, for me, for my money? That's what I want. IMHO Dodge was the place for that, for the Big V8 hold outs who wanted several V8 options and that traditional look in an econobox powered by yo-yos world. Start watering that down and it's not quite an alternative anymore. In the EV game, I'd probably look at Tesla first. The EV tech isn't there for me yet but, hell if Elon will at least put his fucking neck out there and tweet in support of the truckers who are pushing back against the dictator stuff? He earned a LOT of points in my book for that. |
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Quoted: There's a lot to take in there. I don't think I've ever heard the Aussie pronunciation of carburetor before. It's certainly different. That engine sounds glorious. I suspect the induction noise from six open intakes like that is a big part of the magic there. That's a LOT of time and money to make less than 300/300. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: There's a lot to take in there. I don't think I've ever heard the Aussie pronunciation of carburetor before. It's certainly different. That engine sounds glorious. I suspect the induction noise from six open intakes like that is a big part of the magic there. That's a LOT of time and money to make less than 300/300. I would be interested to see what could be gotten out of a 170 cid slant six using forced induction. The engine was originally designed to be that size, for the 225 they just slapped in more stroke, which obviously wouldn't have been the greatest geometry. As far as output, slants were never about peak numbers anyways. They were about ludicrously flat torque curves that were more like flat rulers than curves. |
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Quoted: Yep. The Challenger was "the least good track car" of the big 3, the "oldest", it was "too big" and all that. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/144599/fp3304jfmou41_jpg-2276290.JPG And Jay Leno loved his. And they sell well. They have great power where you can actually use it every day, it's comfortable on long drives, yada yada. I believe the words Leno used, "It's sort of like the supercar you can drive and live with every day". I'm not into the small displacement turbo engines in muscle cars or big trucks. Everything else, not that bothered In a big truck? Big lazy V8 or a diesel - one not tapco-fucked by the EPA, but that's the world we live in. Muscle car? Big V8 with a good roar. A "sporty" car or a porsche or something? Doesn't have to be a V8. Midsize truck? same. But in 2 genres, for me, for my money? That's what I want. IMHO Dodge was the place for that, for the Big V8 hold outs who wanted several V8 options and that traditional look in an econobox powered by yo-yos world. Start watering that down and it's not quite an alternative anymore. In the EV game, I'd probably look at Tesla first. The EV tech isn't there for me yet but, hell if Elon will at least put his neck out there and tweet in support of the truckers who are pushing back against the dictator stuff? He earned a LOT of points in my book for that. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: I'm not a car guy, but even I know that American muscle cars come in one flavor, and that's V8. Customers aren't asking for this, you have to wonder what kind of visit from the Bad Idea Fairy caused them to make this self-inflicted wound...? To make V8s they have to pay a tax and buy credits from Tesla, because the fuel economy is poor. Euroweenies simply do not understand the American market. Nobody here is going to buy a muscle car with a 6 in it unless it is for their girlfriend or wife. Yep. The Challenger was "the least good track car" of the big 3, the "oldest", it was "too big" and all that. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/144599/fp3304jfmou41_jpg-2276290.JPG And Jay Leno loved his. And they sell well. They have great power where you can actually use it every day, it's comfortable on long drives, yada yada. I believe the words Leno used, "It's sort of like the supercar you can drive and live with every day". I'm not into the small displacement turbo engines in muscle cars or big trucks. Everything else, not that bothered In a big truck? Big lazy V8 or a diesel - one not tapco-fucked by the EPA, but that's the world we live in. Muscle car? Big V8 with a good roar. A "sporty" car or a porsche or something? Doesn't have to be a V8. Midsize truck? same. But in 2 genres, for me, for my money? That's what I want. IMHO Dodge was the place for that, for the Big V8 hold outs who wanted several V8 options and that traditional look in an econobox powered by yo-yos world. Start watering that down and it's not quite an alternative anymore. In the EV game, I'd probably look at Tesla first. The EV tech isn't there for me yet but, hell if Elon will at least put his neck out there and tweet in support of the truckers who are pushing back against the dictator stuff? He earned a LOT of points in my book for that. I'm happy to see him tweeting that the emperor is naked, but elon is ... well. See above. YMMV and you do you and all that. |
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The Chrysler Flathead sixes worked well in "Out On A Limb", they were the ACE's out of a mix of ICE's of the day.
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Quoted: What do you mean "easier"...my engine is a direct drop-in and bolt-up upgrade to the OEM engine. Mileage? The vehicle (CJ7) is shaped like a Lego brick...I don't measure "mileage". View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: My 4.6 stroker does alright. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/171820/Capture_JPG-2275508.JPG Would have been easier to do an LS swap. What kind of mileage do you get? What do you mean "easier"...my engine is a direct drop-in and bolt-up upgrade to the OEM engine. Mileage? The vehicle (CJ7) is shaped like a Lego brick...I don't measure "mileage". You sure have excellent taste. |
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Quoted: Yes, Chrysler's history with in-house transmissions is pretty bad. But... Chrysler doesn't use their own transmissions in most applications anymore. They source the designs from ZF, and the ZF 8HP in particular is probably the very best torque converted auto transmission on the market right now. Those ZF transmissions are one of the very best things to ever happen to Chrysler. View Quote It was really just a 20 year period or so. Going back to the torqueflites they did have a good reputation. They also use the Aisin-Warner ASC69RC behind the Cummins on the 3500-5500 Rams, and behind the 6.4 Hemi on the 4500-5500s |
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Quoted: It was really just a 20 year period or so. Going back to the torqueflites they did have a good reputation. They also use the Aisin-Warner ASC69RC behind the Cummins on the 3500-5500 Rams, and behind the 6.4 Hemi on the 4500-5500s View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Yes, Chrysler's history with in-house transmissions is pretty bad. But... Chrysler doesn't use their own transmissions in most applications anymore. They source the designs from ZF, and the ZF 8HP in particular is probably the very best torque converted auto transmission on the market right now. Those ZF transmissions are one of the very best things to ever happen to Chrysler. It was really just a 20 year period or so. Going back to the torqueflites they did have a good reputation. They also use the Aisin-Warner ASC69RC behind the Cummins on the 3500-5500 Rams, and behind the 6.4 Hemi on the 4500-5500s I never had a problem with any of the RE transmissions I owned, but the trick to owning them is to not be an idiot, and also keep other idiots away from them. I've seen too many owners and repair shops damage them by putting the wrong kind of fluids in them. Many people also ignored the periodic band adjustments some of them required. It's no coincidence that the manufacturers later moved to "sealed" transmission designs to keep stupid people from dumping any kind of fluid into them. As far as the switch to ZF transmissions goes, anyone who thinks it's still like it was 20 years ago is living under a rock. |
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Quoted: I never had a problem with any of the RE transmissions I owned, but the trick to owning them is to not be an idiot, and also keep other idiots away from them. I've seen too many owners and repair shops damage them by putting the wrong kind of fluids in them. Many people also ignored the periodic band adjustments some of them required. It's no coincidence that the manufacturers later moved to "sealed" transmission designs to keep stupid people from dumping any kind of fluid into them. As far as the switch to ZF transmissions goes, anyone who thinks it's still like it was 20 years ago is living under a rock. View Quote Yeah I mentioned that in a previous post but didn't really want to unpack it; the reality is that they aren't any worse than any other transmission of the era. If you used the correct fluid (ATF+4 was new when the RE's came out, and a lot of people wanted to use other transmission fluids ), didn't tow in overdrive (which the manual even said not to do) , and did the band adjustments then they were pretty problem free. They're basically a Loadflite with a tailshaft that has an overdrive in it bolted on-and if someone were to tell me the 727s aren't a great transmission I'd have trouble believing anything they had to say. Even then though, I have an 8HP75 backed Hemi sitting in my garage that was built 9 years ago. Ford diesels get less hate here, and they were still making the shitty 6.4 PowerChoke for years after the RE's ended production. |
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Quoted: Yep. The Challenger was "the least good track car" of the big 3, the "oldest", it was "too big" and all that. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/144599/fp3304jfmou41_jpg-2276290.JPG And Jay Leno loved his. And they sell well. They have great power where you can actually use it every day, it's comfortable on long drives, yada yada. I believe the words Leno used, "It's sort of like the supercar you can drive and live with every day". I'm not into the small displacement turbo engines in muscle cars or big trucks. Everything else, not that bothered In a big truck? Big lazy V8 or a diesel - one not tapco-fucked by the EPA, but that's the world we live in. Muscle car? Big V8 with a good roar. A "sporty" car or a porsche or something? Doesn't have to be a V8. Midsize truck? same. But in 2 genres, for me, for my money? That's what I want. IMHO Dodge was the place for that, for the Big V8 hold outs who wanted several V8 options and that traditional look in an econobox powered by yo-yos world. Start watering that down and it's not quite an alternative anymore. In the EV game, I'd probably look at Tesla first. The EV tech isn't there for me yet but, hell if Elon will at least put his fucking neck out there and tweet in support of the truckers who are pushing back against the dictator stuff? He earned a LOT of points in my book for that. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: I'm not a car guy, but even I know that American muscle cars come in one flavor, and that's V8. Customers aren't asking for this, you have to wonder what kind of visit from the Bad Idea Fairy caused them to make this self-inflicted wound...? To make V8s they have to pay a tax and buy credits from Tesla, because the fuel economy is poor. Euroweenies simply do not understand the American market. Nobody here is going to buy a muscle car with a 6 in it unless it is for their girlfriend or wife. Yep. The Challenger was "the least good track car" of the big 3, the "oldest", it was "too big" and all that. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/144599/fp3304jfmou41_jpg-2276290.JPG And Jay Leno loved his. And they sell well. They have great power where you can actually use it every day, it's comfortable on long drives, yada yada. I believe the words Leno used, "It's sort of like the supercar you can drive and live with every day". I'm not into the small displacement turbo engines in muscle cars or big trucks. Everything else, not that bothered In a big truck? Big lazy V8 or a diesel - one not tapco-fucked by the EPA, but that's the world we live in. Muscle car? Big V8 with a good roar. A "sporty" car or a porsche or something? Doesn't have to be a V8. Midsize truck? same. But in 2 genres, for me, for my money? That's what I want. IMHO Dodge was the place for that, for the Big V8 hold outs who wanted several V8 options and that traditional look in an econobox powered by yo-yos world. Start watering that down and it's not quite an alternative anymore. In the EV game, I'd probably look at Tesla first. The EV tech isn't there for me yet but, hell if Elon will at least put his fucking neck out there and tweet in support of the truckers who are pushing back against the dictator stuff? He earned a LOT of points in my book for that. Well said. I mean, sure, there will be some who will buy cars with the straight 6. I have lived with 2 different Chevy straight sixes and they were fine for what they were, but neither was very powerful. So, I don't dislike straight sixes at all, but the "American V8" (even if made in Mex or Can) has a certain draw that cannot be satisfied with fewer cylinders. The last V8 I had was a 6.2L in a 2016 Camaro SS that I sold because I was offered what I thought was an absurdly high price. I ended up grinning every time I drove it. Would buy again if used car prices ever regain sanity. |
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Fond memories of those slant 6's. They were great for Mother Earth style road food. A round of thin Italian sausage, an onion, a pepper and a loaf of Cuban bread from Cacciatore & Sons Italian market was all you needed. Wrap the hell out of the sausage and sliced onion and pepper in aluminum foil in the parking lot and place it on the intake runner/exhaust manifold "Shelf" right next to the head and take off. A hour and a half later at the beach it was time to chow down. My buddies '63 Valiant also had a glass windshield wiper jar. He cleaned it out and redirected the line to the glove box with aquarium tubing. Filled with hooch pilfered from our folks we could sweeten our cokes at the drive in with the press of a button. Good times!
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Quoted: @Geralt55 yeah ... about tesla ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcu2YUCa0lA You might also wanna see how they treated https://www.youtube.com/c/RichRebuilds/videos ... they've also been getting money from government cronyist carbon credit trading (it's pretty vile) https://www.cnbc.com/2021/05/18/tesla-electric-vehicle-regulatory-credits-explained.html I'm happy to see him tweeting that the emperor is naked, but elon is ... well. See above. YMMV and you do you and all that. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: I'm not a car guy, but even I know that American muscle cars come in one flavor, and that's V8. Customers aren't asking for this, you have to wonder what kind of visit from the Bad Idea Fairy caused them to make this self-inflicted wound...? To make V8s they have to pay a tax and buy credits from Tesla, because the fuel economy is poor. Euroweenies simply do not understand the American market. Nobody here is going to buy a muscle car with a 6 in it unless it is for their girlfriend or wife. Yep. The Challenger was "the least good track car" of the big 3, the "oldest", it was "too big" and all that. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/144599/fp3304jfmou41_jpg-2276290.JPG And Jay Leno loved his. And they sell well. They have great power where you can actually use it every day, it's comfortable on long drives, yada yada. I believe the words Leno used, "It's sort of like the supercar you can drive and live with every day". I'm not into the small displacement turbo engines in muscle cars or big trucks. Everything else, not that bothered In a big truck? Big lazy V8 or a diesel - one not tapco-fucked by the EPA, but that's the world we live in. Muscle car? Big V8 with a good roar. A "sporty" car or a porsche or something? Doesn't have to be a V8. Midsize truck? same. But in 2 genres, for me, for my money? That's what I want. IMHO Dodge was the place for that, for the Big V8 hold outs who wanted several V8 options and that traditional look in an econobox powered by yo-yos world. Start watering that down and it's not quite an alternative anymore. In the EV game, I'd probably look at Tesla first. The EV tech isn't there for me yet but, hell if Elon will at least put his neck out there and tweet in support of the truckers who are pushing back against the dictator stuff? He earned a LOT of points in my book for that. I'm happy to see him tweeting that the emperor is naked, but elon is ... well. See above. YMMV and you do you and all that. To be fair the V8 is, to me, one of life's great joys, I'm not in a hurry to get an EPA-CAFE-ban compliant vehicle. |
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I don't care at all how many cylinders, the angle, color, etc. Go fast don't break? yes or no?
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Quoted: Chrysler and "good transmission" are words that NOBODY associates with each other. I was a proud 48RE victim, twice. Maybe they've improved recently but historically their transmissions have been junk View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: More mains per rod too, so theoretically the bottom end can take more boost than a V6, all else being equal. Not really, 90% of torque is available from 1,800 to 6,350 rpm. It isn't a peaky engine at all, and the 845RFE makes it even better. Mitsubishi would have been closer. When you compare the fact that Chrysler has been using some of the best transmissions on the market in their vehicles for the better part of a decade with the fact that Nissan has had a penchant for using disposable transaxles over the same period, your comment reveals itself to be nonsensical. Chrysler and "good transmission" are words that NOBODY associates with each other. I was a proud 48RE victim, twice. Maybe they've improved recently but historically their transmissions have been junk The ZF 8 speed is one of the best transmissions I've ever had in a vehicle and I'm not a Mopar fanboi by any stretch. |
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Interesting observation from looking at the diagram.
While it may be called a "twin turbo" it's more accurately a bi-turbo configuration with each turbo servicing 3 of the cylinders. I'd love to see it check in at 3.2 liters, which would essentially give it 1.6 liters of displacement for each turbo. It will probably have port injection and direct injection. Compared to the 5.7 hemi, it will be lighter and have more torque between 2-4k RPM. |
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I know that engine bay! Datsun 240-260-280 for the win! |
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Quoted: Well said. I mean, sure, there will be some who will buy cars with the straight 6. I have lived with 2 different Chevy straight sixes and they were fine for what they were, but neither was very powerful. So, I don't dislike straight sixes at all, but the "American V8" (even if made in Mex or Can) has a certain draw that cannot be satisfied with fewer cylinders. The last V8 I had was a 6.2L in a 2016 Camaro SS that I sold because I was offered what I thought was an absurdly high price. I ended up grinning every time I drove it. Would buy again if used car prices ever regain sanity. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: I'm not a car guy, but even I know that American muscle cars come in one flavor, and that's V8. Customers aren't asking for this, you have to wonder what kind of visit from the Bad Idea Fairy caused them to make this self-inflicted wound...? To make V8s they have to pay a tax and buy credits from Tesla, because the fuel economy is poor. Euroweenies simply do not understand the American market. Nobody here is going to buy a muscle car with a 6 in it unless it is for their girlfriend or wife. Yep. The Challenger was "the least good track car" of the big 3, the "oldest", it was "too big" and all that. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/144599/fp3304jfmou41_jpg-2276290.JPG And Jay Leno loved his. And they sell well. They have great power where you can actually use it every day, it's comfortable on long drives, yada yada. I believe the words Leno used, "It's sort of like the supercar you can drive and live with every day". I'm not into the small displacement turbo engines in muscle cars or big trucks. Everything else, not that bothered In a big truck? Big lazy V8 or a diesel - one not tapco-fucked by the EPA, but that's the world we live in. Muscle car? Big V8 with a good roar. A "sporty" car or a porsche or something? Doesn't have to be a V8. Midsize truck? same. But in 2 genres, for me, for my money? That's what I want. IMHO Dodge was the place for that, for the Big V8 hold outs who wanted several V8 options and that traditional look in an econobox powered by yo-yos world. Start watering that down and it's not quite an alternative anymore. In the EV game, I'd probably look at Tesla first. The EV tech isn't there for me yet but, hell if Elon will at least put his fucking neck out there and tweet in support of the truckers who are pushing back against the dictator stuff? He earned a LOT of points in my book for that. Well said. I mean, sure, there will be some who will buy cars with the straight 6. I have lived with 2 different Chevy straight sixes and they were fine for what they were, but neither was very powerful. So, I don't dislike straight sixes at all, but the "American V8" (even if made in Mex or Can) has a certain draw that cannot be satisfied with fewer cylinders. The last V8 I had was a 6.2L in a 2016 Camaro SS that I sold because I was offered what I thought was an absurdly high price. I ended up grinning every time I drove it. Would buy again if used car prices ever regain sanity. To me it's one of life's great pleasures is to fire up a Big V8 with an aftermarket exhaust on it. Walking into a crowded parking lot, forgetting where you put your ride - you reach into your pocket, hit the button, and a thunderstorm starts in the lot. Some of my life's favorite memories, have a V8 in the soundtrack of that life moment Man, I close my eyes and I can remember it like yesterday. It's summer, 2018, 2 years before the world lost its mind. The sun's setting, I'm coming home from work. I'm heading to my ex-girlfriend's house, she's woken up for her night shift, she's making dinner. Chicken parm, tastes exactly like my Mom makes. When we're done with dinner, I'll drive her to work - it's a short drive, I'm only seeing her for 2 hours but, man, life's to be enjoyed, happiness is something to be found and enjoyed. I'm rolling through hills and carving the corners, windows down, no music playing, just listening to the V8 symphony the whole way. Borla was my metal band of choice. Man what a feeling, rolling into the go pedal, listening to the band play, wind on your face. It's hard to give that feeling up |
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Quoted: Straight six is best six. View Quote Funny thing. All three of my current vehicles are 6 cylinders. Inline turbodiesel, twin turbo V6 and NA Flat-6 The flat 6 is amazing. And 9K rpms is unreal. The inline is a torque monster and smooth as silk. The TTV6 is powerful, but definitely not as smooth. I’d have a hard time picking a winner between the inline and flat motors but they obviously have much different focuses. I owned a few of the 4.0L Jeep engines previously and I was very impressed with them. They never felt underpowered to me. Tough as nails. Great engines IMHO |
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Quoted: EGR absolutely DOES causes problems, in the form of heavy deposits on intake valves, in modern engines. If by "thousands" you mean $500 for a tuner and a couple of block off plates, then yes. View Quote |
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