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Race Engines in Street Cars

To: vintage-race@autox.team.net
Subject: Race Engines in Street Cars
From: WSpohn4@aol.com
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 12:42:13 EDT
You may recall the question I raised about engines originally designed from 
scratch (i.e., not based on some previous design) for racing purposes that 
found their way into street models.

The score so far:

   Lamborghini (designed by Bizzarini from plans for a Ferrari Formula 1 
design).

   Alfa Montreal - derived from the T-33 Alfa race engine.

   Porsche 4 cam - originally in the racing 550s, later installed in Carreras

Close but no cigar:

Chrysler Hemi - derived from the 413 wedge motor, although it raced before it 
hit the street cars.

 Lotus engine used in Jensen Healey etc. - built on stock block Vauxhall 2 
litre block. 
(there is still some life in this one as it has been argued that the original 
was tested using the cast iron block and soon after went alloy, but I have to 
wonder if the alloy block was virtually the same if this one doesn't fall 
just over the line)

Coventry Climax - originally designed as a lightweight firepump engine, able 
to be carried to fires. I remain unconvinced that Chapman et al were waiting 
in the wings, having tricked them into designing an engine that just happened 
to be easily convertible to race use, although more evidence could tip the 
balance, I suppose.

A new contender!

A friend who is a trivia buff like me commented that many Bugatti engines 
would qualify, which I think is correct, but he also told me about one that I 
hadn't known about.

He said the racing engine used in the Maserati 450S was an oddball design 
with the cam drive for the timing gear running in the middle of the block 
instead of at one end or the other (I am not familiar with this motor, so 
can't comment). He told me that when Maserati designed the V6 engine for the 
Citroen conglomerate (later used in the SM, one of my favourite oddball cars 
- you don't mash the brake pedal, vous manipulez le champignon), which was 
also used in the Maserati Merak, they more or less just chopped off the end 2 
cylinders, and that you can tell, because it is a 90 degree V6 with the cam 
drive running between cylinders, as in the V-8 version.

So I think we have another winner.

And I thought of another one that would marginally qualify, when I was 
thinking about the Maserati cam gear. The racing prewar Alfa 8C 2900 race car 
engine was a straight 8 with central cam drive to the valves. It was copied 
almost bolt for bolt, I believe by Donald Healey, for use in the Triumph 
Dolomite (the old neat one, not the boxy newer one).


Anyone else?

Bill

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