Rogersocal
Well-Known Member
Wow, This thread is still going? 15 pages strong. definatly an early friday posting
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Buick, Pontiac and Packard all had Straight 8’s in the 50’s.I think the last straight 8 was a Cadillac back in the 1920s maybe the 30s. Definitely pre WWII.
Ford made SAAB’s V4. Very popular engine in Europe in the 60’s and 70’s. Odd sounding beast.Don't tell old Saab owners that or even Porsche Motorsport and their 919.
Never ever heard of a 7 cyl.Straight 7’s exist too, marine and industrial diesels
https://www.enginelabs.com/news/the-inline-seven-cylinder-engines-you’ve-probably-never-heard-ofNever ever heard of a 7 cyl.
https://carbuzz.com/news/why-arent-there-seven-cylinder-engines/
Interesting- worked last night-https://carbuzz.com/news/why-arent-there-seven-cylinder-engines/
Never could find anything on the link you sent me.

Nothing better than a cammed big block with glass packs.I hear that the Cherry Bomb mufflers are being made again. There is an old school V8 sound…![]()

We had a Wartsila submarine engine to test one time.Interesting- worked last night-
Known for making the largest Diesel engine in the world (14 cylinders, 109,000 horsepower, 110,450 cubic inches), Wartsila makes a version of the RTA96-C with half the cylinders, making it an inline 7. To further solidify the seven cylinder lineup they also make the 46F and X82 inline 7 marine engines, which are smaller higher revving (relatively speaking) models. However before you start thinking that the inline seven cylinder is only a ship engine or a crazy one-of motorcycle engine there is a production inline seven cylinder engine for land use the ADCOHD 98 (formerly known as the SISU) Designed for agricultural use , the 598 cu in I-7 engine makes about 470 HP at 2100 RPM, and 1,327 lb Ft of torque at 1500 RPM. These are only three of the eight engines covered in the video.![]()
or as I should have said- search straight 7 cylinder engine and it was the third or fourth article.![]()
Nothing sounds better, short of uncapped. But they are “Loud” as well as “Good”. When I pulled up to work a new guy on the heavily insulated refrigerated dock with blasting fans the door opened and his head poked out to see where the rumbling came from.We had a Wartsila submarine engine to test one time.
Dude, those are Purple Hornies!
He had a nice 340 Duster, we became good friends.