Mr. 'H'
Call Me a Cab
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- Dublin, Ireland, Ireland
Inspired by some insights from BellyTank in another thread:
I would love to invite your comments on the reasons for the historic differences.
BellyTank said:European and American car cultures and engineering aproaches have always been very different.
Mr. 'H' said:Yes, but why?
[huh]
Just curious about
- social reasons
- economic considerations
- manufacturing reasons
- need for speed, etc.
BellyTank said:But a "typical/average" US, V-8 car in 1950-ish (a '50 Ford, for instance)was a Flathead (call it 4 litres) and had some good torque, 100 odd hp a shaped like a brick. Compare this to a streamlined, lightweight, OHV European of 4 cylinders and 2 litres with a revvy 50hp, a car of half the weight of its US counterpart. OHV and OHC engines were common in Europe at this time, when flatheads were still normal in the average American car. A car weighing 2 ton needs 180ftlb torque and 100hp to shift it from a standstill and get up to speed. European and American car cultures and engineering aproaches have always been very different. I realise we are are comparing an average American car to a European which is not quite average for the time but maybe you get my point.
B
T
Mr. 'H' said:Some very interesting points. But do you really think that a 4 cyl OHV 2 ltr would or could compete with a straight 8 with between 4 and 5 ltrs?
Are these engines really half the weight?
I would love to invite your comments on the reasons for the historic differences.