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Buick Straight-8 engine

 
Wikipedia: Buick Straight-8 engine
Buick Straight 8
Manufacturer Buick
Production 1931–1953
Predecessor Buick Straight-6 engine
Successor Buick Nailhead V8

The Buick Straight-8 engine (Fireball 8) was produced from 1931 to 1953 and sold in Buick automobiles. Like many American automobile makers, Buick adopted the straight-8 engine in 1931 as a more powerful alternative to the previous inline-6 engines. However, unlike most other car makers at the time, Buick had been using a valve-in-head OHV overhead valve design or I-head since its inception and continued this practice in their inline-8 designs. The engine was sold in different displacements depending on the model of car and the year and was constructed upon two distinct ( possibly more ) block castings. The smaller displacement versions internally resembled the inline Chevrolet straight six, with additional cylinders. The large block version (used in large chassis models such as the Roadmaster) was considerably heavier and this weight adversely affected vehicle performance and handling. As with other General Motors products the engines used cast-in-place bearings that were then machined, which made engine rebuilding an expensive procedure. The last year for Buick's straight-8 was 1953, succeeded by the new Nailhead V8 in 1954 in the same basic chassis. Only in 1955 would the new engine be used in an appropriately modern vehicle.

Production Engine Displacement Bore x Stroke
1931-31 221 220.7 cu in (3,617 cc) 2.8750" X 4.2500" ( 72.1625 x 106.6750 mm )
1931-33 273 272.6 cu in (4,467 cc) 3.0625" X 4.6250" ( 76.8688 x 116.0875 mm )
1931-35 345 344.7 cu in (5,649 cc) 3.3125" X 5.0000" ( 83.1438 x 125.5000 mm )
1932-33 230 230.4 cu in (3,776 cc) 2.9375" X 4.2500" ( 73.7313 x 106.6750 mm )
1934-35 235 235.4 cu in (3,858 cc) 2.9688" X 4.2500" ( 74.5156 x 106.6750 mm )
1934-35 278 278.1 cu in (4,557 cc) 3.0938" X 4.6250" ( 77.6531 x 116.0875 mm )
1934-36 233 233.0 cu in (3,818 cc) 3.0938" X 3.8750" ( 77.6531 x 97.2625 mm )
1936-52 320 320.2 cu in (5,247 cc) 3.4375" X 4.3125" ( 86.2813 x 108.2438 mm )
1937-50 248 248.1 cu in (4,066 cc) 3.0938" X 4.1250" ( 77.6544 x 103.5375 mm )
1950-53 263 263.3 cu in (4,315 cc) 3.1875" X 4.1250" ( 80.0063 x 103.5375 mm )
source: Carnut.com[1]


1952 Production Engines and Ratings

Series Engine Displacement Bore x Stroke Power
40 263 260.3 cu in (4,266 cc) 3 316" X 4 18"
(80.9625 x 104.775 mm)
120 hp (89 kW)@3600 rpm
50 263 260.3 cu in (4,266 cc) 3 316" X 4 18"
(80.9625 x 104.775 mm)
124 hp (92 kW)@3600 rpm
70 320 320.2 cu in (5,247 cc) 3 716"X 4 516"
(87.3125 x 109.5375 mm)
168 hp (125 kW)@3800 rpm
Note: The 320 has a head length of 34 12" while the smaller engines are 31 14" long.
source: 1952 Buick service manual[2]


See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.carnut.com/specs/specs.html
  2. ^ http://www.teambuick.com/reference/buick_8_engine_specs.html

External links



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