Many cars used to come with the 2.8 (early 80's to early 90's) Camaro, S10, Cavalier, Sunbird, Skylark, Skyhawk, Grand Am, Catera, etc, etc
Be aware of an issue that 2.8l engines had... The intake gasket fails and allows water from the head to go into the lifter valley and end up in the oil pan. If water begins to disappear and you don't see a leak, check for water on your dipstick. Antifreeze and oil together do nasty things to bearings, you need to get it out ASAP. If I recall, the 3.4l can be easily installed in it's place also used in the same vehicles in newer years.My '98 gets 18 city/28 hwy (2.2 liter manual)
28 mpg = 7.4 miles per liter
yes....They did is came in the 69 Z-28 Camaro's they were hi performance engines and with little to nothing just screw driver adjustments they can put out 400-450hp
Fords- shelby mustangs, boss mustangs, mustangs with cobra jet engines, fairlane 500s chevy- ss cars (camaro, chevelle, nova), z/28, zl1 Dodge/Plymouth- Hemi, 440/440 sixpack, 340 six pack cars- road runner, Super Bee, challenger, cuda, duster Pontiac- GTO, trans am Buick- GS stage I , GSX
1 liter = 1000 ml 28 liters = 28,000 ml
14.141414...
One liter of water is almost exactly one kilogram.
28 mpg = 11.9 km per literFormula: mpg x 0.4251 = km per liter
28000 ml 1 liter = 1000 mililiters 1 mililiter = 0.001 liter
28 belongs to two Cars, the Nitroade Piston Cup car Apple computers Piston Cup race car.
2 L / 28 sec = x / 60 sec120 = 28 xx = 120/28 = 4.2857 liters/minute (rounded)
Today, usually considered american cars(mustang, challenger,camaro) with the large motor/high out put option motor. Original mid size cars with big blocks or compacts(pony cars) with output engines. Usually more based on straight line performance(especially back in the 60-70's), back then small motors/ good handling were considered, "sports cars". There were some that were both, z/28, boss 302, cuda aar, challenger t/a.