It is a Soviet built diesel used to power submarines. Zveda M503. Radial Design, 7 banks, of 6 cylinders. Some classes of European Tractor pulling have very loose rules when it comes to the power plant, as long as they make the tractor weight limits. The DragonFire team switched that motor over to methanol and claims 8,000+ Hp.
Frankie Brisko built this all aluminum knock off of the Ford tractor engine which was commonly called a Ford Ferguson. He also had Offenhauser build a special engine for him which he ran at Indy. I am more familiar with his 4 cylinder 5 main bearing DO midget engine which had no camshafts. See attached article and photo of engine in test stand. The car was driven initially by Emil Andres.
Derived from a pre-WWII BMW engine: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Cars#Pre-war_BMW_designs,_Aldington_brothers_and_early_cars.
The DKW engine was humorously described by my dad's generation (it is very much the sense of humour of a specific uncle of mine) as having an overhead fanshaft. I'm sure they speculated as to whether the Sonderklasse had a twin overhead fanshaft design ...
FrozenMerc, Thanks. I thought I must have slept somewhere through my fascination with Ford racing engines.
That picture has been tossed around for a while, some people swear it true, most say it’s photoshopped. Bones
O/k......I'll ask the question.........any info & specs on either of those engines?.........I'd hate to be responsible for feeding either their diet of coal...........lol.................andyd
from what i remember, the 1601 was the largest one built, it ran into the '50's. it was so long it could only run on tracks with gradual turns. i think i read it had very few miles on it.
The Allegheny 1601 was the biggest locomotive ever built(76ft long by the way). It began service in the early 1920s making it’s last run in 1953. Several years later Henry Ford hisself bought it put it in the museum. Sent from my iPhone using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
Bigger than the Union Pacific Big Boys? I couldn't find a length of the Big Boys but the weight is hair over 1.2 million lbs compared to the 1601 at .775 million lbs..
The guy on the right I think is Al Rominsky. He was my supervisor after the Ford racing program ended in the early '70s. He did much of the dyno development for Ford racing. He for sure would have told me of a SOHC V12. Upon close examination I can see it is photo shopped - header, coil(s), distributor, plug wires, valve cover insignia, etc.
That is one beautiful engine. I like the dual carbs too. For those who think factory crate engines is a relatively new phenomena in the '30s Duesenberg used to sell factory crate racing engines - for around $750. Of course you could buy a Model T for aroung $250 so that wasn't chump change.