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Each car was furnished with a single Cummins NT855-R5 turbo-diesel engine that produced 213 kW (285 hp). [1] Each engine drove a hot-shift Twin Disc transmission, which in turn powered the axles of one bogie on each car via a Cardan shaft and Gmeinder final drive units. [2]
Cummins M-series engine; Cummins Quantum Series; Cummins X-series engine This page was last edited on 29 December 2013, at 19:49 (UTC). ...
The British Rail Class 155 is a diesel multiple unit passenger train. These DMUs were built by Leyland Bus at Workington (incorporating some Leyland National bus components) between 1987 and 1988 as part of BR's replacement of its ageing first-generation diesel fleet. 42 units were originally built, of which only 7 remain; the other 35 units were converted to Class 153 railcars.
The 3.9-liter 4B/4BT/4BTA Cummins is categorized under the B Engine family alongside the 5.9-liter 6B/6BT/6BTA Cummins diesel engines. The 3.9 is an inline four-cylinder, either naturally aspirated (4B) or turbodiesel (4BT/4BTA), which was popular for many step van applications including bread vans and other commercial vehicles. Additionally it ...
Cummins Inc. is an American multinational corporation that designs, manufactures, and distributes engines, filtration, and power generation products. [2] Cummins also services engines and related equipment, including fuel systems, controls, air handling, filtration, emission control, electrical power generation systems, and trucks.
The Cummins L-series engine is a straight-six diesel engine designed and produced by Cummins. It displaces 8.9 litres (543.1 cu in), and began production in 1982 as the L10 at the Jamestown Engine Plant in Jamestown, New York. After lengthening its stroke from 136 to 147 mm, its displacement was enlarged to 10.8 litres and the engine renamed ...
Cummins Quantum Series is a family of internal combustion engines, developed and manufactured by American Cummins for various heavy-duty use cases. The Quantum series comes with an electronic controlled module. It is used in heavy duty machines and in railway machines. [1] [2]
The B-series was the first Mack truck produced with a diesel engine, introducing the Mack-produced Thermodyne inline-6 in 1953. [1] During 1966, Mack replaced the B-series with the Mack R-series, which lasted into the 21st century. [3] [4] [5] In total, 126,745 examples of the B-series were produced over 13 years. [6]