Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Series 92 engines were introduced in 1974. [8] Compared to the Series 71 engines they were derived from, the Series 92 featured a larger bore of 4.84025 ± 0.00125 in (122.942 ± 0.032 mm) and an identical stroke of 5 in (130 mm) for a nominal displacement per cylinder of 92 cu in (1,510 cc), from which the Series 92 derives its name.
Print/export Download as PDF; ... Pages in category "Detroit Diesel engines" ... Detroit Diesel Series 92; Detroit Diesel 110;
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; Wikidata item; ... Detroit Diesel Series 92; Detroit Diesel V8 engine; DMAX V6 ...
Detroit Diesel Series 92 engines. GM entered the diesel field with its acquisition of the Cleveland-based Winton Engine Company in 1930. Winton's main client was the Electro Motive Company, a producer of internal combustion-electric rail motorcars. GM acquired Electro Motive at roughly the same time as Winton.
The ancestor of Detroit Diesel was the Winton Engine Company, founded by Alexander Winton in 1912; Winton Engine began producing diesel engines in fall 1913. After Charles F. Kettering purchased two Winton diesels for his yacht, General Motors acquired the company in 1930 along with Electro Motive Company, Winton's primary client.
Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Two-stroke diesel engines" ... Detroit Diesel Series 92; Detroit Diesel Series 149; E. EMD 567; EMD 645 ...
Print/export Download as PDF ... Daimler V8 engines; Detroit Diesel Series 53; Detroit Diesel Series 71; Detroit Diesel Series 92; Detroit Diesel V8 engine; Donovan ...
In 1962 GM's Electro-Motive Division (EMD), which had its own marketing and service infrastructure from its years in the locomotive business, took over the production and marketing of large diesel engines formerly produced by the Cleveland Diesel Engine Division. [2] In 1965 GMDD was absorbed by the General Motors Detroit Diesel Engine Division ...