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  2. Ceylon Cold Stores - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceylon_Cold_Stores

    Ceylon Cold Stores was established in 1866 as the Colombo Ice Company, which in 1863 imported the country's first ice-making machine. With an initial capital of £1,600, two steam engines of 8 and 9 horsepower, and a total of 22 employees, the company started producing ice on a commercial scale. [ 3 ]

  3. Taylor Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taylor_Company

    A mixture of chocolate and vanilla soft serve being dispensed, a flavor colloquially referred to as swirl or twist. The company was founded in 1926 by Charles Taylor, a third-generation ice cream maker from Buffalo, New York, who invented an automated countertop ice cream freezer [3] that allowed restaurants to manufacture their own ice cream from mix. [4]

  4. McDonald's ice cream machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McDonald's_ice_cream_machine

    The Taylor C602 freezes ingredients in spinning barrels, pulls sheets of the mixture off the sides of the barrels using scraping blades and mixes the sheets to create the ice cream. The ice cream is pushed out through nozzles. The Taylor C602 uses two hoppers and two barrels and uses a pump to push the ice cream out of the system.

  5. World Gasoline Engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Gasoline_Engine

    The World Gasoline Engine is a family of straight-4 piston engines, based on the Global Engine Alliance design. Three engines have been produced: a 1.8 L, a 2.0 L, and a 2.4 L. The initial design of the engine block and cylinder head was handled by Hyundai as part of the Global Engine Alliance.

  6. Toyota UZ engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toyota_UZ_engine

    The 4.0 L (3,969 cc; 242.2 cu in) all-alloy 1UZ-FE debuted in 1989 in the first generation Lexus LS 400/Toyota Celsior and the engine was progressively released across a number of other models in the Toyota/Lexus range. The engine is oversquare by design, with a bore and stroke size of 87.5 mm × 82.5 mm (3.44 in × 3.25 in). [2]

  7. Halo Top Creamery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halo_Top_Creamery

    Halo Top Creamery is an ice cream company and brand [1] sold in the United States, [2] Australia, Mexico, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Taiwan, Hong Kong, South Korea, Austria, [3] United Kingdom [4] and the United Arab Emirates.

  8. AMC straight-6 engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMC_straight-6_engine

    Engine bay of a 1993 Jeep Grand Cherokee with 4.0 L The 5 millionth Jeep 4.0 engine produced on the "Greenlee Block Line" dated June 15, 2001 The 242 cu in (4.0 L) engine was developed by AMC in just 26 months using many off-the-shelf components while featuring, among others, additional strength, improved combustion chamber, port setup, and cam ...

  9. Mitsubishi 4B1 engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_4B1_engine

    All engines developed within this family have aluminium cylinder block and head, 4 valves per cylinder, double overhead camshaft layouts, and MIVEC continuous variable valve timing. All variations of 4B1 engine share the same engine block with a 96 mm bore pitch. The difference in displacement is achieved by variance in bore and stroke. [4]