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CL-110 2 April 1944 Wilmington CL-111 William Cramp & Sons Shipbuilding Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: 5 March 1945 Vallejo CL-112 New York Shipbuilding Corporation, Camden, New Jersey — — — — Construction cancelled 5 October 1944 Helena CL-113 Roanoke CL-114 — CL-115 Tallahassee CL-116 Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock ...
1.7 Power amplifiers. ... Yamaha Motor Company shares the brand name but has been a separate company since 1955. ... CLP-110 (2002, export model)
The CL class is a class of diesel locomotives built by Clyde Engineering, Granville for the Commonwealth Railways in several batches between 1970 and 1972. The class was the last in the world to be built with the Electro-Motive Diesel bulldog nose but differed from previous builds in having a mansard roof .
This year also saw the addition of a 5-speed gearbox, an upgrade from the older 4-speed. The CB450 went to a front disc brake in 1970, Honda decided to keep the CL450 with its two drum brakes . The CB450 was replaced in 1975 when Honda increased the displacement of the engine and renamed it the CB500 .
The 99 cc (6.0 cu in) engine produced 11.5 HP according to Honda. This was sufficient to propel the bike with a small rider to about 71 mph (114 km/h). [ citation needed ] The CL100 was also available in a model designated CL100S (1971–1973), which had a governor to reduce power to 5 HP to meet some state restrictions for younger operators.
In 1879, Nicolaus Otto built a 5-stroke engine which was commercially produced, but suffered from poor performance. [2] Two Spanish patents (ES0156621, F Jimeno-Cataneo, 1942; and ES0433850, C Ubierna-Laciana, 1975) describe 5-stroke engines identical to that of Schmitz's design, this engine had a fellowship to Burgundy University to be studied.
The class was introduced in 1928 and was a post-grouping development of the Midland Railway 483 Class with modified dimensions and reduced boiler mountings.. The numbering continued from where the Midland engines left off at 563 and eventually reached 700. 138 were built, though numbering is slightly complicated by renumberings and transfers.
The designation for a specific motor looks like C6-3.In this example, the letter (C) represents the total impulse range of the motor, the number (6) before the dash represents the average thrust in newtons, and the number (3) after the dash represents the delay in seconds from propelling charge burnout to the firing of the ejection charge (a gas generator composition, usually black powder ...