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The Mugen MF308 is a naturally aspirated, petrol-powered, 3.0 L (180 cu in), V8 racing engine, designed, developed, and built by Mugen Motorsports, for Formula 3000 racing categories, between 1988 and 2005. It produced between 490–500 hp (370–370 kW) over its lifetime.
Mugen (stylized as M.U.G.E.N) is a freeware 2D fighting game engine designed by Elecbyte. [1] Content is created by the community, and thousands of fighters, both original and from popular fiction, have been created. It is written in C and originally used the Allegro library. The latest versions of the engine use the SDL library.
Mugen-built V10 engines were also used for the RC101B/RC-F1 2.0X, a car built by the Honda R&D Center without direct support from Honda headquarters (previous cars built by the R&D Center used older Honda engines when they supplied engines for McLaren) and for the Honda RA099, an official Honda test car to prepare for Honda's factory engine ...
The Mugen engine, codenamed MF351HC (also known as ZA5C), was not able to show its full potential and failed to score a single World Championship point during 1994 despite coming close on 3 occasions. This was the only season in which Mugen engines (and Lotus) did not score a World Championship point during their time in Formula One.
The 199 was a developed version of the Jordan 198 but featured better aerodynamics after extensive wind tunnel work. [5] The car used a mid-mounted, naturally aspirated Mugen-Honda MF-301HD 3.0 L V10 engine, Elf fuel and oil, Penske shock absorbers, Brembo carbon disc brakes, Bridgestone tyres and their own six-speed sequential semi-automatic gearbox.
The Reynard 89D was built for the 1989 International Formula 3000 Championship.The 89D used one of three different 3.0 L (180 cu in) V8 engines; a Mugen, a Ford-Cosworth, or a Judd.
The first game using Source 2, Dota 2, was ported over from the original Source engine. One of The Lab's minigame Robot Repair uses Source 2 engine while rest of seven uses Unity's engine. Spring: C++: C, C++, Java/JVM, Lua, Python: Yes 3D Windows, Linux, macOS: Balanced Annihilation, Zero-K: GPL-2.0-or-later: RTS, simulated events, OpenGL ...
The Arrows team, which has been running under the name Footwork since 1991, had used ten-cylinder Mugen engines in 1992 and 1993, which could be traced back to Honda designs. For the 1994 season, the Mugen engines went exclusively to Team Lotus, which had previously used Cosworth HB eight-cylinder engines.