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Ariel VA 1940 500 C.C. Side Valve four stroke Ariel W/NG: 1940–45 350 cc (Military) Ariel KG & KH 1948 500 cc parallel twin, later versions called the "Fieldmaster" Ariel VB 1947–58 598 cc side-valve single, later models had alloy head Ariel Square Four Mark I: 1949–53 "Square" four-cylinder 995 cc Ariel VCH 1949–53
The Cyclone was a short-lived brand but made its mark by doing very well on the board track racing circuits of 1910s through the 1920s. Cyclones also did well on the dirt track racing circuit of the day winning many races. In 1914, an Excelsior lost its one-mile speed record title to a Cyclone.
One of the last cars designed by Harley Earl, the Cyclone was a testbed for futuristic styling and technology. Built on a 104" wheelbase chassis, it featured a front-mounted 390in 3 engine, rear-mounted automatic transaxle, and an all-wheel independent suspension. Uniquely, the Cyclone's engine exhaust was ported out just ahead of the front wheels.
Free bike valet service at the Blue Nose Marathon (2023), operated by the Halifax Cycling Coalition. Halifax has several non-profit organisations that promote cycling in the city, including the Halifax Cycling Coalition, Bike Again (a DIY bike shop), and the Ecology Action Centre. [12] [13] Critical Mass events have been held regularly for many ...
Wright Cyclone was the name given to a family of air-cooled radial piston engines designed by the Wright Aeronautical Corporation and used in numerous American aircraft in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. Background
A historic “bomb cyclone” has caused multiple deaths and mass power outages after slamming into Seattle, Washington, as it charts a destructive path through California and Oregon.
Cyclone Power Technologies reports "Our R&D team is moving towards completion of the Mark 5 project in Quarter 1 of 2015. These engines are to be delivered to Combilift for use as a clean-burning power supply in material lift equipment." [22] February 23, 2015: Cyclone Power Technologies posts a video [23] of the Mark V engine undergoing ...
A powerful extratropical cyclone developed c. November 18, 2024, in the Northeast Pacific and struck the Western United States and Western Canada. [9] [10] The storm underwent bombogenesis, rapidly dropping its central pressure [11] to a record-tying level of 942 millibars (27.8 inHg). [9]