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The 4.2-liter V8 engine (GM RPO code LTA) is an eight-cylinder, dual overhead cam (DOHC) twin turbo engine produced by General Motors specifically for use in Cadillac luxury vehicles. The engine is the result of a new clean-sheet engine design as well as Cadillac's first twin-turbo V8 engine. It first launched with the 2019 Cadillac CT6. [10]
1912 – Cadillac Model 1912; 116 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine Fisher; 1913 – Cadillac Model 1913; 120 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine Fisher; 1914 – Cadillac Model 1914; 120 and 134 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine Fisher; 1915 – Cadillac Type 51; 122 and 145 in wheelbase V8 Fisher; 1916 – Cadillac Type 53; 122 132 and 145 in ...
1905–1914 Cadillac Model D side-valve (acquired as part of the founding of GM); 1906–1923 Oldsmobile Model S side-valve (acquired as part of the founding of GM); 1906–1911 Buick Model D inline-4 [10] (T-head design, the only non-OHV Buick engine ever made) [11]
Dodge wanted to keep up with General Motors, so it made a version of the already goliath Chrysler Newport with a standard 5.9-liter, 265-horsepower V8 engine and an optional 6.3-liter, 305 ...
It is a clean sheet engine design, as well as the Division's first ever twin-turbo V8 engine. The engine was branded as the "Blackwing V8" by GM technicians, and is the first Cadillac-exclusive dual overhead cam V8 engine since the Northstar V8 was dropped in 2011. [1]. Each engine is hand-built by a single technician at the Performance Build ...
Prior to the official 1984 and 1985 Eldorado convertibles marketed by Cadillac, some 1979–1983 Eldorados were made into coach convertibles by independent coachbuilders e.g. ASC inc., Custom Coach (Lima, Ohio—this coachbuilder turned a few 1977 and 1978 Eldorados into convertibles) and Hess & Eisenhardt. The same coach-builders also offered ...
The new LMDh-class concept represents the first time the marque’s design studio has played such a key role in creating a motorsport model.
The engine was bumped to 429 cu in (7.0 L) OHV V8 for 1964. 340 hp (254 kW) was the result. Cadillac's longest, heaviest, richest, and highest priced model was again more conventionally engineered than the other lines in 1965. For example, the new perimeter frame was not in use and neither was the improved automatic transmission.