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The Detroit Diesel 149 is a series of two-stroke diesel engines manufactured by Detroit Diesel which were first announced in early 1966. After Detroit Diesel was spun off in 1988 and later acquired by MTU, production of Series 149 engines was discontinued around 2000.
The 5.9 L Cummins, also known as the "12-Valve" Cummins was the first member of the Cummins B-Series to be used in a light truck vehicle. The 6BT used Bosch fuel systems, injector, and VE rotary pump and P7100 inline injection pumps. Some early 6BTs were supplied with CAV rotary pumps instead, before the Bosch system became the sole standard.
The Mk. 4 was first fitted with a General Motors Detroit Diesel 12V-71T engine [6] developing 915 bhp and subsequently fitted a Rolls-Royce V-12 diesel engine, the CV12 TCA Condor, virtually the same engine as that fitted in the British Army FV4030/4 Challenger 1 main battle tank, but is rated at 1000 bhp instead of 1200 bhp. The lower power ...
Output is 167 hp (125 kW; 169 PS) at 3,400 rpm with 380 N⋅m (280 lb⋅ft) of torque at 1,400 rpm. The fuel system is direct injection, and adopts the electronic fuel injection (EFI) system. Redline of this engine is at 4200 rpm. The 4 valves per cylinder are actuated by the SOHC, by using bridges so each rocker actuates a pair of valves.
In 2003, the engine were revised, and the cars were upgraded with the Pre-Safe precrash system and a DVD-based navigation system vs CD-based COMAND system. The CL 55 AMG became supercharged allowing the car to accelerate from 0-60 mph in 4.27 seconds according to Motor Trend and the V12 CL 600 had turbochargers added along with a slight reduction in engine capacity, from 5,786 cc (5.8 L) to ...
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New "All-in-one" tool on fork, stronger foot-pegs, rock-guard on swing-arm. [31] [32] PE175C released. Based upon the RM125A frame and the RM100/125 B & C running gear. No Squish-band, wider ratios, two additional clutch plates and a 32mm carburettor. Plastic 11 litre tank, except in UK (2.6 gallon alloy).
The Series 92 engines were introduced in 1974. [8] Compared to the Series 71 engines they were derived from, the Series 92 featured a larger bore of 4.84025 ± 0.00125 in (122.942 ± 0.032 mm) and an identical stroke of 5 in (130 mm) for a nominal displacement per cylinder of 92 cu in (1,510 cc), from which the Series 92 derives its name.