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Let's start with a worst-case - the single cylinder engine. The starter motor simply spins it through about a turn and a half, with no real resistance, before it has to push the piston against compression. Coming up on compression slows it down (1/4 turn), then it speeds up as the piston goes over the top and starts back down. Speed up for a turn and a half, slow down for a quarter turn, pick up for a quarter turn, zip along for a turn and a half, repeat...: rrrrrrrrRRRrrrrrrrrrrrrRRRrrrrrrrrrRRChugChugChug.... A 4 cylinder has compression resistance every rotation, but again only for about half of that turn. The starter speeds up a little during half a turn, then slows during the compression stroke. Sound is: rrrRRrrrRRrrrRRrrrRRPutPutPtPtvroom..... The V-8 has even less gap between compression peaks, so it sort of sings with a vibrato: rrRRrrRRrrRRrrRRrrRRrrRrrRRrRrrRrRVroooooom.... A V-12 has almost no gap between compression peaks - one cylinder is coming up on peak compression just as another is coming off compression, so the starter motor just sees a steady load. A rope starter on a v-12 would feel like no compression, just a steady load. Does that make sense? Cheers JohnO
[This message was edited by johno on 30 June 2003 at 09:56 AM.]
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| Location: Moses Lake, WA, USA | Registered: 15 August 2001 |   |
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more likely. DD GM 71 diesels were supplied in 2, 3, 4, 6, 6V, 8V, 12V and 16V- the 12 and 16 cylinder units are much like two 6's/ 8's joined but I believe sharing a common crank.
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| Location: Vancouver Island, Canada | Registered: 30 September 2001 |   |
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Thats an engine, 1136 cu". There was a surplus landing craft recently for sale with twin 16V71 Detroits. What a grease gobbler that could be! Expect in a pinch one could drag large sea mammals aboard, flense and render them into fuel.
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| Location: Vancouver Island, Canada | Registered: 30 September 2001 |   |
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The V 12 and V 16 were integral engines using the same heads as V 6 and V 8- engines were sometimes ganged up in series, even in industrial 'quads'
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| Location: Vancouver Island, Canada | Registered: 30 September 2001 |   |
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