Indeed they don't.
green merc.jpg
Indeed they don't.
green merc.jpg
Simpler is better, except when complicated looks really cool.
The car in # 12497 appears to near perfection - I like it a lot ! ! ! !
Charter Member - - Professional Procrastinators Association of America - - putting things off since 1965 " I'll get around to it tomorrow, .... maybe "
Simpler is better, except when complicated looks really cool.
A Delage from the same sort of era.
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The red 156 is mine. It's the 2.0 twin spark petrol, fitted with a millennial anti-theft device. The black 159 belongs to a mate, but he likes me to exercise it regularly. It's the 2.4 5 cylinder diesel with the lazyman's gearbox... which makes it a great car around town, with oodles of torque.
Inaugural recipient: the AGFIA
(Alf Garnett Fake Ignore Award)
A rather older Alfa. 1922.
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I don't think I have posted this Delage before.
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Another French car,to keep this thread from dropping any further.
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A bloke down the road where we used olive had an Aston Martin DB 35 with similar spartan interior.
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From the Portland ABFM a few years ago:
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Inquiring (& iggerent) mind: The supercharger forces the air/fuel mix through the black pipe. What's the SUish looking thing (but not a carb I'm thinking) above it on the manifold?
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"If it ain't broke, you're not trying." - Red Green
K3 magnette, they had tiny 6 cyl engines... 1000 or 1200cc. I know nothing about supercharging.
Interlude..
A real sports utility vehicle parked around the road from us a couple of days ago.
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Last edited by John B; 04-01-2023 at 08:28 PM.
K3 - 1100cc 6 cyl (capable of 8000 rpm's)
https://simeonemuseum.org/collection...g-k3-magnette/
Thanks Jake!
"If it ain't broke, you're not trying." - Red Green
From the looks of the 2nd pic - it's got a full load of water. Cool rig - I want one!
"If it ain't broke, you're not trying." - Red Green
Needs a little work:
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It's a long way from the Carburetor/fuel/supercharger to the combustion chamber. Those copper tubes are a dash controlled priming device to avoid endless cranking (I think)
"The Ki-Gass system, also referred to as Kigass or K-Gas, is "a system of starting petrol and Diesel engines by injecting finely divided fuel in the form of a mist into the in-take pipe."[1] The system uses a hand-pump to spray fuel into the air in-take, thus priming the engine for easier starting. In the case of diesel engines, this spray was aimed at a heated Glowplug fitted into the manifold. Ki-Gass systems were widely used on aircraft, cars and tractors in 1944,[2] including British Spitfire and Hurricane fighters.
The system is thought to have been introduced in the mid-1920s, when it was a feature of the 1926 Vauxhall 30-98 OE Tourer.[3] It appears to have origins in fuel priming pumps developed in the early 20th century (e.g. by Frederick Lunkenheimer).
Manual priming was carried out via a small pump or push button (e.g., in some Ferguson TE20 Tractors).
Bugatti used Ki-Gass to aid starting on several of their early supercharged cars in the mid 1920s, such as the Bugatti Type 35. A lever[4] on the dashboard allowed the driver to pump some gas into the intake."
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ki-Gass
LOVE IT! I keep learning more about old cars from the WBF than I do from my automotive forums![]()
That blow-off valve after the carb must be hard on fuel economy.
^ It could make road-rally driving REALLY exciting ! ! !![]()
Charter Member - - Professional Procrastinators Association of America - - putting things off since 1965 " I'll get around to it tomorrow, .... maybe "
In this example the "blow off valve" shown is to prevent damage to the supercharger from a "backfire" (which can generate a lot of pressure in that induction path)
It is not needed or used to regulate normal induction pressures. That is calculated by displacement and supercharger speed.
(I would like to see a tube routed downward to clear the burning backfired fuel from under the hood, but note the carburetor is out in front of the car, so the risk of raw fuel being ignited under the hood is reduced. (The tube may in fact be removed in this image)
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I don't think I posted this earlier.
MGABush.jpg
"If it ain't broke, you're not trying." - Red Green
dude's first car
he bought it used in 1963 and drove it almost daily for forty years
visited every state in the 'lower 48' and all the canadian border provinces
after it broke a half shaft in the the early 2000's he parked it for three years until he retired and could restore it
good to go for another 40 years
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Simpler is better, except when complicated looks really cool.
Nice one Paul.
Meanwhile, in the racing car side of the thread, a guy I know just started a new job. Parked in the very interesting garage is a Bugatti Chiron. Not the base 1500 hp version... the fast one. Cost his boss $4 million. And at that, he can't bolt on a registration plate unless he coughs up another $3 mil in taxes... so, it's a track car.
Inaugural recipient: the AGFIA
(Alf Garnett Fake Ignore Award)
Simpler is better, except when complicated looks really cool.
Even wires on the trailer! Nice.
"If it ain't broke, you're not trying." - Red Green