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Yamaha F1 engine; Ford SHO V8 engine; K. Yamaha KT100; O. Yamaha OX66 engine; Yamaha OX77 engine; T. Toyota LR engine; V. Volvo B8444S engine This page was last ...
In May 1944 Lyulka was ordered to begin development of a turbojet with a thrust of 12.3 kN (2,800 lbf). He demonstrated an eight-stage axial-flow engine in March 1945 called the S-18. In early 1946 the Council of Ministers ordered that the S-18 be developed into an operational engine with a thrust of 15.5 kN (3,500 lbf). The TR-1 was developed ...
TR.1, see Orenda Engines; TR1, a postal district in the TR postcode area; TAS1R1, a taste receptor; Tri-R KIS TR-1, an American aircraft design; Lyulka TR-1, first Soviet turbojet engine; Tropical Race 1, a strain of Fusarium oxysporum that causes the Panama disease; Type 1 regulatory T cell (Tr-1), a T-lymphocyte lineage with immunoregulatory ...
The cylinder head from the Toyota 4A-GE engine was developed by Yamaha and built at Toyota's Shimayama plant alongside the 4A and 2A engines. [ 28 ] In 1984, executives of the Yamaha Motor Corporation signed a contract with the Ford Motor Company to develop, produce, and supply compact 60° 3.0 Liter DOHC V6 engines for transverse application ...
Yamaha numbers its models according to their make (in the case of the SuperJet, all models begin with the letters SJ) followed by the engine size (given in approximate cubic centimeters— the 650cc referred to as 650 and the 701cc referred to as 700) and the year in which the vehicle was made, given as either a one or two letter designation and increasing by one ‘letter' each full year ...
Rocket engines [14] Armstrong Siddeley Alpha; Armstrong Siddeley Beta; Armstrong Siddeley Delta; Armstrong Siddeley Gamma; Armstrong Siddeley Screamer; Armstrong ...
In 1951 Sangster sold Triumph to BSA for £2.5 million, having previously sold Ariel to BSA in 1939. As part of the sale agreement, he joined the BSA Group as a member of the board. Turner's holdings in Triumph gave him 10% of the sale. A race kit for the Tiger 100 was introduced, bikes were restyled with new paint and the first dual seat appeared.
The Ford Super High Output (SHO) V8 engine was designed and built by Ford Motor Company in conjunction with Yamaha Motor Corporation for use in the 1996 Ford Taurus SHO. It was based on the successful Ford Duratec engine rather than its predecessor, the compact Ford SHO V6 engine developed by Yamaha for the 1989 Taurus SHO.