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  2. Axial engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axial_engine

    A four-stroke, air-cooled unit, it had seven cylinders and a variable compression ratio, altered by changing the wobble-plate angle and hence the length of piston stroke. [3] It was called a "rotary engine", because the entire engine rotated apart from the end casings. Ignition was supplied by a Bosch magneto directly driven from the cam gears.

  3. Swashplate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swashplate

    The fixed plate is shown in gold and six shafts each take a reciprocating motion from points on the gold plate. The shafts might be connected to pistons in cylinders. Note the power may be coming from the shaft to drive the pistons as in a pump, or from the pistons to drive the shaft rotation as in an engine

  4. General Motors Rotary Combustion Engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Motors_Rotary...

    1972 GM Rotary engine cutaway shows twin-rotors. Popular Science magazine in the May 1972 article "GM Rotary Engine for the 1974 Vega", an illustration of the Wankel installed in a 1974 Vega hatchback showed a different grille, a lower, more sloped hood line, and a "GM Rotary" badge and Wankel crest on the rear quarter panel. They stated the ...

  5. Cam engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cam_engine

    A similar engine to the swashplate engine is the wobble plate engine, also known as nutator or Z-crank drive. This uses a bearing that purely nutates, rather than also rotating as for the swashplate. The wobble plate is separated from the output shaft by a rotary bearing. [2] Wobble plate engines are thus not cam engines.

  6. Chevrolet Turbo-Air 6 engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chevrolet_Turbo-Air_6_engine

    The Chevrolet Turbo-Air 6 is a flat-six air-cooled automobile engine developed by General Motors (GM) in the late 1950s for use in the rear-engined Chevrolet Corvair of the 1960s. It was used in the entire Corvair line, as well as a wide variety of other applications.

  7. Axial piston pump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axial_piston_pump

    Automotive air conditioning compressors for cabin cooling are nowadays mostly based around the axial piston pump design (others are based on the scroll compressor or rotary vane pump ones instead) in order to contain their weight and space requirement in the vehicle's engine bay and reduce vibrations. They're available in fixed displacement and ...