Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Year code. 11: Factory code. 12: Third character of model type (read positions 7,8 and 12 together). 13: Body configuration code or leading digit of serial number. 14: First digit of serial number. 15: Second digit of serial number. 16: Third digit of serial number. 17: Fourth digit of serial number.
A Regular Production Option (RPO) is a 3-digit standardized code used by General Motors to designate vehicle options & modifications. RPO codes designate how a vehicle is built, and they've been used on dealership order forms and in assembly plants since at least the 1950s (see Corvette C1).
Porsche-Schmid 5-speed synchronized gearbox for Ford (Getrag) 680 Porsche 1.2-liter stationary engine, 12HP with carburetor 681 Body design for NSU Prinz 30 682 Porsche-Schmid synchronized gearbox for a Hermes passenger car 683 Porsche-Schmid synchronized gearbox for the Meadows 250 C 5 684
The engine was designed by chief engineer Hans Mezger under the leadership of Ferdinand Piëch and Helmuth Bott. [9] Power came from a new 4.5-litre air-cooled engine designed by Mezger, which was a combination of 2 of Porsche's 2.25L flat-6 engines used in previous racing cars.
Porsche Engineering (Porsche Engineering Group GmbH) was established in 2001 as a wholly owned subsidiary of Porsche AG, with headquarters in Weissach, and traces its history back to 1931 when Porsche created its first engineering office subsidiary.
Drinking coffee could extend your life up to two years, new research finds. Regular coffee consumption was found to be associated with increased health span (time spent living free from serious ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A large number of Americans' metadata has been stolen in the sweeping cyberespionage campaign carried out by a Chinese hacking group dubbed "Salt Typhoon," a senior U.S ...
The Porsche V10 engine is a naturally-aspirated, V-10, internal combustion piston engine, designed and developed by Porsche, originally as a concept design for Formula One motor racing in the 1990s, and later Le Mans racing, but eventually used in the Porsche Carrera GT sports car; between 2003 and 2007.