When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: lisle ford spark plug extractor

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Autolite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autolite

    In 1935, Royce G. Martin, President of the Electric Autolite Company, decided the company should enter the business of manufacturing spark plugs. Robert Twells, a ceramic engineer, led the development team. In 1936, the first spark plug was produced at their Fostoria, Ohio plant. A few months later, the company sold their first spark plug.

  3. Coso artifact - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coso_artifact

    Coso artifact in 2018. The Coso artifact is an object falsely claimed by its discoverers to be a spark plug encased in a geode.Discovered on February 13, 1961, by Wallace Lane, Virginia Maxey, and Mike Mikesell while they were prospecting for geodes near the town of Olancha, California, it has long been claimed as an example of an out-of-place artifact. [1]

  4. Lisle Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisle_Corporation

    Lisle was founded in 1903 by C.A. Lisle, originally manufacturing horse-powered well-drilling machines.. Lisle's product for the automotive market was an aftermarket master vibrator for the Ford Model T engine, replacing the engine's four trembler coils with a cheaper and more easily adjusted single unit. [3]

  5. Motorcraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorcraft

    Motorcraft is an auto part brand owned and operated by Ford Motor Company. Products under the "Motorcraft" brand include spark plugs, batteries, brakes, fuel filters, A/C condensers and accumulators, motor oil, automatic transmission fluid, among other goods.

  6. Duraspark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duraspark

    The Duraspark II is a Ford electronic ignition system. Ford Motor Company began using electronic ignitions in 1973 with the Duraspark electronic ignition system and introduced the Duraspark II system in 1976. The biggest change, apart from the control box redesign, was the large distributor cap to handle the increased spark energy.

  7. Ford FE engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_FE_engine

    A 427 Cammer once used by Ford's "X-Garage" skunkworks Ford's 427 cu in/7.0 L Cammer SOHC hemi-head V8 showing cam, rockers and timing chains The Ford single overhead cam (SOHC) 427 V8 engine, familiarly known as the "Cammer", [ 25 ] was released in 1964 in an effort to maintain NASCAR dominance by seeking to counter the enormously large block ...