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One Dodge dealership in Darien New York kept a 1969 Charger 500 with a hemi until 1989, and then finally sold it (with 1270 miles on it from parades and events) It's just been sold at BJ for 341K |
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https://images2.imgbox.com/7a/b6/c9Xxyw6U_o.jpg https://images2.imgbox.com/c6/4d/Csc680Mv_o.jpg The front of the Mustang seemed to be higher than normal. I walked up to the front of the car and raised its hood, only to find an engine bay minus the power plant. Even though the Mustang was void of an engine, I could tell this engine compartment was unlike any other I’d ever seen on a Mustang. The car had an unusually thin radiator with heavy-duty steel brackets that were unlike those on a factory Mustang. The compartment also had a large metal container resembling an oil or water cooler mounted in front of the shock tower on the driver’s side, and like the front and rear bumpers, the passenger side shock tower had a Curtiss-Wright decal. This decal read, “Rotating Combustion Engine — A New Shape in Power.” https://images2.imgbox.com/27/ea/3UZpoyu6_o.jpg |
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The NACA duct was originally used on jet air craft but the design didn’t pay off big the way engineers had hoped. Turns out the jet engine doesn’t like the turbulent, choppy air pulses that come in from the low boundary layer that NACA ducts take in. When used on the Douglas YF-93A in tests, the high speed dives the jet was capable of was limited by loss of air to the jet engine due to turbulence. By the time the Douglas YF-93 reached production, the NACA ducts were dropped for another design. While they were used to some degree, it wasn’t the big innovation they were hoping for. In the auto world, the NACA duct held more promise. It’s compact, low profile so drag isn’t a problem and easy to design. The cosmetic appeal is also high. Internal combustion engines with carbs don’t mind a bit of turbulence before reaching the inside of a carburetor. It helps atomize fuel better and provides cooler air. Cars did end up using the NACA duct to some degree. In fact, Ford used it first on their 1969 Shelby GT 350 and GT 500. |
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