December 7, 201114 yr Hmmm...probably some kind of one off prototype in ancient times. Not the ZR-1 engine, because that was built by Mercury Marine IIRC.
December 8, 201114 yr Author Oldsmoboi ~ >>"the first or their first?"<< The question was quite purposefully stated...
December 8, 201114 yr Oldsmoboi ~ >>"the first or their first?"<< The question was quite purposefully stated... In that case, the answer is that Chevrolet didn't.
December 8, 201114 yr Author No; you're going to have to gloss over the 'the' and the interpretation you are giving it, Camino... tho you are 'warm' WRT the 'trick' aspect... In other words, I was forced to word it as such.... Edited December 8, 201114 yr by balthazar
December 8, 201114 yr OK, I know that they "built" such an engine as a prototype based on the smallblock that never made production. Somewhere around 1970 or so. I remember it being on the cover of Hot Rod or some other such magazine.
December 8, 201114 yr OK, I know that they "built" such an engine as a prototype based on the smallblock that never made production. Somewhere around 1970 or so. I remember it being on the cover of Hot Rod or some other such magazine. Maybe some kind of Corvette experimental engine? Besides the rotaries, didn't they have other experimental Corvette engines in the '60s-70s?
December 8, 201114 yr GM did the tease thing back then too, I remember some Pontiac engines as well. But all of the specifics escape me.
December 8, 201114 yr Author The '60s Division projects were amazing- well worthy of a in-depth thread. Olds had some sort of wack-a-do reciprocating/rotating engine, IIRC.
December 14, 201114 yr If you mean Chevrolet the man, he was building DOHC conversions for Model T engines. The earlier date I've seen for one is 1924
December 14, 201114 yr Oh, I forgot about the DOHC Frontenac racer he built that won the 1920 Indy 500
December 14, 201114 yr Author ^ DINGDINGDING! - that's the answer I was looking for. Hence the wording "the first"; the trick being I was referring to Chevrolet the man, not Chevy the car division; I could not use "their first". Louis Chevrolet did indeed build a DOHC, 4-valve/cyl engine for the '20 Indy 500. Frontenac was his second auto company after he left Chevrolet, tho he & his brother also ran the Chevrolet Brothers Manufacturing Co, making numerous parts, ironically perhaps, primarily for the Model T, all as mentioned above. Nice work, rjbartop!
December 14, 201114 yr Thanks. The wording had me wondering if you meant the first DOHC 4-valve/cylinder engine ever, but that honour, as far as I know, goes to Ernest Henry and Peugeot in 1912, and the Chevrolets had nothing to do with that.
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