The engine used in the Fiat S.76 land speed record vehicle is a large-displacement, four-cylinder engine, designed and developed by Fiat, in 1910.[3][4]

FIAT S.76 engine
Overview
ManufacturerFiat
Production1910-1911
Layout
ConfigurationI4
Displacement28.353 L (1,730.2 cu in)
Cylinder bore190 mm (7.48 in)
Piston stroke250 mm (9.84 in)
Valvetrain16-valve, DOHC, four-valves per cylinder[1]
Combustion
Fuel systemWeber Carburetor
Fuel typeGasoline
Oil systemDry sump
Cooling systemWater-cooled
Output
Power output290 hp (216 kW; 294 PS)
Torque output2,000 lb⋅ft (2,712 N⋅m)[2]

Overview

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The S.76 uses a 4-cylinder engine, with a displacement of 28,353 cm3 (1,730.2 in3) (190 mm × 250 mm)(7.48in x 9.84in), providing 290 metric horsepower (210 kW) at 1400 rpm, 4 valves (3 valves the airship engine) starting with trembler coil, 2 spark plugs per cylinder (3 spark plug the aeroship engine), ignition with high voltage magneto BOSCH type DR4/4, and water cooling.[5][6]

After the 2 car engine was built from 1910 and 1911, FIAT built a similar engine for an airship, changing the valves to 3 (two exhausts and one intake) and the spark plugs to 3 (the car engine had 2 spark plugs) That engine was built from 1912 to 1913, and was used on Forlanini airships.

In November 2014, Pittaway and a team of motorists managed to return the S76 engine to working order including Leonardo E. M. Sordi an Italian Air Force consultant and historic expert of mechanics and magneto, to rebuild a full ignition system (including spark plugs), full set of engine bearings whit shell and white metal, and rework the original crankcase n°2 for realignment of the bench supports, deformed in over 100 years of history; although more work was needed before the car was fully operational. This was completed in 2015 and the "Beast of Turin" was displayed and driven for the first time in almost a century at the Goodwood Festival of Speed between 23 and 26 June 2015.

Applications

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References

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  1. ^ "#Focus – the Beast of Turin – FIAT S76". December 2014.
  2. ^ "Fiat S76 Record specs, performance data".
  3. ^ "The Beast of Turin: Video @ Top Speed". 4 April 2015.
  4. ^ "The largest propulsion and engines in the automotive industry". News i. 2020-04-28. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  5. ^ "1911 Fiat S76 Roars 28.4-Liter 4-Cylinder Engine At Goodwood FoS". Motor1.com.
  6. ^ "FIAT S76 has the Largest Car Engine Ever Built". 24 April 2016.