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| Engineering/ Technical Ask technical questions about cars. Do you know how a car engine works? |
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#1
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The Rocket 88 was one of the first "Muscle cars"
In the immediate post-war years Oldsmobile had two models, the near-luxury 98 and the mid-range 76. At first the Rocket (or "Kettering" V-8) seemed destined for just the top-of-the-line 98, but then good sense prevailed and the modern V-8 was also offered in the much-lighter 76 chassis in a new 1949 model dubbed the 88. A legend was born. Though fitted with an automatic transmission (the Olds manual couldn't handle the engine's torque), the Oldsmobile 88 was the hit of NASCAR's 1950 season, winning eight of the 10 races. Given its lightning-like success, one could clearly make the case that the Olds 88 with its 135-horsepower V-8 was the first "musclecar," the first in a line that would include the Pontiac GTO, Dodge Charger and Olds 442 among scores of others. In fact, all the successful Oldsmobile vehicles that would follow it for the next 30 years would bear the distinct seal of Charles Kettering's last great invention, the legendary Rocket V-8.
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#2
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That legend will never die either. I bought a 1969 Cutlass a year ago and it has a Rocket 350. When I bought it the 350 had headers, intake, 750 double pumper carb, and a mild cam in it. I'm only 18 but I will never forget the first time I opened that thing up and let it take me for a ride. WOW
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