It only puts out 1.5 horsepower, but that is enough to irrigate a field.
The 1.6-liter four puts out 132 horsepower, and in a 2,600-pound car measuring barely 13 1/2 feet long, that constitutes major zoom.
Less expensive models get the 1.9-liter Ford four-cylinder engine that puts out 88 horsepower.
A 4.3-liter V6 engine puts out 195 horsepower, 30 percent more than its predecessor.
This year, the in-line four puts out 150 horsepower, the same as the V6 in the 1995 model.
It has 24 valves and puts out 217 horsepower, 40 more than the 12-valve version shared by the rest of the 300 line.
Its beautiful 5.3-liter engine puts out 263 horsepower, and the 12 cylinders purr as they should.
First of all, there is that engine, a V-12 whose 5 liters put out 300 horsepower.
The 5.3-liter V12 engine continues to put out 263 horsepower, although the fuel-delivery system has been improved for easier starting.
The test vehicle had a 4-liter overhead-cam V6 that puts out 210 horsepower; it is the better choice.