Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
In these cases, the sidevalve engine still has much to offer.
By 1952 sidevalve engines were already seen as old fashioned.
The earlier sidevalve engine had a similar arrangement, but simpler.
This had a smaller, 2-litre sidevalve engine and was lighter and more economical to run.
A major improvement to the sidevalve engine was the advent of Ricardo's turbulent head design.
The car had an eight-cylinder in-line sidevalve engine with 4,872 cc of displacement.
The first prototype, the FX had a 1.8-litre sidevalve engine that proved inadequate for the job.
The FX used a 1800cc sidevalve engine, and was fitted with a pre-war body for testing purposes.
It is a sidevalve engine that is distinguished from the much more common L-head by its placement of the valves.
Sidevalve engines also required their tappets adjusting, and in this case it was the tappets themselves that were adjusted directly.
Early sidevalve engines were in use at a time of simple fuel chemistry, low octane ratings and so required low compression ratios.
In 1931 this was replaced with a sidevalve engine of much simpler design and greater reliability, although the overhead cam engine was available until 1932.
The Colorale featured the four cylinder '85 series' sidevalve engine first seen in 1936 in the Primaquatre.
Manufacturer of close ratio gears, special axle ratios, and all types of engine tuning equipment for the 4 cylinder sidevalve engines.
The Sidevalve engine was used in many smaller Fords as well as farm vehicles, commercial vehicles and a marine version in boats.
Aquaplane, manufacturer of dedicated exhaust and inlet manifolds for the Ford sidevalve engine, also aluminium alloy cylinder heads etc.
Original engine for both M4 and M3 was a Morris Commercial 4-cylinder sidevalve engine running on tractor vaporising oil, delivering 42 hp.
In a T-head engine, a sidevalve engine has a crossflow configuration, so exhaust gases leave on the opposite side of the cylinder from the intake valve.
The F-4 had a new pressed-steel chassis the four-cylinder Ford Sidevalve engine used in the Model Y, and a four-seat body.
The main advantages of a sidevalve engine are simplicity, reliability, cheapness, compactness, responsive low-speed power, low mechanical engine noise and insensitivity to low-octane fuel.
Although a sidevalve engine can safely operate at high speed, its volumetric efficiency swiftly deteriorates, so that high power outputs are not feasible at speed.
The main disadvantages of a sidevalve engine are poor gas flow, poor combustion chamber shape, and low compression ratio, all of which result in a low power output.
Although still a sidevalve engine, the engine was developed with high squish pistons, dual ignition and sodium-cooled exhaust valves in Stellite seats to give 350 bhp.
Elva Engineering in the U.K. designed and manufactured overhead inlet valve conversion cylinder heads for this sidevalve engine, also complete sports/racing cars and other tuning parts.
That Ford were still powering their entry level Taunus P1 with a sidevalve engine ten years later, in 1962, would leave the model looking badly outclassed under the bonnet/hood.