The 1930s brought many innovations to the automobile market. Cars became safer, more comfortable, and more powerful. Carmakers also began adopting aerodynamic designs. In 1934, the Chrysler Airflow ...
Ian Wright joined CarBuzz as an automotive journalist and photographer in 2018. His career started with specialist publications, covering everything from Harley-Davidson to Ferrari. Before writing for ...
How Ford's Flathead V8 Engine Works, And Why It Disappeared In 1932 Ford introduced the mass market to V8 engines, sticking a 3.6L flathead V8 producing a terrifying 65 horsepower in the Model 18. The ...
Kyle has written professionally across the motorsport and motoring world since graduating from Plymouth University in 2018, and has acted as the MotoGP editor for Motorsport Week and as a Features ...
Left: Bill Ford of the Ford Company; Right: Cadillac F1 unveiling its 2026 shakedown livery in January Bill Pugliano/Getty Images; SIPA USA Bill Ford, the executive chairman of major American car ...
Production of the all-electric Ford F-150 has come to an end. But the next one will be an extended-range electric vehicle, or EREV. The high-power generator will enable 700+ miles of range, Ford said, ...
Great. Another pair of engines from the same manufacturer that are a cubic inch apart. Well, GM loves giving anti-kindred engines similar displacements (looking at you, Chevy 454 and Pontiac 455), so ...
It was considered a major breakthrough when Ford launched its Flathead V8 engine in 1932. Up until that point, V8 engines were expensive and limited to just luxury cars, but Henry Ford wanted one that ...
Small turbocharged engines are all the rage these days. Their popularity has grown over the last decade or so, and that’s around the same time that Ford introduced some of its own. EcoBoost engines ...
For the first few decades of the 20th century, V8 engines were finicky, expensive things reserved for low-production luxury cars. Fancy pants Cadillacs and LaSalles were powered by V8s, while more ...
Facebook Marketplace—what a thing. You can find almost anything for sale there, from obscure ’90s tuner vehicles to a rare leaping Lexus prototype and even a seven-figure GM Futurliner bus. And while ...