Yep, missed it.
1.0 litre was the smallest car.
5.7 largest car.
In reply to 914Driver:
I think that you missed the point. Your total is either 4.1L (cars only) or 4.8L with bikes.
'68 Caddy 472 so 7.73L
minus
'95 Geo Metro 1L
equals
6.73L variation....
With bikes, .998L
minus .049L
equals .949L variation.
Life time: GMC Yukon Xl 6.2L - Fiat 850 Spider = 5.35
Current: 6.2 - 1.6 (Miata)= 4.6
Single car: Single car 1988 RX7 w/ 350 Swap. 5.7 - 1.3 = 4.4
I have a 66 Bonneville that currently has no engine, so 0.0L. Then I have a bored Caddy 500 on the stand that displaces 8.3L
That's cheating, but that makes 8.3L difference.
But playing fairly, I have a 5.7L and a 5.3L currently running. That's a 0.4L spread.
Chevy 396 = 6.5
'76 Honda Civic = 1.2
difference = 5.3
if I could use my motorcycle as the small that would have been a 100cc Yamaha … or .1L
for a total of 6.4
and currently … a 4.6 F150, and a 1.4 Sonic = 3.2
Mustang: 3.7L
-3 of my old cars: 2.0L
=1.7L spread
My RX-7s were nominally 1.3L, but that's comparing apples to triangular oranges.
GMC 4x4 truck with 8.1 L engine and SAAB 96 with 650cc engine
Spread of 7.45 L
I think that's the highest spread so far.
Old Viper 8 - Fit 1.5 = 6.5 spread
Current CTS-V 6.2 - Miata 1.8 = 4.4
Hybrids and trucks are cheating in my opinion.
For cars:
302 Mustang (5.0) minus Civic 1200 = 3.8
For motorcycles:
Harley 883cc minus Rockford Chibi 60cc = 0.820
wearymicrobe wrote: 8.3 Liter Viper. 0.0 Liter i3 So I win as the only infinite number if we were finding a ratio.
I call BS! That i3 happens to have a 655cc two cylinder gas engine in it.
My contribution:
caprice with a 305 (5.0L).
Nissan leaf. (0.0L)
Lifetime:
Olds Delta 88 455 : Mini 850 = 6.6L
Currently:
Chevy S-10 4.3 : Mini 1380 = 2.9L
Bikes:
Road Glide 103 : JCP PintoII 50 = 1.6L
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