If we start talking ANY car, my RC car has somewhere around a 2cc engine.
Cars only;
68 Coupe De Vile - 7.730
77 mini- 1.380
6.35
Other;
1980 24'Ford box truck?
Honda Mini Trail 50
?
.5 liters on the Buell and 6.6 on the Olds.
Holy monkey farts I just realized that we do not have a single car or truck at my home that has anything smaller than a V8 currently. '80 Olds 403, '95 Ram 360, '99 Tahoe 350 and '07 Charger 5.7 Hemi.
5 (305 Chevy) - 1.3 (RX-7) = 3.7 liters, which is exactly how many liters my wife's current car has.
'67 Thunderbird with 390 (6.39L) - '93 RX7 (1.3) = 5.09 lifetime.
'08 Sienna (3.5) - '93 rx7 (1.3) = 2.2 current.
My current spread also equals an F2T! It's a sign! F2T all the things!
In reply to JamesMcD:
The RX7 13B REW is considered as 2.6 liters per SCCA, so your current liter spread might be a bit closer to .9.
If I can count my E150 as a car, then 4.0L. If I can't count the van, then 1.2L not allowing any add-on turbocharger bonuses.
EDIT: Typing 4.0L made me think of my old Jeep. I miss it.
Current: Miata 1.8 to Odyssey 3.5, so 1.7
Lifetime: Chevette 1.4 to Camaro 5.7, so 4.3
Looks like I need to get out more.
GameboyRMH wrote: This is a game that's only fun for Americans
My spread is out of whack because while I have previously owned a 429 and 460 Ford (385-series engines measure their displacement in cubic inches, dangit!) all of my piston engined cars save one have been 1.6-1.9l fours, mostly 1.8l engines. The outlier is/was a 2.2l five.
And then of course all of the 2.3l and 2.6l rotaries.
EvanR wrote: Mine is 5.6 liters. What's the game? Subtract the smallest-displacement passenger car engine you've ever owned from the largest, thusly... 1967 Pontiac Catalina and/or 1972 Ford Gran Torino wagon: 6.6 liters. minus... 1986 Chevrolet Sprint Plus: 1.0 liter equals... 5.6 liters! Now it's your turn!
Up until we sold our Mini Cooper, I had the exact same spread. Now it's 6.6L minus 1.6L. (Catalina minus Miata.)
'73 Road Runner 7.2L - '80 Chevette 1.6L = 5.6L, equivalent to a 340.
Going with current fleet, still the Runner with 7.2L - '00 Plymouth Neon 2.0 = 5.2L or a 318.
Current fleet average is 4.8L. If the Neon goes away, and the Challenger gets the stroker small block the fleet average is back up to a 5.2L/318. I guess I need to do that.
modernbeat wrote: 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.
Still got the highest spread. You guys need more big blocks and 2-Strokes in your lives.
Small end is 1.8 and better not use boost mutiples. If I get to count Moby the White Whale, the top end is 10.4l, so 8.6, or 17.2 if I use boost multiple on the big side and not on the other. If I stuck the electric moped in there, I wouldn't have to count on my fingers or nuthin.
Knurled wrote:GameboyRMH wrote: This is a game that's only fun for AmericansMy spread is out of whack because while I have previously owned a 429 and 460 Ford (385-series engines measure their displacement in cubic inches, dangit!) all of my piston engined cars save one have been 1.6-1.9l fours, mostly 1.8l engines. The outlier is/was a 2.2l five. And then of course all of the 2.3l and 2.6l rotaries.
429 is 7.0, 460 is 7.5
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