What Cars Have Radial Engines?
A radial engine is a type of internal combustion engine in which the cylinders are arranged in a radial pattern around the crankshaft. This design is most commonly used in aircraft engines, but has also been used in some cars.
Radial engines have a number of advantages over other types of engines, including:
- Compact size
- Lightweight
- High power output
- Good fuel efficiency
However, radial engines also have some disadvantages, including:
- High vibration levels
- Difficult to cool
- More complex to manufacture
What Cars Have Used Radial Engines?
There have been a number of cars that have used radial engines over the years, including:
- Anzani 10
- Citroen B14
- Crosley Hot Shot
- Fiat 500
- Heinkel Kabine
- Messerschmitt KR200
- NSU Prinz
- Renault 4CV
- Saab 91
- Volkswagen Beetle
Most of these cars were produced in the 1950s and 1960s, and were powered by small, single-cylinder radial engines.
Why Are Radial Engines Not Used in Cars Anymore?
There are a number of reasons why radial engines are no longer used in cars.
- The high vibration levels make them uncomfortable to drive.
- They are difficult to cool, which can lead to overheating problems.
- They are more complex to manufacture than other types of engines.
In addition, the development of more efficient and reliable inline and V-type engines made radial engines obsolete.
Conclusion
Radial engines were once a popular choice for cars, but they have been replaced by more efficient and reliable inline and V-type engines.
Have Radial Engines Ever Been Used In Cars & Do Companies Still Make Them Today?
During World War II the radial engine was popular, and it was used in many fighter and bomber aircraft. Manufacturers in aviation used them because the engines deliver a ton of power for their size, with the most powerful models delivering 3,500 hp.
Such potential was also noticed by aviation and automobile enthusiasts, who theorized that the radial engine would be useful in cars. After all, inline or v engines used to power cars have been utilized for aviation, and jet engines from aircraft have been tried in automobiles, like the Chrysler Turbine and Rover Jet1.
Transferring the powerful output of the radial engine into a land vehicle was worth a try and some were adopted in prototypes and concept cars throughout the first half of the twentieth century. Let’s check out a few of these cars that hosted a radial engine and see why companies no longer make such motors for cars today.
1922 North-Lucas Car
The North-Lucas car was a 1922 two-door saloon shaped like a boat in an early attempt at streamlining. The other standout feature was the five-cylinder air-cooled radial engine, with a 1,460cc displacement, sitting in the rear compartment right above the wheels. This allowed the car to be compact by mounting the engine above the gearbox and rear-axle unit.
Aside from its owner, only one other person had driven the North-Lucas car by the end of 1922 — a motoring journalist who heaped praise on the vehicle, calling it vibrationless and comparing the engine to a turbine. The North-Lucas could cruise at 35 mph, reach a top speed of 55 mph, and had no problems climbing hills. The car was reliable for its time — requiring no service in 150 miles — and the engine was reportedly near impossible to overheat.
Aston-Martin and Bentley racing driver H. Kensington Moir liked the car, and although it was just a proof of concept, not intended for production, the owner considered it after such positive feedback. However, he did not push through, and the North-Lucas was never offered for sale to the public.
1925 Julian Sport Coupe
In the 1920s the Julian Sport Coupe was a sporty automobile created by the wealthy Julian S. Brown, who had inherited approximately $2.5 million – near $45 million in 2024. The car used a rear-mounted radial engine with six cylinders installed horizontally that pushed out 60 hp.
Aside from its unconventional engine, the Julian Sport Coupe was built for luxury with its elegant finish. It had a unique interior layout with the driver sitting in the middle, flanked by passengers on either side, like the McLaren F1. There were also two folding jump seats against the dashboard, allowing the car to carry up to five people.
The Julian Sport was supposed to go on sale for $2,500, but owing to the economic conditions at the time, and the high cost of building an entirely new car, the controlling company folded and declared bankruptcy. After being placed in storage, the sole model was discovered and restored to operating status in 1966.
1935 Monaco Trossi Grand Prix Racer
The high power output of the radial engine also caught the attention of some aspiring Grand Prix racers. Driver Count Carlo Felice Trossi funded Augusto Camillo Pietro Monaco in 1935 to build a front-wheel drive Grand Prix racer powered by a 16-cylinder radial engine.
The Monaco Trossi divided its 16 cylinders into two rows, giving the car a 3,982cc displacement. It also had two superchargers mounted behind the engine, allowing it to produce 250 hp at 6,000 rpm. This was a lot of power for 1935, with the most powerful car in the world at that time sporting 400 hp in the Duesenberg Model SSJ.
Despite the massive potential of this engine, it also came with a huge drawback — the heavy radial meant that the racer had a weight distribution of 75% in the front and 25% in the rear, causing massive understeer. This meant that there was a high chance it would be unstable around twists, turns, and curves, making it unsafe as a racer without a complete rethink of the chassis. Unfortunately, it never raced because of its dangerous design.
1939 Guidobaldi Prototype Racer
Francois Guidobaldi was an inventor and team mechanic on Bugatti race cars who designed and built a 10-cylinder aircraft engine, before building his own race car. The vehicle — sometimes referred to as the Guidomobile — had a unique chassis that leaned into corners when turning, much like a motorcycle. It also had a mid-engine layout and looked similar to Auto Union Grand Prix cars with a V16 engine. Guidobaldi used a 1.5-liter eight-cylinder radial engine placed horizontally with two Roots-type superchargers. This gave the car a low center of gravity for improved stability, while outputting approximately 200 hp.
The prototype race car began construction in 1939, but the outbreak of World War II and the material shortages during and after the conflict delayed its development. It wasn’t until 1951 that Guidobaldi completed the main chassis, and it was finally displayed to the public in 1956 at the Exposition Automobile de Nice.
Some major auto manufacturers, Mercedes-Benz in particular, had an interest in the vehicle, but no one was successful in acquiring it. Guidobaldi suggested that the car could hit a top speed of 174 mph, but since he lacked the funding to test it in Formula 1, the radial-powered race car wasn’t able to make its debut.
What happened to the radial car engine after World War II?
The start of World War II in 1939 affected all civilian development of automobile engines. Nevertheless, the radial still found its way into thousands of tanks that the Allies fielded. Some variants of the M3 Lee, the M4 Sherman, and some of the best tank destroyers, like the M18 Hellcat, were powered by radial engines.
However, these tanks mostly used radial engines because of their availability and reliability. When the American automotive industry was able to gear up for the war, American tanks started switching over to other engines like the GM 6046 Twin, the Chrysler A57 Multibank, and the Ford GAA V8. One reason for the switch was that the tall profile of the radial engines required tank hulls to be high, which is less than ideal in battle when you want to keep as low as possible.
Advances in engine technology during and after World War II meant that inline and v engines could deliver the same power as radial engines but in a more compact size. Turbine engines had also started to supplant the radial in aircraft development, and so the radial was slowly edged out of production in the aviation industry. Automobile manufacturers had no interest in developing a car around a massive engine when there was a smaller alternative that could deliver a better power-to-weight ratio, thus ending the prospect of radial engines in cars for good.
Cars with radial engines
This design also uses a rotary engine; see the Adams-Farwell car just below as the only other example known at present. This is the sort of rotary engine where conventional pistons and cylinders rotate around a stationary crankshaft. Balzer is said to have built several automobiles in the 1890’s but it is not currently known if he used his rotary engine.
The transmission is by a pair of rods driven by eccentrics attached to the rotating engine, which drive levers that alternately jam themselves against a central rotor fixed to the rear axle. It is all rather complicated, including a facility to ‘declutch’, and I don’t think it is very practical, as it relies on friction.
The ring joining the cylinder is is fact an exhaust pipe, perforated with small holes to allow the escape of the exhaust gases. This was supposed to have a silencing effect.
Balzer worked with Charles Manly, who was associated with Samuel Langley and his unsuccesful Aerodrome flying machine.
Source: US patent 573,174 granted to Stephen Balzer in 1896
Left: The Balzer rotary engine & car: 1896
These diagrams show the peculiar transmission system. I would have thought the car would move forward in a series of jerks, if indeed it moved at all.
No evidence has been found so far that a rotary-engined car was actually built.
Many thanks to John Beck for drawing this patent to my attention.
Left: The Balzer 5-cylinder rotary engine: 1902
Source: Scientific American 1902-03-01-v86-n09
Many thanks to John Beck for drawing this engine to my attention.
THE ADAMS-FARWELL CAR
The Adams-Farwell car was very unusual. Its inclusion here would make you assume it had a radial engine; in fact it had something much rarer; a rotary engine. This is nothing to do with Wankels but instead refers to radial engines in which the crankshaft is stationary but the cylinders rotate around it.
Left: The Adams-Farwell car: 1906
Between 1898 and 1907, the Adams Company manufactured fifty-two automobiles that featured innovations like fuel injection, supercharging, and automatic control of ignition timing.
The car was the first in the world (and probably the last) to be powered with an air-cooled rotary engine, which was mounted at the rear of the car ahead of the back axle. The engine was mounted with its crankshaft vertical, and so the engine spun in a horizontal plane.
This is the only remaining Adams-Farwell car; you can read about its history here and here and here. The car is fully operational and on 21st August 2011 it won the prestigious Charles A. Chayne Trophy at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance. The car is in the National Automoble Museum.
Thanks to Bill Godwin for reminding me about this car.
Left: The Adams-Farwell engine: 1906
The engine in the Adams-Farwell car, one of only three engines in existence. It was four-stroke design and was made in both three and five-cylinder versions. A rotary (or radial) engine must have an odd number of cylinders to get a sensible firing order. The advantages claimed were that no heavy flywheel had be fitted as the engine was its own flywheel, and there was no need for cooling fans, etc.
However, a rotary engine does present some engineering challenges; notably that the inlet and exhaust ports and the spark plugs are whizzing round at engine speed. The inlet ports are connected to the non-rotating carburettor (to the left of the yellow cylinder on top of the engine) through a rotating joint, and the fuel air mixture reached the inlet valves through the flat boxes on top of the cylinder. In some versions of the engine the exhaust just came directly out around the exhaust valve, which must have been very noisy; the engine shown here has stub exhausts attached to the side of the cylinders, presumably to cut down the noise a bit. It is clear that connecting up five exhaust ports with a non-rotating silencer system would be enormously difficult.
Pic source: Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance 2011
The sparkplugs present less of a problem as there are five contacts mounted near the engine centre, which connect with the red sector-shaped thing to the right of the yellow cylinder. This sector is connected to the ignition system by the wires going out of picture at top right. This works like a distributor; given the high voltage the contact does not actually need to rub on the sector (it would soon wear) but just be close enough for a spark to pass without undue loss of voltage.
Left: The Adams-Farwell engine: 1906
This Adams-Farwell engine is one of three in existence. This example is in the Smithsonian National Air & Space Museum.
The output shaft can be seen at bottom right
For some reason, this engine has no cooling fins.
Left: The Adams-Farwell engine: 1906
The internals of the engine. The five connecting rods each have their own connection to the crank-pin.
This picture shows each piston has having five rings, which somehow show on the inside of the piston. The engine cross-section below shows four rings per piston, fitting into conventional ring grooves.
Left: The Adams-Farwell engine: 1906
The parts of the Adams-Farwell rotary engine.
Note that both valves are operated by one push-rod underneath the cylinder, there is a ‘variable-compression’ inlet valve, and there are no exhaust stubs; the exhaust escapes around the exhaust valve.
From one point of view, this is going to be a difficult engine to work on; how do you do a compression test when the whole engine is whirling about? On the other hand, as an early reviewer pointed out, to get access to any cylinder you simply had to turn the engine round.
Source: unknown
Left: The Adams-Farwell engine: 1906
This section of the engine shows the non-rotating air intake pipe at top right; the dotted thing appears to be an air filter. At lower right a single circular cam with a follower on its inside face operated the two valves via a curved rod. They do not look like conventional poppet valves.
There is no possibility of having different timings for the inlet and exhaust valves, which makes one wonder what effect that had on engine efficiency.
At the bottom is the bevel gearing to the output shaft.
Source: unknown
Left: Three-cylinder Adams-Farwell engine: 1896
This early three-cylinder engine. On the back of the photograph has been typed: “Number two. 4″ bore, 4″ stroke, ignition make and break. Built in 1896, was never placed in a car.”
The design of the cylinder-head is completely different from that of later engines.
Source: Detroit Public Library Collection
Left: The Adams-Farwell chassis: 1906?
This appears to be an early version of the car, with a three-cylinder engine and tiller steering. The engine output shaft droves the rear axle via a chain, and a differential gear J. There are drum brakes M on the rear, but no brakes are visible at the front. Note the large battery required just to run the coil ignition system. I don’t see any provision for a starting handle.
Source: The Horseless Age , date unknown at present, but pre-1910 as the advert below shows steering wheels.
Left: The Adams-Farwell engine: 1906
The bevel gears that connected the vertical engine crankshaft with the horizontal output shaft. The spur gears above are believed to be part of the gearbox, but this is not yet confirmed.
Source: Smithsonian National Air & Space Museum.
Left: Advertisment for the Adams-Farwell car: 1906
The advert claims that the ‘motor’ developes 25 HP for a weight of only 97 pounds.
“The Adams-Farwell Motor has no reciprocating parts, has but one cam for all ten valves and the five pistons are all connected to a single-throw crank shaft which weighs only about 17 pounds.” No reciprocating parts? What about the pistons?
Note that the cars now have steering wheels rather than tiller steering.
THE NORTH-LUCAS CAR
Colin Lucas was a well known English architect in the nineteen-twenties and thirties. He collaborated with Oliver North to build this aerodynamic car. It had a single headlight, and a boat-shaped body with a roof of translucent canvas.
There are some biographical details on what I think is the right Colin Lucas here but there is absolutely no mention of a car.
Left: The North-Lucas car: 1922
This looks a bit like streamlining but it probably isn’t very aerodynamic. The vertical sides and near-vertical windscreen suggest that the drag coefficient would not have been impressive. The rear-engined prototype had a top speed of 55 mph, which doesn’t seem very quick from a 1.5-litre engine.
For those (excusably) in doubt, the front of the car is at the left. There is a large intake for the air-cooled engine just behind the spare wheel.
Left: The 5-cyinder engine of the North-Lucas car: 1922
The engine sat on top of the transmission; there were finned inboard brakes and the suspension was by swing-axles.
The induction manifolds vanish under the flywheel; was the carburettor there? Note that the exhaust manifold is not shown. An aeroplane radial engine could use stub exhausts, but a road car would have to have the exhaust from the five cylinders collected into a silencer, and this must have been a serpentine piece of plumbing.
It has been remarked that the fan-blades on the flywheel are well-situated for slicing off the fingers of anyone examining the engine when it was running.
THE JULIAN SPORT COUPE
Julian Brown inherited a $2.5 million fortune from his industrialist father, and spent much of it on developing engines and cars that never reached production.
Left: The Julian sport coupe: 1927
Julian Brown designed the aluminum body, which was then constructed by the
Fleetwood Metal Body Co. It was finished and mounted on the backbone chassis in 1925.
Left: The Julian sport coupe: 1927
The steel backbone frame consisted of a 4.5-inch central tube, with two 2.0-inch crossmembers fixed to it at front and back. The cross-members supported the aluminum five-passenger coupe body.
Left: The Julian sport coupe: 1927
The radial, six-cylinder engine was set horizontally at the rear, as in the North-Lucas car. The cylinders were set 120 degrees apart. It appears to have been a four-stroke engine so it is unclear how the cylinder firing order could be arranged with an even number of cylinders. The crankcase was aluminum. Bore and stroke were 3.375 x 5.0 inches giving a displacement of 268.4 cu-in. (4398 cc) The power output was said to be 60 HP at 2500 rpm. The compression ratio was a modest 4.8 to 1.
It is currently unclear how the cooling air got into the engine compartment. Presumably it exited downwards.
More information can be found at The Old Motor.
Left: The Julian sport coupe: 1927
This contemporary image, sadly of poor quality, shows the rear engine and part of the chassis. Note part of the exhaust manifold leading into the cylindrical silencer.
THE ROHRBACH CONCEPT
Left: The Rohrbach concept put a radial engine in each wheel: Modern Mechanix 1931
There are, I suggest, some obvious problems here. There are two engines to go wrong and I suspect driving on one engine is not going to be feasible. The engines are unsprung weight and will cause some serious handling problems. The spark-plugs and ignition system are shielded from the elements by a casing; the ignition etc may be kept dry, but it is not clear how air is going to get to the air-cooled cylinders. It seems Rohrbach believed that his special engines would not need any cooling. (See just below)
There is the obvious problem of feeding the petrol supply, and the controls for throttle, clutch and gearbox, through a rotating bearing. It would certainly be interesting if the two gearboxes got out of sync.
In short, this is a daft idea. However that never stopped magazines like Modern Mechanix publishing them. And why not? They have a certain entertainment value.
From Modern Mechanix May 1931, p84
Left: The Rohrbach engine: Modern Mechanix 1931
Like many inventors, Rohrbach thought it a good plan to use as many new ideas as possible. He had convinced himself that the faster a piston moved, the less likely it was to overheat, and so built an engine where the combustion space was between two moving pistons rather than the piston and the cylinder. Therefore, he reasoned, no engine cooling was required. Simples!
The two pistons were driven from one crankshaft as shown in the picture. A single-cylinder prototype was built, but no details of its performance were disclosed. There is no sparkplug as the inventor claimed it used compression ignition, which seems to point to some sort of Diesel fuel. Rohrbach claimed his engine used half the fuel of a conventional engine; not very plausible.
Who was Rohrback? A first thought was Adolf Karl Rohrbach, who joined the Zeppelin Company in 1914, and went on to be involved in the design of large R-Plane (Riesenflugzeuge, or giant aircraft) bombers.
However, the real answer is Hans Rohrbach of Hamburg, Germany, who is known to have been involved in car design.
Left: A Hans Rohrbach car: 19??
This car was built by Hans Rohrbach. In 1922 he founded the Leichtfahrzeugb au-Gesellschaft for the exploitation of his patents like a unit-body (monococque?) car. He is actually best known for the Modern Mechanics article from 1931. One version of the car used a NAG 8/24 PS engine.
It is difficult to describe this car as beautiful or stylish, with its very odd radiator that looks like a gaping mouth.
In 1948 he showed an updated design of his three-wheeler as a model at the Leipzig fair.
THE STAPP LAND SPEED RECORD CAR
Left: The Stapp Land Speed Record car: 1932
The Stapp car was a Land Speed Record (LSR) contender powered by three 9-cylinder Bristol Jupiter air-cooled radial engines; or was it?
Ren� Stapp was a racing driver rather than an automotive engineer, which may explain some of the contradictions in the existing information about the car. At the time the LSR stood at 253 mph, set by Malcom Campbell in the Campbell-Napier-Railton Blue Bird in Febuary 1932.
The 1932 Jupiter engine produced 440 HP, so the total horsepower available would have been 1320 HP. However Stapp claimed he was going to use a petrol-electric transmission capable of carrying only 800 HP; even that would have been very heavy and complicated. This is just one of the contradictions in this project.
The car itself was called Jupiter , but there actually is no evidence that the car was ever fitted with one radial engine, let alone three. Stapp was testing it on a French beach called La Baule when it caught fire. (he escaped) and it has been suggested many times that the car was deliberately destroyed to prevent its exposure as a hoax. It is hard to see how any fire, however fierce, could destroy all traces of three great big radial engines. My own objection is that Jupiter engines were large, and from the photographs the only possible way three engines could have been fitted in the car was in-line, which would cause massive problems in getting enough cooling air to them; the air intake visible at the lower front of the car does not look big enough for one Jupiter, let alone three.
My correspondent Stu Riegel has the following to say:
“A quick look at the Jupiter engine reveals its overall diameter is 54.5 inches. A 1930 Voisin C20 (not sure if this was the actual Voisin chassis used, but it’s a big ‘un) measures 59.8 inches track width (typically but not always measured center to center of the tire). If one assumes a 7-inch tire typical of large cars of the period, that leaves 52.8 inches between the tires, not enough for even an unshrouded Jupiter.”
“The pictures of the Stapp car show the full width of the wheels are clearly outboard of the central cylinder, and by a healthy margin. It’s especially clear in the video.(although it seems to produce enough smoke for three Jupiters) There just isn’t room.”
Thanks to Mathieu Maury for drawing this car to my attention.
Left: The Stapp Land Speed Record car: 1932
The Jupiter was constructed just outside of Paris, apparently based on a Voisin chassis. It was apparently put about that the Voisin engine was left installed to act as a starter motor for the three big radial engines. That makes some sort of sense, but it is very hard to see how three big radials and the existing engine could all be fitted into the body.
Things got a bit weird after this because Stapp then claimed he was going to convert the three Jupiter radial engines into gas combustion turbines by removing the pistons from them. The engines would then allegedly give 800 horsepower each, power going to all four wheels via an electric transmission. It (I hope) hardly needs saying that such a process would have been utterly impossible.
There is more information here.
Ren� Stapp has a short Wikipedia page.
He should not be confused with Colonel John Stapp, a pioneer in studying the effects of g-forces on human beings.
Left: The Stapp Land Speed Record car: 1932
There is a video of the car being driven around the streets of Paris on YouTube. It has often been suggested that the car was running on its original Voisin engine for this trip.
At around 0:13 Stapp can be seen wearing a sort of flying-helmet as he fuels the car. It is he who drives it, from the opposite side of the car from the man in the dark coat, whose identity is unknown.
THE MEYERS CAR: 1932
Left: The Roy J Meyers Air car: 1932
The most important thing about the Meyers car was not the radial engine, but the compressed-air propulsion; note the four gas cylinders at the back of the car. This photo gives a good view of the six-cylinder radial engine. So far as I can see there are no fins on the cylinders to combat the icing that occurs when you cool air by expanding it.
Another important thing about the Meyers car was that it was almost certainly a perpetual-motion fraud. Roy J Meyers had a colourful history, which included a 3-1/2 year sentence in the Arizona state prison at Florence; what for does not seem to have been recorded.
There is more information in the compressed-air vehicles gallery.
From Popular Science for Jan 1932, p58
THE TROSSI-MONACO RACING CAR
Left: The Trossi-Monaco racing car: 1934
Count Carlo Felice Trossi was both a racing driver and a car constructor. As a racing driver he raced for Alfa Romeo, Mercedes-Benz, and briefly for Maserati. He won the 1947 Italian Grand Prix and the 1948 Swiss Grand Prix- but not in the car shown here.
The project was begun by engineer Agusto Monaco; he persuaded Fiat to test the engine at their Lingoto plant, but its poor performance and reliability led to Fiat withdrawing their support. Agusto then persuaded Count Trossi that the project was worthwhile, and this remarkable radial-engined car was built in Trossi’s ancestral castle at Gaglianico, outside Biella in Northern Italy. It was designed to meet the 1934 Grand Prix formula.
The car looked very much like an aeroplane engine nacelle with the propellor missing, and created a sensation when it was unveiled. The engine was a two-stroke design with sixteen cylinders, arranged in pairs with one cylinder behind the other; each pair had twin pistons but a shared combustion space and single spark-plug. Its capacity was 3.982 litres. In a bay behind the engine were two M160 Zoller superchargers drawing from two Zenith carburettors.
The output of this amazing engine was claimed to be 250 BHP at 6000 rpm, which sounds impressive until you compare other contemporary racing cars such as the 3.8 litre Alfa-Romeo, (305 BHP) the 5-litre Auto-Union (375 BHP) and the 4-litre Mercedes. (430 BHP) The 1934 Grand Prix formula introduced a maximum weight limit of 750 kg, but there was still no limit on engine capacity; that was not introduced until 1938.
The Trossi-Monaco racing car is in the Museo dell’Automobile, Turin.
Left: The Trossi-Monaco racing car under test in 1934
The car had a front/back weight distribution of 75:25, because of the massive engine mounted forward of the front wheels, and must have been interesting to drive.
Note that here the Townend ring around the engine is not in place; possibly this was a attempt to improve the cooling. Normally Townend ring manages both to reduce drag and improve air cooling, but here it does not seem to have helped.
Tests showed that engine was very prone to overheating; the exhaust manifolds masking the cylinders would not have helped. It also destroyed spark plugs rapidly. The car was clearly not race-worthy, and it never appeared at a Grand Prix race.
Left: The Trossi-Monaco racing car: 1934
With the Townend ring removed. The ribbed thing is one of the two Zoller superchargers.
Left: The Trossi-Monaco racing car under test in 1934
With the Townend ring removed.
Left: Count Carlo Trossi at the 1934 Grand Prix
Carlo Trossi is pictured looking thoughtful at the 3rd June 1934 Grand Prix at Montreux, Switzerland.
RADIAL-ENGINED FIGHTING VEHICLES
Several USA fighting vehicles were powered by air-cooled radial engines, because they were powerful for their weight. They were also available and thoroughly tried. One of the alternatives was the mechanical nightmare called the Chrysler Multibank, essentially five 6-cylinder engines mounted on the same crankshaft, giving a very heavy 30-cylinder engine which only produced 370 HP at 2400 rpm.
I am aware that a tank or a self-propelled gun is not strictly speaking a car, but this seems like a good place for the material.
Left: The Continental R975 radial engine: 1939-1950s
The Continental_R-670 was a 7-cylinder four-stroke radial aircraft engine of 11,000 cc displacement, giving from 210 to 240 HP at 2,200 rpm. It was used in the M1-Combat-Car and the M2 light tank, and a couple of other vehicles.
When greater power was required, The USA turned to the Wright R-975 Whirlwind, a 9-cylinder air-cooled radial engine running on petrol. Its displacement was about 16,000 cc and the power output in the range 300 to 450 HP at 2,400 rpm. The versions used in tanks etc were built by Continental under licence. The engine remained air-cooled, and cooling air was provided by a fan on the output shaft and appropriate shrouding around the cylinders.
- The M3 Lee tank.
- The M4 Sherman tank.
- The M7 Priest Self Propelled Gun.
- The M18 Hellcat tank destroyer.
- The Sexton Self Propelled Gun.
THE GUIDOBALDI RACING CAR
Left: The Guidobaldi car: 1956
This racing car designed by Francois Guidobaldi was principally built to demonstrate a suspension system that caused the chassis to lean into bends rather than follow the dictates of centrifugal force.
The car is currently in the private collection of David Humbert, who has had it completely restored.
Left: The radial engine of the Guidobaldi car: 1956
The Guidobaldi suspension system required the centre-of-gravity of the car to as low as possible, so a radial engine with its flat format was chosen. It was mounted at the rear of the car.
Guidobaldi designed the engine himself, coming up with a two-stroke, dual ignition, twin supercharged, air-cooled, 8-cylinder radial engine. Its capacity was 1500cc and so met the contemporary Grand Prix regulations which permitted either 4500cc unsupercharged or 1500cc supercharged engines. Fed by double Roots superchargers (originally from a Bugatti) the engine produced 180 HP at 6500 rpm.
The car was never raced.
Left: The radial engine of the Guidobaldi car: 1956
Just above the engine can be seen the distributor, with skew-gear drive from the crankshaft.
In the foreground are the two Roots superchargers. It is not currently clear how they were driven.
https://www.slashgear.com/1635246/radial-engine-cars-use-do-company-still-make/
http://douglas-self.com/MUSEUM/TRANSPORT/radialcars/radialcars.htm