Oldsmobile straight-6 engine

Oldsmobile produced a straight-6 automobile engine from 1923 to 1950. It was a conventional side-valve engine of varying capacities and at stages was shared with GMC.

1941 Olds Inline Six 238

Although the engines changed from year to year there were basically 5 series of Oldsmobile side-valve 6 cylinder engines over the 27 years of production, 1923 to 1927, 1928 to 1931, 1932 to 1936, 1937 to 1948 and 1949 to 1950. The '49 to '50 Big Six was to be the last inline six built by Oldsmobile although there were a few models in the late '60s and early '70s built using the overhead valve Chevrolet straight-6 engine.

505

The 505 cu in (8.28 L) was used by the Oldsmobile Series 23 between 1910 & 1912. It used a T-head configuration and made 60 bhp. In 1911 the displacement increased to 706.0 cubic inches (11,569 cc) while remaining at 60 bhp

380

The 380 cu in (6.2 L) was used by the Oldsmobile Model 53 between 1913 & 1915, and made 50 bhp.

177

The 177 cu in (2.90 L) was used by the Oldsmobile Model 37 between 1917 & 1921 and made 40 bhp.

169.3

The 169.3 cu in (2.774 L) was used by the Oldsmobile Model 30 between 1923 & 1926. It used a 2 3/4" bore and 4 3/4" stroke and made 40 bhp @ 2600

185

The 185 cu in (3.03 L) was used by the Oldsmobile F-Series for the 1927 model year only and it was basically an over-bored 169.3. It used a 2 7/8" bore and 4 3/4" stroke and made 44 bhp @ 2600rpm .

197.5

The 197.5 cu in (3.236 L) was used by the Oldsmobile F-Series between 1928 and 1931 in various power outputs. It used a 3 3/16" bore and 4 1/8" stroke, had a compression ratio of 5.2:1 and when released in 1928 made 55 bhp @ 2700rpm.

In 1929 the intake was upgraded from 1" to a 1 1/4" carburetor and power increased to 61 bhp @ 3000. 1931 saw another increase in power to 65 bhp @ 3350.

213.3

The 213.3 cu in (3.495 L) was used by the Oldsmobile Series 70 between 1932 & 1936 and also GMC in their 1936 T-14 & T-16 trucks.[1] It used a 3 5/16" bore and 4 1/8" stroke and on its introduction in 1932 had a compression ratio of 5.3:1 and made 74 bhp @ 3200.

For 1933 the capacity was increased 221.4 but then in 1934 it reverted to the original 213.3 and with a higher compression ratio of 5.7:1 made 84bhp @ 3200 along with the '33s shell bearings.

221.4

The 221.4 cu in (3.628 L) was used by Oldsmobile for one year in 1933 and then reverted to using the 213.3. It used a 3 3/8" bore and 4 1/8" stroke.

This 1933 engine was the first Olds to use removable "shell" bearings in lieu of the earlier poured in place babbit bearings.

229.7

The 229.7 cu in (3.764 L) was used by Oldsmobile between 1937 & 1940 and also GMC in their 1937 & 1938 T-16, F-16, T-16H and F-16H trucks.[1] It used a 3 7/16" bore and 4 1/8" stroke.

216

The 216 cu in (3.54 L) was used by Oldsmobile for only one year in 1939 for the 60 series line of vehicles. It was basically a de-stroked 229.7 and used the same 3 7/16" bore but a 3 7/8" stroke.

238

The 238 cu in (3.90 L) 238 was used by Oldsmobile between 1941 and 1948. It used a 3 1/2" bore and 4 1/8" stroke

257

The 257 cu in (4.21 L) 257 was used only by the Oldsmobile 76 during the 1949-50 model years. It used a 3 17/32" and 4 3/8" stroke. These engines were known as the "Big Six" and had this cast into the cylinder head.

See also

References

  1. Meyer, Donald. "THE FIRST CENTURY OF GMC TRUCK HISTORY" (PDF). GM Heritage Center.


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