Massey Ferguson 35 tractor that some guy built overseas. Nice job. Says he wants more power and is building a twin-injection pump setup. I envy this guy's skill and innovation - but he MUST be spending a lot of money. I thought it was only us "rich" Americans that blew money on such projects. On the subject of innovation - and G.M. diesels - I was re-reading the story of the "bored" Oldsmobile engineers that spent a winter converting a 350 Oldsmobile engine to diesel - which later got cheapened and used in Chevy cars and light trucks. This is what started the light-truck diesel use for GM. Goes as follows:"Winter 1976 - As a winter project, the engineers at Oldsmobile took the 350 gasser block, cast it from high nickel iron, stroked the crank, cut reliefs in the pistons, reworked the heads with a Ricardo Comet prechamber and installed Detroit pencil injectors. Found a Roosa Master 8 cylinder pump from the local tractor dealer and machined an adapter plate to mount the pump. Made five copies and put them on the dyno to do the tests. Two months later, Mercedes announced that they had put a turbo on the 300 and finally had a diesel that could keep up with the traffic. With the fuel crisis still in full swing and Detroit stumbling along with their two ton lead sleds, GM marketing went looking for a solution only to find that their own engineers had a hobby. Olds was given 18 months to get the prototype into production (about 24 months shorter then normal, especially for a new engine design). January 1978 - After working many overtime hours the engineers had developed an engine, that at the time had the best power to wieght ratio of any production automotive diesel ever made, but discovered the accountants all held a deep desire to be designers. Nix the dual exhaust, heavy duty version of the Roosa Master, the hardened head studs and the high nickel block. The result was a 120 hp diesel that got almost 40 miles to the gallon (IMP) and only 70 lbs heavier then it's gasser counterpart. Unfortunately you had to drag a magnet behind the car to catch all the parts that flew out of the engine. August 1981- After almost breaking the bank with warrantee claims, and after many hours of exhaustive testing GM introduced the "DX" block with stiffer webs, high nickel block, roller cam, new stronger crank, 27 modifications to the Roosa Master (now made by Stanadyne) (lets face it, it started out life as a tractor pump), better cooling channels, improved injectors and a better head design. While they were forced to de-rate this engine to 105 HP, it still gave great mileage and reasonably acceptable power for the vehicles it was installed in. None the less, the previous three years had written paid on it's reputation and nothing Madison Avenue could do could revive it. The engine stayed in production through the 1985 model years but was quietly laid to rest."
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