Tommy Cookers wrote:the Indy Ford was destroked by McLaren for 1967 F1, was hideously overported/valved and quickly had its ports reduced
McLaren used a BRM V-12 in 1967. In 1968 McLaren used a Ford V-8 - but it was the Cosworth designed engine.
Tommy Cookers wrote:the Offy was perfectly suited to the first F1, but was never so used
The first rules allowed non supercharged engines of 4.5l or supercharged engines of 1.5l. The Alfa 158s and 159s dominated that era of racing with their 1.5l supercharged in-line 8. Not sure if the Offy would have competed well against them, or the V-12 Ferraris.
Tommy Cookers wrote:the Offy people had manufacturing involvement and even design involvement with the Indy Ford V8 (which was in design proportions a destroked Offy, and so was overvalved and overported)
The 1964 Indy engine was based (loosely) on a production Ford V8.
Former Offy engineers may have worked on it, but to say that it was based on a scaled Offy is a stretch.
The 1963 Ford V8 was a stock block - ie, it had pushrods.
A turbo version of the quad cam was made for 1968. Later Indy Ford engines were Cosworths.
http://www.wrljet.com/fordv8/indy.html
Tommy Cookers wrote:I suspect that Ford intended in part a race sportscar application at 5 litres, and a road spin-off eg 351
(the existing pushrod 4.2 litre/260 Indy winner was brother to the above dimensionally for good reason)
Yes, because it was originally based on the Ford 260 production V8. That morphed into the 289, then became the 302. The 351 was a different engine.
And then there were the Clevelands. Also available in 302 and 351 (this time the same engine with a few different components), and up to 400ci.
Tommy Cookers wrote:the pre WW1 Peugeot was overported (they were chasing laminar flow) and so had a 5 speed gearbox
First I've heard of this. I have struggled to find good info on the Peugeot 1912 GP car and its engine.