saviour stivala wrote: ↑14 Jan 2019, 08:11
...... in my book that is not called ‘fish-plating’.
well in Griffith Borgesen's writings it was (the fishplates)
he and his camera were regulars there in the pits - that was his job
the cars retired after the 1948 season (the 158 - btw this of course had swing-axle rear suspension)
A-R returned after the 1949 season with new cars (the 159 - this of course had De Dion type type rear suspension)
with newly-cast blocks (presumably somewhat improved in design)
iirc the 158 blocks were said to have been cast pre-war
as I said - people are forgetting the Italian-driven move before WW2 to 1.5 litre GPs
and forgetting that a 1.5 litre championship GP season was started in 1940
and forgetting eg that these and more advanced A-R GP cars existed and were developed within the 1939-1945 period
there's a reason Formula 1 had 1.5 litre supercharged cars
the Maserati shown previously had 4 valves per cylinder (remember its 8 cylinder brother dominated Indy pre-1941)
when developed as the 'new' Milan-Maserati car it claimed over 300 hp and won a prize to encourage new cars
the A-R had 2 large valves per cylinder necessarily at a large included angle