Straight-twelve engine

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A 1905 Wolseley straight-12, 360 hp, petrol or oil marine engine

A straight-12 engine (also known as a inline-12 engine) is a twelve-cylinder piston engine with all twelve cylinders mounted in a straight line along the crankcase.

Land use

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Due to the very long length of a straight-twelve engine, they are rarely used in automobiles. The first known example is a 7.2 litres (440 cu in) engine in the 1920 French Corona car;[1] however it is not known if any cars were sold. Packard also experimented with an automobile powered by an inline 12 in 1929.[2]

The straight-12 has also been used for large military trucks.[citation needed]

Marine use

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Some Russian firms built straight-12s for use in ships in the 1960s and 1970s.

MAN Diesel & Turbo 12K98ME and 12S90ME-C and the Wärtsilä-Sulzer RTA96-C are examples of contemporary marine engines in L-12-cylinder configuration. These are popular for propulsion in container ships.[3][4]

References

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