Talk:Chevrolet Corvair
That engine photo isn't the turbo engine, it's the low end two carb engine. The turbo had a sidedraft carb with a cylindrical air cleaner mounted back (forward?) on the driver's side of the firewall (well, right behind the back seat) right on the turbo input. The big pie plate air cleaners as seen here were the two carb and four carb, and it looks like you can see only one air horn going to one carb on the left side head. (I owned a few two carb and one four carb version, and I saw a few turbo versions). Gzuckier 19:12, 11 July 2005 (UTC)
- Oh, man, I was excited to get a shot of the turbo, too! The reason I thought it was a turbo is that it says "TURBO-AIR" on the air cleaner - I assumed they wouldn't use the word, "turbo", on a non-turbo car, but I guess I was wrong... --SFoskett 19:42, July 11, 2005 (UTC)
- Yeah, for some ungodly reason they called the more powerful 2 carb engine (in contrast to the less powerful two carb engine) the turbo air. ??? Great marketing strategies of the 20th century. Here's a good pic of the turbo engine[1]; that big chrome can on the left that looks like an air inlet is the air cleaner, that chrome thing on the right with a dent in it to clear the spare tire is the heat shield over the exhaust side of the turbo, and you can see the sidedraft carb in between and the chrome pipe out to the intake manifolds. Unmistakable. Gzuckier 04:24, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
Great marketing moves
But wait, there's more! The two carb engines (80-110 HP) were all "Turbo-Air," and the four-carb. 140 HP engine was the "Super Turbo-Air." The actual Turbo engine says "Turbocharged" on the air cleaner with a fireball for the cross of the "T." At least it's graphically interesting... I'll see if I have a nice photo of a 140 HP to pop in as well.
whats missing
There is the Greenbrier so I am trying to find a good picture for it:) Whopper 02:20, 2 January 2006 (UTC)
Huh?
Could someone please comment on this? It makes no sense.. what's so bad about taking the key out?: "The first Corvairs (1960 – 1964) were factory equipped with an ignition lock wherein it was possible to start the car and then remove the key. Doing so in Southern California and being caught by the Los Angeles Police Department was a guaranteed ticket to a weekend in jail." --JeffryJohnston 19:18, 18 February 2006 (UTC)
Nothing wrong with the design, I used to drive a 64 Monza 900 with the keys in the speaker dish on the dash. But the thing was, the LAPD would see that there was no key in the ignition and instantly decide the car was stolen. And of course, once they decided to take you to jail, you were going to jail, end of story.