V8 Engine Magnets
Description: Founded in Hagerstown, Indiana in 1926, Perfect Circle became the undisputed world leader in piston ring technology and are credited with practically every major innovation in piston ring development to this day being credited to them. Manufacturing became international and played a vital part in air, land and marine transportation during World War II. In addition to piston rings for cars, trucks, aircraft, locomotive, marine and industrial engines, Perfect Circle manufactured valve seals, cam shafts, seals and gaskets, pistons, cylinder sleeves, turbine wheels and blades and specialized electronic laboratory equipment.
Description: Perfect t-shirt for everyone who loves big block V8 engines. If you love the big engine, then you will love it. For use in car lovers' meetings. Great gift for lovers of American v8 engines. To give for birthday and Christmas gift. V8, big block, legend, engine, machine, car, classic, muscle car lovers, drag fans, v8 engine, hemi.
Description: Perfect outfit for all who love big block V8 engines. If you love big motor then you will love this dress. Great gift for lovers of American v8 engines. To give as a birthday and Christmas gift. Shirt v8, big block, legend, engine, machine, car, classic, muscle car lovers, drag racing fanatics, v8 engine, hemi.
Description: Mad Max is a 1979 Australian dystopian action film directed by George. Mel Gibson stars as "Mad" Max Rockatansky, a police officer turned vigilante in a near-future Australia in the midst of societal collapse. Please, if you liked this design, you can help me a lot by sharing it or following my work. I will really be very grateful to you!
Car Ford Falcon V8 The Pursuit Special Interceptor from the movie Mad Max Magnet
by DaveLeonardo
$4.75
Description: Mad Max is a 1979 Australian dystopian action film directed by George. Mel Gibson stars as "Mad" Max Rockatansky, a police officer turned vigilante in a near-future Australia in the midst of societal collapse. Please, if you liked this design, you can help me a lot by sharing it or following my work. I will really be very grateful to you!
Car Ford Falcon V8 The Pursuit Special Interceptor from the movie Mad Max Magnet
by DaveLeonardo
$4.75
Description: My Kind of Engine - 8 Eight Cylinder V8 Car quote. Gift for tuning fans and car lovers. Wear for Car Meet
My Kind of Engine - 8 Eight Cylinder V8 Car quote Magnet
by Automotive Apparel & Accessoires
$4.75
Description: American V8 Muscle written in the American flag with a distressed look.. A perfect gift for yourself or a muscle car enthusiast . Show your love for the big gas guzzler hot rod engine. Big horse power fans will love this. True American muscle whether it be a big block or a small block. Torque lovers, street racers and track racers all love the v8.
Description: Weber Speed Equipment started out in 1945 as Weber Tool Company, making some of the first aluminum performance fly wheels. As the company continued to expand their speed parts catalog with cams, clutches, and heads, becoming increasingly popular with hot rodders and racers alike, they changed their name to Weber Speed Equipment. Aside from making high quality, extreme high-performance parts, one of their biggest claims to fame was their 'blow up proof' guarantee on their flywheels, something that was a big draw to those pushing higher horsepower and revs in the early days of drag racing.
Description: Ed Iskenderian was a Southern California hot rodder in the years leading up to WWII, working to make his roadster go faster. Post war, a high demand for parts from returning GIs eager to get back to hot rodding was so great that Iskenderian was faced with a long wait for a cam he wanted for his own car. Figuring he could do just as well himself, he bought a surplus cylindrical grinder, converted it into a cam-grinding machine, and went to work. He wasn’t just making a similar cam to those available at the time – he made them better. His cams made big power, and a business grew on the strength of that reputation that would succeed for decades to come, rightfully earning the title of America's fastest racing cams.
Description: Robert Paxton McCulloch formed McCulloch Engineering in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the city in which his grandfather made millions as an early pioneer of electric utilities and manufacturer of electric trolleys. McCulloch hired on a number of engineers at the firm, including Francis L. Colburn, who designed a simple, easy-to-install centrifugal supercharger. McCulloch began offering the superchargers as kits for Ford’s flathead V-8 engine, advertising them to truck owners as well as racers and owners of every day street-driven cars. The crankshaft-driven supercharger had a fixed 6:1 ratio and was seated horizontally between the carburetor and intake manifold. McCulloch first offered the kit in 1937 and by 1942, his sales topped $3 million.
Description: The 426 Hemi was an engine produced for use in NASCAR and not initially available to the general public. The name refers to the hemispherical cylinder head or hemi-head, while the 426 was from the 2nd generation of engines released in the mid 1960s that displaced 426 cu in (7.0 L). It was used in classic muscle cars like the Charger, the Challenger, Barracda ('Cuda), Daytona and Super Bee that today can sell for millions of dollars. Distressed for a vintage/retro look.
Description: Founded in 1925, Mallory initially developed OEM ignition systems for many early cars, but by the '50s, they were known for their aftermarket systems for hot rods and drag racers who needed more oomph to get their high-compression engines to light and for those needing more adjustability for fine-tuning and keeping their monster motors humming along. Mighty Mallory was a fun superhero inspired character introduced in 1962 and was most commonly found on decals handed out at drag racing events.
Description: The only way to get big stroke in the early decades of hot rodding was taking an existing crank, building up the journals through welding, and then machine finishing it, and that is what Alex Alexander had a knack for. As a welder, machinist, and avid hot rodder, Alex started making his own welded strokers in the '50s. As orders stacked up from word of mouth, he eventually had to admit that he had a business and formalized his operation as the less than creatively named 'Crankshaft Company' in 1965. From mild to wild, Crankshaft Company could build it and build it right, whether it was a street driven small block or a top fuel big block, the originator of the welded stroker could be counted on to go the distance.