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With further modifications, the V12 appeared in the Jaguar XJR-6 race car of 1985. It grew from 6.2 to 6.3 liters, before expanding again to 7.0 liters for the XJR-9, pictured above, which won six ...
Otherwise there's no way this Mercedes-Benz SL600 V12 would ever make it under the hood of this Datsun 280Z. You read that right, a huge V12 in a teeny Z car. “Imagine a poor man’s Jaguar E ...
Originally good for 301 horsepower and 336 LB-FT of torque, the 6.0 V12 was Jaguar’s last great engine before the brand wandered off into Ford-powered ambiguity. It made its name with a quiet ...
Under all that glitz and glimmer is a 5.6-liter supercharged V12 engine that was developed in-house by the TWR engineers, which produces around 650 horsepower and 538.4 lb-ft (730 Nm) of torque.
There was another V12 car in the Jaguar stable that's long been overshadowed by the E-Type and its XJS successor.The XJC V12 Coupe has remained something of a niche item despite its good pedigree ...
That car did indeed come with a V12, and it was based directly on Jaguar's Le Mans racers. That was the XJR-15. The XJR-15 ended up being one of the most manic cars of the modern era and never ...
The shell (heavily based on the Series I E-Type) was mated with a customized Series II frame, and a Jaguar V12 (borrowed from the Series III variant) was installed under the hood.
The 1992 Jaguar XJS came with an updated version of the company's venerable 5.3-liter V12, with 263 horsepower, 288 lb-ft of torque, and fancy Lucas digital fuel-injection.
Then E-Type Series 3 came along in 1971, a different animal from its predecessors thanks to the XJ13-derived V12 engine with four Zenith carburetors.The longer wheelbase gave the Series 3 an ...