For Sale: A 15.3 Liter Seagrave T-Head Straight-Six Engine From 1916

2022-07-23 08:46:32 By : Mr. Lester Choo

This 1916 Seagrave T-Head engine is an inline-six with a displacement of 15.3 liters (934 cubic inches.) The engine has a crossflow head design with three spark plugs per cylinder, and it tips the scales at a hefty 2,800 lbs (1,270 kgs).

Seagrave Fire Apparatus was founded back in 1881 by Fredric Seagrave, the company initially made extendible ladders that were often used for harvesting fruit.

Urban fire departments also needed ladders, given that buildings kept getting taller, and Seagrave capitalized on this by building two-wheeled hand-carts containing firefighter’s ladders. Horse-drawn firefighter carts came next followed by the Model K front-wheel drive tractor in 1915 that replaced the horses.

Seagrave’s large six-cylinder engine was the company’s primary power unit for years, until the Seagrave V12 entered use in 1932.

This 2,800 lb Seagrave engine was recently refurbished and it’s now mounted to a base in full running order.

Internal combustion engines were still relatively primitive at the time, and fuel octane levels were typically far lower than they are in the present day. As a result of these factors displacement was a crucial factor for any engine that needed to produce significant power.

The Seagrave straight-six has a T-head design, essentially a flathead engine with the intake valve on one side and the exhaust valve on the other. Each valve is operated via long pushrods which extend down into the crankcase, and there’s a separate camshaft for the intake and exhaust.

The engine has a cast iron crankcase with an aluminum oil pan, cast iron pistons, an aluminum intake manifold, open tubular steel exhaust pipes, a Delco generator, a Stromberg carburetor, a Berlin twin-spark magneto, a brass coolant manifold, and on the front it has a hand crank for manual starting.

Though it’s difficult to imagine any one human having the strength to crank over a 15.3 liter engine by hand.

The open exhausts create quite a noise, so when running the engine on the display stand it’s important that those observing wear ear protection.

As a result of the Herculean effort that would be required to crank the engine over a 16 horsepower Briggs & Stratton starter engine has been bolted to the side of the stand and attached to the fly wheel by way of a belt. This allows the engine to be started relatively quickly and easily.

The engine is now fitted to a stand that allows it to be run, the stand certainly looks period correct with cast iron wheels, a wooden base, and an iron I-beam structure to hold the engine.

There’s a radiator mounted up front and in the rear you’ll find a number of switches and levers that allow the engine to be run for display purposes.

We don’t often see engines of this vintage coming up for sale and certainly not in running condition, so it’ll be interesting to see what this one sells for. It’s currently being offered for sale out of Tucson, Arizona on Bring A Trailer and you can visit the listing here.

Images courtesy of Bring A Trailer

Ben has had his work featured on CNN, Popular Mechanics, Smithsonian Magazine, Road & Track Magazine, the official Pinterest blog, the official eBay Motors blog, BuzzFeed, and many more.

Silodrome was founded by Ben back in 2010, in the years since the site has grown to become a world leader in the alternative and vintage motoring sector, with millions of readers around the world and many hundreds of thousands of followers on social media.

Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Pinterest Reddit Email This Waco UIC Cabin Class biplane has a fascinating history, it was being used as a training aircraft…

Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Pinterest Reddit Email This 1982 Chevrolet K20 Scottsdale has been fitted with a 1973 Caveman Camper and the original 6.2 liter…

Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Pinterest Reddit Email This is the Clash leather motorcycle jacket from the team over at Roland Sands Design. It was developed to…

Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Pinterest Reddit Email This well-preserved 1968 Airstream Globetrotter is a great example of what travel trailers were like back in the…

Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Pinterest Reddit Email This is an original and fully operational Lycoming R-680 radial aircraft engine. It’s fitted to a display stand…

Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Pinterest Reddit Email This coffee table was made using an original Porsche 911 2.7 liter flat six engine from a 1974…

We launched the first official Silodrome apparel store in 2020 – grab yourself a t-shirt and help support a truly independent publication, every single sale matters. Visit The Store Here

Silodrome was founded in 2010 as a website dedicated to Gasoline Culture and all it entails - We write about modern cars, classic cars, motorcycles, racing, gear, gadgets, clothing, boats, planes, airships and the occasional submarine.Read more...

© Silodrome 2022. all rights reserved. Powered by Gasoline and Caffeine.

Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Contact Us