Horsepower’s Relentless March: 1950-1960
This story first appeared in the September/October 2024 issue of Hagerty Drivers Club magazine. Join the club to receive our award-winning magazine and enjoy insider access to automotive events, discounts, roadside assistance, and more.
The following multi-part series explores the developmental timeline of horsepower in the automotive industry. We kicked things off with the engine’s early development, from 1776-1900, here. Time marched on, and so did our coverage—through the early 20th century and the eventful decades of the ’20s-40s. Stay tuned as we continue our daily installments highlighting all the major evolutionary milestones in horsepower. Enjoy! –Ed.
How much horsepower does it make? The question is, in many practical respects, pointless. Pretty much every vehicle on the road has enough power to do what it needs to do, and then some. Yet for enthusiasts, it’s critical, part of a secret handshake that tells us not only what someone’s driving, but whether they know and appreciate what they’re driving.
The horsepower your car produces is the product of some 250 years of continuous improvement, serendipitous discoveries, and daring feats—most of it revolving around a type of air pump we call the internal combustion engine.
As we write this, the future of the engine, the beating heart of the automobile, is somewhat in doubt. There’s no question, though, that our horsepower quest will continue. We will keep tweaking, and the numbers will keep growing. But it’s worth pausing, if only for a moment, to reflect on just how far we’ve come.
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1952: The first production mechanical fuel-injection system for spark-ignition engines, developed by Robert Bosch, is introduced in the compact Goliath sedan in Germany. Although achieving ample horsepower is certainly possible with carburetors, fuel injection simplifies that task while also maximizing fuel economy over a broader rpm range.
1955: The muscle car era is green-flagged by Chrysler’s C-300 powered by a dual-four-barrel Hemi V-8 producing 300 horsepower.
1956: The Federal-Aid Highway Act passes. The Interstate Highway System is intended to reduce traffic and improve road safety. It also literally and figuratively paves the way for higher horsepower cars capable of taking full advantage of thousands of miles of high-speed roadways.
1957: The Chevrolet Corvette’s mechanically fuel-injected 283-cubic-inch V-8 produces 283 horsepower—1 horsepower per cubic inch.
AMC’s Rambler Rebel offers Bendix Electrojector electronic fuel injection as a $395 option on its 288-hp V-8. Chrysler Corporation followed a year later with similar equipment for various Chrysler, DeSoto, Dodge, and Plymouth models. Unfortunately, these initial EFI systems were so unreliable that the 35 or so cars so equipped had to be retrofitted with carburetors. Bendix sold its patents to Bosch, which redeveloped the technology as the first D-Jetronic fuel injection, introduced on the 1967 Volkswagen 1600, followed by various Citroën, Porsche, Mercedes-Benz, Saab, and Volvo car lines. Britain’s Lucas also purchased a license to equip Jaguars with EFI.
Rising horsepower generates a backlash: America’s Automobile Manufacturers Association bans direct factory motorsports participation for safety reasons, driving hardcore performance development underground.
Return to Part III (1920–1950), and stay tuned for Part V (1960–1980).
The Hillsboro video is pretty cool. Top 3 were the SEDCO “Black Widow” Chevys.
Fuel Injection
If you are limiting your article to Automobiles you are probably correct on the early Bosch system. During WWII Germany used FI on its aircraft, most notably the BF109.
This gains for modern performance and the styling of the cars that happened in this era is what makes this so memorable to me. But the next decade on this list is easily the most fun decade in terms of variety.