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The normal V-angle for a V8 is 90°. There are two classic types of V8s which differ by crankshaft.
The cross-plane V8 is the typical V8 configuration used in American road cars. Crank pins are at a 90° angle. The cross-plane can achieve very good balance but requires heavy counterweights on the crankshaft.
The flat-plane V8 have crank pins at 180°. They are unperfectly balanced and thus produces severe vibrations. As they don't requires counterweights, the crankshaft has less inertia allowing higher RPM. They're mainly used as racing engines the most famous example being Ford-Cosworth[?] DFV.
The Coventry-Climax[?] 1,5 l V8 evolved from a cross-plane configuration to a flat-plane configuration in its latest versions.
2. V8 is a beverage made of juices from 8 vegetables. Specifically: tomatoes, beets, celery, carrots, lettuce, parsley, watercress[?], and spinach.
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