The first hemi engines were invented in the early 1900s to power the nation's first automobiles. In the 1940s, improved versions were developed for use in the airplanes of WWII. However, Chrysler's ...
The third-generation Hemi engines have been in production since 2003, and ever since their arrival they have been in demand. The 5.7L is what you'll commonly see in vehicles, but 6.1L, 6.2L, and 6.4L ...
When Chrysler introduced the Gen 3 HEMI in 2003 as a replacement for the Magnum engine, it was received with much fanfare, ...
We may receive a commission on purchases made from links. The HEMI nameplate is arguably one of the most famous in the automotive community, with the name a reference to their hemispherical combustion ...
Hemi engines aren't perfect. Sorry. Half-grapefruit-shaped combustion chambers sure do let designers increase valve sizes, and in the larger displacement Hemis, these valves could probably pass golf ...
Back in the days of carburetors and cigarette lighters being common in dashboards, a Gen-II Hemi didn't need a lot of spark plugs to prove a point. Eight cylinders, eight spark plugs — simple, loud, ...