I believe it is an optical illusion, but when I saw the engine I circled at first glance I thought it had a turbo on it.
I think it is a Torque Converter on the engine behind it, but that is also strange as I have never seen a torque converter mounted to an engines flexplate at a factory before, they have always attached to the transmission, so I don't know? But I have never seen a Factory Slant 6 Turbo.
I am used to see the vertical version of that engine As used in one of these or these But they did make a few for Light Fixed wing A/C also, Tucker was the last Nail in the Coffin for Franklin A/C Engines, not related to the Aircooled Franklin Cars of the early 20th Century
There isn't anything behind those engines, except a bellhousing and flywheel or most likely a flexplate (because most of them ended up connected to automatics. So, why do double work, when avoidable?), so that the engine could get started
That was craftsmanship. I would have love to have visited that, or the Eldorado Brougham assembly’s lines.
Or both. The Continentals spent most of their production hours getting their numerous coats of paint. I wish that Ford's management had continued Mark II production for at least one year more, so that it could get a factory-installed M.E.L. engine for '58