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  2. Rotary engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotary_engine

    Engine designers had always been aware of the many limitations of the rotary engine, so when static style engines became more reliable and gave better specific weights and fuel consumption, the days of the rotary engine were numbered. Rotary engines had a fundamentally inefficient total-loss oiling system. In order to reach the whole engine ...

  3. Dyke Delta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyke_Delta

    In its standard configuration, the aircraft is a true double-delta with no horizontal stabilizer; however, a small T-tail is an option for trimming variants with higher-power engines. Since the mid-1960s, designer John Dyke has sold full construction plans and three-view drawings for the aircraft to homebuilders and is still selling them today.

  4. Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pratt_&_Whitney_R-1340_Wasp

    It was the Pratt & Whitney aircraft company's first engine, and the first of the famed Wasp series. It was a single-row, nine-cylinder, air-cooled, radial design, and displaced 1,344 cubic inches (22 L); bore and stroke were both 5.75 in (146 mm). A total of 34,966 engines were produced. [1]

  5. Lycoming O-320 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycoming_O-320

    The LIO-320 is a "left-handed" version with the crankshaft rotating in the opposite direction for use on twin-engined aircraft to eliminate the critical engine. [2] [3] The first O-320 (with no suffix) was FAA certified on 28 July 1953 to CAR 13 effective 5 March 1952; this same engine was later re-designated, without change, as the O-320-A1A. [2]

  6. BMW 801 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMW_801

    The BMW 801 was a powerful German 41.8-litre (2,550 cu in) air-cooled 14-cylinder-radial aircraft engine built by BMW and used in a number of German Luftwaffe aircraft of World War II. Production versions of the twin-row engine generated between 1,560 and 2,000 PS (1,540–1,970 hp, or 1,150–1,470 kW). It was the most produced radial engine ...

  7. Fokker Dr.I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fokker_Dr.I

    Replica 001 EI-APW is the oldest surviving example of the Dr.1. Because of the expense and scarcity of authentic rotary engines, most airworthy replicas are powered by a Warner Scarab or Continental R-670 radial engine. [39] A few, however, feature vintage Le Rhône 9J [40] or reproduction Oberursel Ur.II rotary engines. [41]

  8. Liberty L-12 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberty_L-12

    A Packard Liberty V-1650 Aircraft engine (cut-away)- 12 cylinder "v" type water cooled engine; 400 h.p. at 1700 r.p.m. 5" bore, 7" stroke, 8431 lbs., 45-degree angle cylinders, and aluminum pistons is on exhibit on a display stand at Carillon Historical Park in Dayton, Ohio.

  9. Radial engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radial_engine

    The first radial-configuration engine known to use a twin-row design was the 160 hp Gnôme "Double Lambda" rotary engine of 1912, designed as a 14-cylinder twin-row version of the firm's 80 hp Lambda single-row seven-cylinder rotary, however reliability and cooling problems limited its success.