Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Aircraft engine manufacturers of Japan (6 C, 9 P) R. Rocket engine manufacturers of Japan (1 P) S. Subaru (3 C, 26 P) T. Toyota (15 C, 113 P)
Workshare on the joint venture's first engine, the V2500, was divided between the constituent aero-engine companies. Rolls-Royce based the high pressure compressor on a scale-up of the RC34B eight stage research unit used in the RB401-06 Demonstrator Engine, but with a zero-stage added at the front and a tenth stage added to the rear. [1]
Defunct aircraft engine manufacturers of Japan (1 C, 4 P) D. Daiichi Kosho aircraft engines (1 P) H. Hitachi aircraft engines (3 P) I. IHI Corporation (4 C, 16 P) M ...
Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd. (KHI) (川崎重工業株式会社, Kawasaki Jūkōgyō Kabushiki-gaisha) is a Japanese public multinational corporation manufacturer of motorcycles, engines, heavy equipment, aerospace and defense equipment, rolling stock and ships, headquartered in Minato, Tokyo, Japan.
The 550 hp Type 14 engine, although notionally more powerful than the Napier Lion, flight tests of the H2H indicated the Type 14 engine had poor performance due to insufficient power, and it was replaced by the 600 hp Hiro Type 91 engine (an enlarged development of the Type 14) when manufacturing was shifted to Aichi in 1931.
The New York representative office was closed in January 1977 and, instead, Mabuchi Motor America Corp. was established in New York City for sales and service operations to respond directly to local needs and to focus on developing new markets (in 1997, the US head office was moved to Detroit). [23]
coupled Ha-40 engines Mitsubishi: Ha-211: MK9 A20 Ha-43: Mitsubishi: Ha-214: MK10 Nakajima: Ha-219: NK11A BH Ha-44 Nakajima: Ha-315: Nakajima: Ha-505: D-BH Ha-54 projected 5,000 hp 36-cyl radial engine Aichi: AE1 Atsuta: license-built Daimler DB 601A Aichi: Ha-70: Coupled Atsuta engines Hiro: Hiro Type 14 500 hp Water Cooled W-12 Type 14: Hiro ...
Oak Island Yard is a freight rail yard located north of Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal and Newark International Airport in an industrial area of Ironbound, Newark, New Jersey at 91 Bay Ave., United States. The sprawling complex includes engine house, classification yard, auto unloading terminal