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#1
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![]() -- Moving Things in Still Pictures! |
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"®i©ardo" wrote in message
... -- Moving Things in Still Pictures! Well, that's an interesting engine arrangement. (to put it mildly) -- Cheers Dave Kearton |
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On 19/03/2013 19:26, Dave Kearton wrote:
"®i©ardo" wrote in message ... -- Moving Things in Still Pictures! Well, that's an interesting engine arrangement. (to put it mildly) Hi Dave, Yes, as explained to Indrek: "Macchi-Castoldi MC-72 Fiat AS6 engine; dual V-12, 3100 total HP, each engine drives one very course, fixed-pitch prop 440.729 mph in 1934. Class record still stands. Why contra-prop? Supermarine S6B w/ 2650 HP on single prop overloaded one float by 32% on takeoff due to torque." Regards, Ri©ardo -- Moving Things in Still Pictures! |
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"®i©ardo" wrote in message
... On 19/03/2013 19:26, Dave Kearton wrote: Hi Dave, Yes, as explained to Indrek: "Macchi-Castoldi MC-72 Fiat AS6 engine; dual V-12, 3100 total HP, each engine drives one very course, fixed-pitch prop 440.729 mph in 1934. Class record still stands. Why contra-prop? Supermarine S6B w/ 2650 HP on single prop overloaded one float by 32% on takeoff due to torque." Regards, Ri©ardo What fascinated me is the engineering work required to get the job done. Not only are there two unique engines inline, but the crankshafts can't be simply bolted together. I've been thinking about it for a while now and I can't think of a simple way to do it reliably. All that effort and expense for a one-off design. Absolutely outstanding that they got it to work at all, much less in the '30s. -- Cheers Dave Kearton |
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On 19/03/2013 22:02, Dave Kearton wrote:
"®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 19/03/2013 19:26, Dave Kearton wrote: Hi Dave, Yes, as explained to Indrek: "Macchi-Castoldi MC-72 Fiat AS6 engine; dual V-12, 3100 total HP, each engine drives one very course, fixed-pitch prop 440.729 mph in 1934. Class record still stands. Why contra-prop? Supermarine S6B w/ 2650 HP on single prop overloaded one float by 32% on takeoff due to torque." Regards, Ri©ardo What fascinated me is the engineering work required to get the job done. Not only are there two unique engines inline, but the crankshafts can't be simply bolted together. I've been thinking about it for a while now and I can't think of a simple way to do it reliably. All that effort and expense for a one-off design. Absolutely outstanding that they got it to work at all, much less in the '30s. It shows the prestige attached to the Schneider Trophy and it also spurred development of European WWII fighter aircraft. There's a superb article on the subject he http://www.airspacemag.com/history-o...schneider.html ....all seven pages of it. Hmm, have also just spotted a typo in the original lifted article whe "one very *course* , fixed-pitch prop..." should surely read "coarse"! Regards, Ri©ardo -- Moving Things in Still Pictures! |
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On Wed, 20 Mar 2013 08:32:20 +1030, "Dave Kearton"
wrote: "®i©ardo" wrote in message m... On 19/03/2013 19:26, Dave Kearton wrote: Hi Dave, Yes, as explained to Indrek: "Macchi-Castoldi MC-72 Fiat AS6 engine; dual V-12, 3100 total HP, each engine drives one very course, fixed-pitch prop 440.729 mph in 1934. Class record still stands. Why contra-prop? Supermarine S6B w/ 2650 HP on single prop overloaded one float by 32% on takeoff due to torque." Regards, Ri©ardo What fascinated me is the engineering work required to get the job done. Not only are there two unique engines inline, but the crankshafts can't be simply bolted together. I've been thinking about it for a while now and I can't think of a simple way to do it reliably. Sounds like the designers had the same problem - didn't Ricardo mention that two of the three examples crashed? All that effort and expense for a one-off design. Absolutely outstanding that they got it to work at all, much less in the '30s. And how much faster would it have been without the floats? |
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On 3/19/2013 5:02 PM, Dave Kearton wrote:
"®i©ardo" wrote in message ... On 19/03/2013 19:26, Dave Kearton wrote: Hi Dave, Yes, as explained to Indrek: "Macchi-Castoldi MC-72 Fiat AS6 engine; dual V-12, 3100 total HP, each engine drives one very course, fixed-pitch prop 440.729 mph in 1934. Class record still stands. Why contra-prop? Supermarine S6B w/ 2650 HP on single prop overloaded one float by 32% on takeoff due to torque." Regards, Ri©ardo What fascinated me is the engineering work required to get the job done. Not only are there two unique engines inline, but the crankshafts can't be simply bolted together. I've been thinking about it for a while now and I can't think of a simple way to do it reliably. All that effort and expense for a one-off design. Absolutely outstanding that they got it to work at all, much less in the '30s. It was the early 1930s? There weren't many engines on the shelf to chose from, and NONE that size... The seaplane races were intended to advance aviation technology. AND national pride was at stake here. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Macchi Castoldi MC.72 01 | ®i©ardo[_2_] | Aviation Photos | 4 | March 20th 13 09:08 AM |
Macchi Castoldi MC.72 02 | ®i©ardo[_2_] | Aviation Photos | 0 | March 19th 13 05:15 PM |
Macchi a | Fabio | Aviation Photos | 0 | April 28th 09 07:55 PM |
Macchi | Fabio | Aviation Photos | 0 | April 28th 09 07:54 PM |
RE;Macchi | Klem | Aviation Photos | 2 | January 10th 09 02:54 PM |