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#1
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Those interested in the Typhoon and it's engine can look up
www.cpmac.com/napier.html a site on Napier and all it did from cars - printing machines - minting machines- aircraft engines - train engines... Picture gallery and forum peterann2 (at) yahoo.fr |
#2
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Colin McGARRY wrote:
Those interested in the Typhoon and it's engine can look up www.cpmac.com/napier.html a site on Napier and all it did from cars - printing machines - minting machines- aircraft engines - train engines... Picture gallery and forum peterann2 (at) yahoo.fr And here's me thinking that it was made by a company called Recalcitrant !! At least that's what they call it in all the books I have read - the Recalcitrant Sabre !! ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++ Ken Duffey - Flanker Freak & Russian Aviation Enthusiast Flankers Website - http://www.flankers.co.uk/ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++ |
#3
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Ken Duffey wrote in message ...
Colin McGARRY wrote: Those interested in the Typhoon and it's engine can look up www.cpmac.com/napier.html a site on Napier and all it did from cars - printing machines - minting machines- aircraft engines - train engines... Picture gallery and forum peterann2 (at) yahoo.fr And here's me thinking that it was made by a company called Recalcitrant !! At least that's what they call it in all the books I have read - the Recalcitrant Sabre !! The engine as I understand it was rushed into service before the engineers had fully debugged it and this was a source of many of the engines early teething problems. WW2 ended befor production could be transfered over to to "Much Maligned". Sleeve valves worked very well on a whole range of Bristol engines that powered a whole range of British aircraft with legendary reliability. Initialy Napier punched the ports in the sleaves while Bristol was carefully machinining them. Reliability improved when Bristols' longer experience was introduced to Napier. Sleave Valves reduce engine friction thus more than doubling both engine life and sevice intervals while increasing efficiency. Their large port area improves induction and exhaust flow also improving efficiency and power. Experimental Auto engines have been produced with standard poppet valves for induction but a rotating sleave simply to get the reduced wear and friction of this. (It breaks ststic friction at the point of piston reversal) Sleave valves reduce the diameter of radials and the width of flat engines. The Alternatives were incredibly complicated multiport heads on multirow radials ( a japanese speciality ) or turbo-charging (an american technique that required refractory alloys) |
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