Originally the names Kimberley and Beverly were also boy's names.
Kimberly (given name) - Wikipedia
Beverly - Meaning of Beverly, What does Beverly mean? boy name
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Originally the names Kimberley and Beverly were also boy's names.
Kimberly (given name) - Wikipedia
Beverly - Meaning of Beverly, What does Beverly mean? boy name
McKenzie was a surname, people are naming their daughters that.
I am reading a book from the 1930s on "oil engines for road rail and air transport" (diesels to you). Mostly about road transport.
The trivia bit is the detailed list of British manufacturers of these engines at the time - twenty-three of them.
A few (not many) are familiar - ......Lister, Perkins,
A few more would be familiar to the older people here -..... AEC, Dennis, Leyland, Thornycroft
A few would be familiar to those with boating or marine or stationary engine backgrounds - Ailsa Craig, Blackstone, Dorman-Ricardo, Gardner, Meadows, Paxman-Ricardo, - but who new they made car or truck diesels?
And who has heard of -... Armstrong-Saurer, Barton, Crossley, EMB, Ferry, Fowler-Sanders, McLaren, RN, Stellar, Victor, as manufacturers of diesel engines at all?
The other fascinating section is the one on aircraft engines. The only one that appears to have actually been made in significant numbers was the Junkers Jumo series which continued in production to the end of WW2 and was also licence built by Napier in the UK. But who has heard of the Bristol Phoenix (nine cylinder radial, 400hp), or the Clerget 14F (500hp 14 cylinder radial), or the Packard DR980 (9 cylinder radial, 225hp) - in 1931 this flew for 84hr 33 min non-stop, although only one ever appears to have been made?
Quote:
in 1931 this flew for 84hr 33 min non-stop, although only one ever appears to have been made?
Obviously it was because it was unreliable, John. [tonguewink] [biggrin]
The Oil Engine made by Hornsby of Grantham should be on your list as well. In WW1 it powered Tanks, Trucks, Locomotives, Road Rollers & all types of Agricultural machinery. A pure oil engine & (although I used Kero) & it was a Hot Bulb type,&it would run for hours unattended so long as it it had fuel. The original engine was invented (?) by Akeroyd as I understand.
Later in time they made Diesels under the name of Ruston Hornsby also a well known name.
At the time the book was published they did not make engines suitable for road transport. They appear in the rail section, but their smallest motor listed is a 35hp (at 1,000rpm) two cylinder one - theat weighed two and a half tons.
According to Wikipedia, the Packard diesel aeroplane engine was reliable and economical, but was unpopular because of the vibration and the smell of the exhaust. But I suspect the real reason was that competing petrol engines of the period were rapidly improving the power/weight ratio, and they were just too heavy to compete. There seem to have been about a hundred built.
Apparently they were an option in the Stinson Reliant, although Wikipedia's list of models makes no mention of it suggesting that it was only done experimentally). But (according to Wikipedia)1283 M3 Stuart light tanks had the Guiberson engine, and there were undoubtedly spare engines for these. I suspect this may be the source of any survivors!
JD, here is a learned treatise on the Guiberson diesel. The scribe seemed suitably impressed.
http://www.enginehistory.org/Piston/Diesels/Ch3.pdf
If you search for Guiberson on aulro you will locate photos that I posted of Nev. Morris' engine.
Here is a link to Nordberg radial diesel engines. They made a real good size range of radial diesels.
Nordberg Radial Stationary Engine | Old Machine Press
Thanks for posting those links Brian. I was not aware of the Nordberg engines - power generation is slightly out of my range of interests. The pictures of the crankshaft arrangements of the Nordberg engines do show the issues with actually designing a radial engine (of any type). Another issue, presumably avoided by Nordberg, simply because they were low speed, is that radial engines, because of the need to have a master rod (or equivalent) have some very nasty vibration modes that are really hard to manage.
All the information I have been able to find on diesels in aviation seems to confirm that the Junkers was the only one built in any numbers and even remotely satisfactory as an aeroplane engine.
Today there are conversions of automotive diesels being fitted to new aircraft or offered as replacements for petrol engines, but the numbers actually making it into service still seem to be very low compared to the Junkers engines. See Aircraft diesel engine - Wikipedia
These are taking advantage of advances in small displacement diesels in cars, even where they are not direct conversions.