
Originally Posted by
Brian Hjelm
I think that a major reason the Merlin stayed in production so long was that it was engineered into a number of very good airframes. Hurricane, Spitfire, Mustang, Lancaster, Mosquito. The very similar Allison V1710 was just as good a performer when built to similar specification, and a far easier engine to maintain, but development of this type was virtually at a standstill from about 1942 because of the very powerful radial engines coming out of Wright, and Pratt & Whitney, and the development in secrecy of jet engines. The US Navy became very aware of the need to get the pilots back on board. US Industry could build aircraft much, much, faster than carrier pilots could be trained. Pilot survivability became an issue, one of the reasons for the ascendancy of the radial over the liquid cooled in-line engines. The radials didn't have a cooling system to be shot full of holes. The radials were also easier to maintain as one cylinder at a time can be serviced. Particularly important in the cramped accomodation of the carriers of the time. There are plenty of recorded instances of radial engined aircraft getting home with a cylinder or more shot off. Radials are much shorter and the space saved was usually filled with fuel tank, which combined with drop tanks gave the long range required for the Pacific theatre and for escorting the bombers in long penetration of Germany, and later the endurance to hang around the battlefield to give ground forces some aerial artillery when called upon. The Spitfire was pretty much a home defence fighter initially with very short range and time in the air.
The American navy made the decision to ditch liquid cooled engines in the twenties, nothing to do with WW2. Their decision, however was, as you note a desire to get their pilots home. This was the result, not of enemy action, but of the Liberty engine. This engine, designed by a committee of auto engineers for mass production (allegedly on the back of an envelope in a railway carriage or hotel room) featured separate cylinders with welded on water jackets that regularly cracked. Interestingly, their reliability depended on which car manufacturer built them - and Packard's were reputed to be the worst. Built in very large numbers in 1918, they powered much of US aviation until reliable aircooled radials appeared in 1927.
As these were developed, they became the engine of choice for commercial aircraft in the late twenties and thirties (from the Southern Cross to the DC-2,3,4 etc), with little effort being put into liquid cooled engines, so that both manufacturing capacity and development of US aircooled radials was way ahead of European practice, as their liquid cooled expertise was behind. Add to that the Navy's aversion to liquid cooled engines, and the lack of a separate airforce, and it is little wonder that the best US aircraft had aircooled engines.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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