|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The Liberty L-12 was a 27 litre water-cooled 45 degree V-12 aircraft engine of 400 horsepower (300 kW) designed both for a high power-to-weight ratio and for ease of mass production.
HistoryIn May 1917, one month after the US had declared war on Germany, a Federal task force known as the Aircraft Production Board summoned top engine designers Jesse Vincent (of Packard) and E.J. Hall (of the Hall-Scott Motor Co.) to Washington D.C. They were given the task of desiging as rapidly as possible an aircraft engine that would rival if not surpass those of Great Britain, France, and Germany. The Board specified that the engine would have a high power-to-weight ratio and be adaptable to mass production. The Board brought Vincent and Hall together on 29 May 1917 at the Willard Hotel in Washington, where the two were asked to stay until they produced a set of basic blueprints. After just five days Vincent and Hall left the hotel with a completed design for the new engine.[1] In July 1917 an 8-cylinder prototype assembled by Packard's Detroit plant arrived in Washington for testing, and in August the 12-cylinder version was tested and approved. That fall, the War Department placed an order for 22,500 Liberty engines, dividing the contract between the automobile manufacturers Buick, Ford, General Motors, Lincoln, Marmon, Nordyke, and Packard. Manufacturing by multiple different factories was facilitated by its modular design[2] Cadillac was asked to produce Liberty engines but William Durant was a pacifist who did not want General Motors or Cadillac facilities to be used for producing war material. This led to Henry Leland leaving Cadillac to form the Lincoln company to make Liberty engines. However, Durant later changed his mind and both Cadillac and Buick produced the engines.[3] Ford was asked to supply cylinders for the new engine, and rapidly developed an improved technique for cutting and pressing steel which resulted in cylinder production rising from 151 per day to over 2,000, Ford eventually manufacturing all 433,826 cylinders produced, and 3,950 complete engines.[4] Lincoln constructed a new plant in record time, devoted entirely to Liberty engine production, and assembled 2,000 engines in 12 months. By the time of the Armistice with Germany, the various companies had produced 13,574 Liberty engines, attaining a production rate of 150 engines per day. Production continued after the war, for a total of 20,478 engines built between July 4, 1917 and 1919.[5] DescriptionThe Liberty L-12 was a modular design where 4 or 6 cylinders could be used in one or two banks. A single overhead camshaft for each cylinder bank operated 2 valves per cylinder, in a similar manner to the inline six cylinder German Mercedes D.III engine. Dry weight was 383 kg (844 lb). Two examples of a six-cylinder version, the Liberty L-6, were produced but not procured by the Army. Both were destroyed by Dr. William Christmas testing his so-called "Christmas Bullet" fighter. VariantsV-1650An inverted Liberty 12-A was referred to as the V-1650 and was produced up to 1926 by Packard — the exact same designation was later applied, due to identical displacement, to the World War II Packard-built Rolls-Royce Merlin.[6] Nuffield LibertyThe Nuffield Liberty tank engine was produced in World War II by the UK car manufacturer Nuffield. It was a 27-litre engine with an output of 340 hp (254 kw), which was inadequate, and it suffered numerous problems with cooling and reliability.[7] It was replaced in later British tanks by the Rolls-Royce Meteor, based on their Merlin aero engine.
Major Henry H. Arnold with the first Liberty V12 engine completed
Specifications (Liberty L-12)General characteristics
Components
Performance
Anglo-American or Liberty TankThe Anglo-American or Liberty Mark VIII tank was designed in 1917-18. The American version used an adaption of the Liberty V-12 engine of 300 hp, designed to use pig iron rather than steel. A hundred tanks were manufactured at the Rock Island Arsenal in 1919-20, too late for World War I. They were eventually sold to Canada for training in 1940, except for two that have been preserved. Aircraft
Tanks
Notes
External Link |
| All Right Reserved © 2007, Designed by Stylish Blog. |