Torque Meter
Summer 2003 Issue
The Development of Early Turbojet Engines Peter Berry traces the history of early turbojets and the three design concepts — the reverse-flow centrifugal, the straight-through centrifugal and the axial-flow — that helped revolutionise post-war aviation. |
The Curtiss-Wright R-1820 Cyclone If you were a child during the years 1964 through 1969, your introduction to the sights and sounds of the Curtiss-Wright R-1820 Cyclone may have been the popular television series Twelve O'clock High. Because of that series, a whole generation of kids learned about radial engines with their smokey starts and monotonous low drone. Then restored Boeing B-17s started touring the air show circuit and "Warbird" entered the lexicon of aviation enthusiasts everywhere. Today, Cyclones are commonplace in air show B-17s, T-28s, and the occasional F4F. Much has been written about the design, development, production and application of the Wright Cyclone. This article aims to illuminate its evolution by describing some its more obscure ancestors and to survey the advances in technology that allowed it to more than quadruple its original power. |
Chinese Choice Warbird fans worldwide are anxiously awaiting the first flight of one of twelve replica-built Focke-Wulf FW 190 A-8 N (N means new) at German Flugwerk Company deep in the Bavarian countryside. First flight is due in summer 2003. Meanwhile, Torque Meter is offering a technical view at the impressive Huosai HS-7 powerplant, which is very similar to the famous BMW 801 two-row radial of the former FW 190 A-series. |