
Sujet
Curtiss Chieftain H-1640, Radial 12 Engine, ca. 1928. Creator: Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company.
Légende
Among the most successful early engines marketed in the United States were those designed and built by aviation pioneer and inventor Glenn Curtiss of Hammondsport, New York. Early Curtiss engines were designed to power motorcycles. In 1904 a two-cylinder, V-type motorcycle engine, believed to be the first Curtiss aircraft engine, was modified to power Capt. Thomas S. Baldwin's California Arrow, a small dirigible. In 1926, Curtiss began the design of a 12-cylinder, two-row engine, the H-1640, that it hoped would surpass the performance of Pratt & Whitney's Wasp engine while having a considerably smaller frontal area. It had cylinders of the second row directly behind those of the first row, and the valves were operated by an overhead camshaft for each pair of cylinders. The H-1640 was certificated on September 13, 1928. The H-1640 powered the Curtiss P-11, Thomas-Morse XP-13, and Curtiss XP-14 aircraft. However, partly because of its extremely small diameter, this engine was not very successful.
Crédit
Photo12/Heritage Images/Heritage Art
Notre référence
HRM21A88_140
Model release
NA
Property release
NA
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
90,5Mo (3,5Mo) / 55,0cm x 41,2cm / 6496 x 4872 (300dpi)