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The Centaurus was the final development of the Bristol Engine Company's series of sleeve valve radial aircraft engines. The Centaurus is an 18-cylinder, two-row design that eventually delivered over Template:Cvt. The engine was introduced into service late in the Second World War and was one of the most powerful aircraft piston engines to see service.

Design and developmentEdit

Like other Bristol sleeve valve engines, the Centaurus was based on the design knowledge acquired from an earlier design, in this case the Bristol Perseus cylinder. The Centaurus used 18 Perseus cylinders. The same cylinder was in use in the contemporary 14-cylinder Hercules, which was being brought into production when the design of the Centaurus started.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

File:Sleeve Valve Closeup.JPG
Sectioned cylinder showing sleeve valve

The Centaurus had a cylinder swept volume of Template:Cvt, nearly as much as the American Template:Cvt Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone large radial, making the Centaurus one of the largest aircraft piston engines to enter production, while that of the Hercules was Template:Cvt. The nearly 40 per cent higher capacity was achieved by increasing the stroke from Template:Convert and by changing to two rows of nine cylinders instead of two rows of seven. The diameter of the Centaurus was only just over 6 per cent greater than the Hercules in spite of its much greater swept volume.<ref name="Jane's">Bridgman (Jane's) 1998, p. 270.</ref>

The cylinder heads had an indentation like an inverted top hat, which was finned, but it was difficult to get air down into this hollow to adequately cool the head. During development, Bristol contacted ICI Metals Division, Birmingham, to enquire whether a copper-chromium alloy with higher thermal conductivity would have sufficient high temperature strength to be used for this purpose. With the same cylinder volume and using the new material, the horsepower per cylinder was raised from Template:Cvt to Template:Cvt.

Bristol maintained the Centaurus from type-testing in 1938, but production did not start until 1942, owing to the need to get the Hercules into production and improve the reliability of the entire engine line.<ref name="Jane's"/> Nor was there any real need for the larger engine at this early point in the war, when most military aircraft designs had a requirement for engines of about Template:Cvt. The Hercules power of about Template:Cvt was better suited to the existing airframes.

The Centaurus did not enter service until near the end of the war, first appearing on the Vickers Warwick. Other wartime, or postwar, uses included the Bristol Brigand and Buckmaster, Hawker Tempest and Sea Fury and the Blackburn Firebrand and Beverley. The engine also entered service after the war in a civilian airliner, the Airspeed Ambassador and was also used in the Bristol Brabazon I Mark 1 prototype aircraft until the Brabazon trans-Atlantic airliner programme was cancelled. The eight Centaurus engines were to be replaced with eight Bristol Proteus gas turbines on the Mark II giving a Template:Cvt faster cruising speed at Template:Cvt higher altitude.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> By the end of the war in Europe, around 2,500 examples of the Centaurus had been produced by Bristol.<ref name="Jane's"/>

The 373 was the most powerful version of the Centaurus and was intended for the Blackburn Beverley transport aircraft. Using direct fuel injection, it achieved a remarkable Template:Cvt, but was never fitted.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> A projected enlarged capacity version of the Centaurus was designed by Sir Roy Fedden; cylinders were produced for this engine, but it was never built. Known as the Bristol Orion, a name used previously for a variant of the Jupiter engine and later re-used for a turboprop, this development was also a two-row, 18 cylinder sleeve valve engine, with the displacement increased to Template:Cvt [[[:Template:Cvt]]], nearly as large as the American Pratt & Whitney R-4360 Wasp Major four-row, 28-cylinder radial, the largest displacement aviation radial engine ever placed in quantity production.<ref>Gunston 2006, p.152.</ref>

VariantsEdit

Centaurus ITemplate:Cvt, two-speed full/medium supercharger and left-hand tractor drive. Run on 100 octane fuel.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus IVTemplate:Cvt, two-speed medium/full supercharger and rigid mounting.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus VTemplate:Cvt, two-speed full/medium supercharger with cropped impellers. The Centaurus VI was similar to the Centaurus V with master connecting rods in cylinder numbers 7 and 8. The Centaurus VIII was similar to the Centaurus VI with methanol/water fittings.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus VIITemplate:Cvt, two-speed medium/full supercharger and rigid mounting.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus IXTemplate:Cvt, and Centaurus XI were similar to the Centaurus VII. The Centaurus X was similar to the Centaurus IX with methanol/water fittings.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus XIITemplate:Cvt, was a development of the Centaurus IV with twin-turbine entry supercharger, redesigned propeller reduction gear and Hobson-RAE injector and vertically mounted starter motor. The Centaurus XV was a development of the Centaurus VII with flexible mounting.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus XVIIITemplate:Cvt, was similar to the Centaurus XV.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus XXTemplate:Cvt, a dual-installation engine for the Bristol Brabazon, similar to the Centaurus 57.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus 57Template:Cvt, a development of the Centaurus XII with modified supercharger and injector. The Centaurus 58 was a modified Centaurus 57, and the Centaurus 59 was a modified Centaurus 58 with a flexible mounting.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus 70Template:Cvt, a modified Centaurus 57 with single-speed medium supercharger. The Centaurus 71 was a lightened Centaurus 70 with torquemeter-type reduction gear and Template:Cvt accessory drive.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus 100Template:Cvt, a modified Centaurus 57 with two-speed full/medium supercharger and methanol/water injector. The Centaurus 130 was a civil model, modified from the Centaurus 100 with single-speed medium supercharger.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus 160Template:Cvt, two-speed full/medium supercharger, a front cover suitable for braking propeller, front ignition, Template:Cvt accessory drive, improved sleeve timing and dynamic suspension mounting. The Centaurus 161 was a Centaurus 160 with torquemeter-type reduction gear. The Centaurus 165 was a Centaurus 161 with improved power section and methanol/water fittings.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus 170Template:Cvt, a development of the Centaurus 160 with single-speed medium supercharger. The Centaurus 171 was a Centaurus 170 with torquemeter-type reduction gear. The Centaurus 173 was a Centaurus 171 with methanol/water injection and accessory drive. The Centaurus 175 was a Centaurus 173 with modified valve port timings and reduced boost.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus 373Template:Cvt, a modified Centaurus 173.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus 568Template:Cvt, a civil engine with two-speed full/medium supercharger modified from the Centaurus 58.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus 630Template:Cvt, civil engine with single-speed medium supercharger, a front cover suitable for braking propeller, front ignition, Template:Cvt accessory drive, improved sleeve timing and dynamic suspension mounting. The Centaurus 631 was a Centaurus 630 with torquemeter-type reduction gear.Template:Sfnp

Centaurus 660Template:Cvt, civil engine with two-speed full/medium supercharger, a front cover suitable for braking propeller, front ignition, Template:Cvt accessory drive, improved sleeve timing and dynamic suspension mounting. The Centaurus 661 was a Centaurus 660 with torquemeter-type reduction gear. The Centaurus 662 was a Centaurus 660 with methanol/water injection for improved takeoff power, the Centaurus 663 was a Centaurus 662 with torquemeter-type reduction gear.Template:Sfnp

ApplicationsEdit

Note:<ref>List from Lumsden</ref> Template:Columns-list

SurvivorsEdit

The Royal Navy Historic Flight operated a Hawker Sea Fury powered by a Bristol Centaurus engine<ref>Royal Navy Historic Flight - Aircraft Template:Webarchive Retrieved: 5 August 2009</ref> until it was destroyed in an accident on 28 April 2021 whilst attempting a forced landing following a failure and seizure of its Bristol Centaurus XVIII engine:

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/628cd96cd3bf7f1f47c65ebc/Hawker_Sea_Fury_T_Mk_20_G-RNHF_07-22.pdf

Engines on displayEdit

Preserved Bristol Centaurus engines are on public display at the following museums:

Specifications (Centaurus VII)Edit

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See alsoEdit

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ReferencesEdit

NotesEdit

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BibliographyEdit

  • Bridgman, L, (ed.) (1998) Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War II. Crescent. Template:ISBN
  • Gunston, Bill. Development of Piston Aero Engines. Cambridge, UK. Patrick Stephens, 2006. Template:ISBN
  • Gunston, Bill. World Encyclopedia of Aero Engines: From the Pioneers to the Present Day. 5th edition, Stroud, UK: Sutton, 2006.Template:ISBN
  • Template:Cite book.
  • White, Graham. Allied Aircraft Piston Engines of World War II: History and Development of Frontline Aircraft Piston Engines Produced by Great Britain and the United States During World War II. Warrendale, Pennsylvania: SAE International, 1995. Template:ISBN

External linksEdit

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