Monday, May 30, 2022

Rotary Engine


You can almost smell the castor oil.  

4 comments:

SteveP said...

Radial, not rotary.

David aka True Blue Sam said...

Steve P: The crankshaft is stationary and the engine turns around it.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgTwKPg7Obo

Mr. Engineering Johnson said...

TBS is correct.
I believe this was on a Sopwith Triplane meaning it's a Clerget 9B or 9Z engine. The crankshaft is fixed and the cylinders rotate around it. The intake is through the crankcase (since there's no way to attach a manifold to the spinning cylinders) and lubrication is a total loss system much like a small two cycle engine. Castor oil was the preferred lubricant of the day, hence the comment below the photo.

Both Radial and Rotary are valid descriptors in the physical sense, but it's more common to refer to the rotating cylinder engines as rotary and the fixed cylinder engines as radial.

Mr. Engineering Johnson said...

Whoops! That's an Avro, not a Sopwith. Still a Clerget though. Looks to be the 9B, producing 130 hp.