Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Alvis Pelides

1930s British piston aircraft engine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alvis Pelides
Remove ads

The Alvis Pelides was an unflown British air-cooled radial aero engine first developed in 1936. The Pelides Major was a projected but unbuilt development as were the Alcides, Alcides Major and the Maeonides Major, the Alvis aircraft engine range taking their names from Greek mythology.[1]

Quick Facts Pelides, Type ...
Remove ads

Design and development

The Pelides was the first aero engine of Alvis design; the company had previously only built the French Gnome-Rhône Mistral Major under license.[2] With the two companies working closely together the 14 cylinder radial layout of this engine retained metric dimensions but substituted metric screw threads with British fasteners such as BSF and Whitworth. Material specifications were different as were the detail design of internal parts such as the crankpin. The Pelides passed a 50-hour Air Ministry type test in 1937 where it produced 1,065 hp (794 kW) but no aircraft application was found and only 15 engines were built. The onset of the Second World War caused the abandonment of any further development of the Pelides and its related designs.[3]

Remove ads

Variants (projected)

Pelides
1,000/1,050 hp (750/780 kW) 2-row 14-cylinder radial, 5.75 in × 6.5 in (146 mm × 165 mm) (bore x stroke), 38.67 L (2,359.79 cu in), LH or RH, d/d, 13:19 or 0.5:1.[4]
Pelides Major
The Pelides Major was a version retaining the same dimensions as the Pelides but with improvements to the supercharger, only built in small quantities for testing at 1,000 hp (750 kW).
Alcides
The Alcides of 1937 was a powerful supercharged 18-cylinder two-row radial engine, with a power output of 1,650/1,725 hp (1,230/1,286 kW). 2-row 18-cylinder radial, 5.75 in × 7.09 in (146 mm × 180 mm) (bore x stroke), 54.24 L (3,309.93 cu in), LH or RH, d/d, 13:19 or 0.5:1.[4]
Alcides Major
The Alcides Major was an improved supercharged version of the Alcides.
Maeonides Major
Also designed in 1937, the supercharged Maeonides Major was effectively a smaller version of the Pelides with a power output of 680 hp (510 kW). 2-row 14-cylinder radial, 4.803 in × 4.567 in (122.0 mm × 116.0 mm) (bore x stroke), 18.98 L (1,158.23 cu in), LH or RH, 5:7.[4]
Remove ads

Specifications (Pelides)

Data from Lumsden and Flight[5]

General characteristics

  • Type: 14-cylinder 2 row supercharged air-cooled radial piston engine
  • Bore: 5.75 inch (146 mm)
  • Stroke: 6.5 inch (165 mm)
  • Displacement: 2,359.8  cu in (38.7 L)
  • Diameter: 52 in (1321 mm)
  • Dry weight: 1,190 lb (540 kg)

Components

Performance

See also

Related development

Comparable engines

Related lists

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads