
So what year, what aircraft and what was the first true fuel injected engine that entered RAF service?
Cheers...Happy Landings...Doug
Were the Napier engines carbs as well then? And the Bristol radials too I presume.
Edit: As the Napier Sabre and the RR Vulture engines had their cylinders in a H and X formation respectively, surely that meant that half the cylinders were upsidedown. And carbs don't work all that well upsidedown, so wouldn't they have been fuel injected?
Probably a late model Spitfire like the 21 or one of the Griffon engined Seafires at a guess. I'll have to look into it however...
Of course this would be mechanical fuel injection!
Griffon 62 (Mk21 and 46) had a Rolls Royce fuel injection system as did the 88 (MkXIV? 21 and 47), the 89 (Mk22) and all thereafter (mostly Mk21 and 46/47). Everything else seems to have an injection carburettor of some kind, mostly a Bendix-Stromburg.
I am not up on military aircraft or commercial jets to much but I would think most of the aircraft operated by Japan in the Pacific Theater were probably fuel injected but please correct me if I am wrong.
The Sakae 21 is a 14-cylinder, two row radial aircooled engine developing 1,020 hp. at 2,600 rpm. at 6,400 ft., turning a 10 ft. 3-in, diameter constant speed propeller which is very, very similar to Hamilton Standard design. As installed in Zeke 32 the engine has a down-draft carburetor and a two-speed blower in place of the older single speed. The installation has necessitated moving the. firewall aft eight in. and changing the cowling to put the air intake at the top.
If fuel injection was already in use in Europe then why would Rolls Royce not have looked at that option right at the beginning of the "Merlin" development?
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