- Source: Ranger V-770
The Ranger V-770 was an American air-cooled inverted V-12 aircraft engine developed by the Ranger Aircraft Engine Division of the Fairchild Engine & Aircraft Corporation in the early 1930s.
Design and development
In 1931, the V-770 design was built, derived from the Ranger 6-440 series of inverted inline air-cooled engines, and test flown in the Vought XSO2U-1 Scout. In 1938 it was tested in the Curtiss SO3C Seamew but was found to be unreliable with a tendency to overheat in low-speed flight, but would still be the most produced aircraft to have the V-770, with 795 being built. Its competitor Vought XSO2U also suffered from overheating problems that were never satisfactorily solved.
By 1941 a more developed V-770 was installed in the Fairchild XAT-14 Gunner prototype gunnery school aircraft, which went into limited production as the Fairchild AT-21 Gunner, of which 174 were built, not including one radial engine prototype.
Produced from 1941 to 1945, the V-770 featured a two-piece aluminum alloy crankcase, steel cylinder barrels with integral aluminum alloy fins and aluminum alloy heads. The V-770 was the only American inverted V-12 air-cooled engine to reach production. The engine was used in very few aircraft, among them the short lived Fairchild AT-21 twin-engine bomber trainer, and in the two Bell XP-77 light-weight fighter prototypes.
Variants
V-770-4
Installed in the Vought XSO2U-1 scout aircraft
V-770-6
Installed in the Fairchild XAT-14 Gunner prototype, intended for the Ryan SOR-1 Scout
V-770-7
Installed in the Bell XP-77 lightweight fighter prototype
V-770-8
Installed in the Curtiss SO3C Seamew Scout.
V-770-9
Installed in the North American XAT-6E Texan prototype.
V-770-11
Installed in the Fairchild AT-21 Gunner.
V-770-15
Installed in the Fairchild AT-21 Gunner.
V-770-17
Similar to V-770-8 but with raised hollow propeller shaft for mounting cannon or machine gun.
GV-770
Geared un-supercharged variants.
SV-770
Supercharged direct-drive variants.
SGV-770
Supercharged and geared variants.
SGV-770C-1
Tested in the Curtiss XF6C-7 Hawk fighter-bomber at 350 hp (260 kW).
SGV-770C-1B
(V-770-11)
SGV-770C-2A
(V-770-8)
SGV-770C-B1
Installed in the Ikarus 214 prototype
SGV-770D-4
(V-770-17) Similar to C-2A but with raised hollow propeller shaft for mounting cannon or machine gun.
SGV-770D-5
Developed for post-war commercial use, 700 hp (520 kW) at 3,600 RPM, weight 870 lb (390 kg), height 31.11 in (790 mm), length 74.92 in (1,903 mm), width 33.28 in (845 mm)
Applications
AEKKEA-RAAB R-29
Bell XP-77
Curtiss SO3C Seamew
Edo OSE
Fairchild F-46
Fairchild AT-21 Gunner
Fairchild BQ-3
Ikarus 213/Utva 213 Vihor
Ikarus 214 (prototype)
Vought XSO2U
North American XAT-6E
Engines on display
One restored engine in storage at the Carolinas Aviation Museum
One survives at Cincinnati State Aviation school
One modified V-770 survives in an art car by Michael Leeds
The Yankee Air Museum has a V-770 on display.
One restored engine at the Vintage Flying Museum in Fort Worth.
Specifications (SGV-770C-1)
Data from Janes Fighting Aircraft of World War II (1989).
= General characteristics
=Type: 12-cylinder inverted Vee piston engine
Bore: 4 in (102 mm)
Stroke: 5.125 in (130 mm)
Displacement: 773 cu in (12.7 L)
Length: 62 in (1,575 mm)
Width: 28 in (711 mm)
Height: 32.2 in (818 mm)
Dry weight: 730 lb (330 kg)
= Components
=Valvetrain: Single overhead camshaft (SOHC) (1 shaft per bank), gear driven
Supercharger: Single-speed, single-stage, produced 45 inches of mercury (1.5 bar, 22 psi) at take-off
Fuel system: Holley non-icing carburetor
Fuel type: 87 octane gasoline
Oil system: Full pressure type
Cooling system: Air-cooled
= Performance
=Power output: 520 hp (390 kW) at 3,150 rpm
Specific power: 0.68 hp/in³
Compression ratio: 6.5:1
Power-to-weight ratio: 0.71 hp/lb
See also
Comparable engines
Argus As 410
Argus As 411
de Havilland Gipsy Twelve
Walter Sagitta
Related lists
List of aircraft engines
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ranger/Fairchild Engines
- Sarawak
- Ranger V-770
- V12 engine
- Ranger Engines
- Junkers Jumo 210
- Fairchild AT-21 Gunner
- Fairchild BQ-3
- Bell XP-77
- North American T-6 Texan variants
- Vought XSO2U
- Light fighter