- Rolls-Royce Peregrine
The Peregrine was an 885 hp liquid-cooled
V-12 aircraft engine designed by Rolls Royce in the early 1930s. It was essentially the ultimate development of theirRolls-Royce Kestrel , which had seen widespread use. The engine was named after thePeregrine Falcon bird of prey.Development
During the 1930s the use of
supercharger s to increase "effective displacement'" of an aircraft engine came into common use. Charging of some form was a requirement for high-altitude flight, and as the strength of the engines improved there was no reason not to use it at all times. The introduction of just such a "ground level"supercharger to the Kestrel along with several design changes improved thepower-to-weight ratio considerably, and it was generally felt that the resulting Peregrine would be the "standard" fighter engine for the impending war. Two Peregrines bolted together on a common crankshaft would produce theRolls-Royce Vulture , a 1,700 hp X-24 which would be used forbomber s.As it turned out, aircraft designs rapidly increased in size and power requirements to the point where the Peregrine was simply too small to be useful. Rolls' internal project to "fill in the gap" between the Peregrine and Vulture resulted in the
Rolls-Royce Merlin , which annihilated any demand for the smaller, less powerful Peregrine. The demand for the Merlin overshadowed development of the Peregrine and resources for it were cut back as attempts were made to quickly bring the Merlin into service.Operational history
In the end only two aircraft used the Peregrine, the Westland Whirlwind and the second prototype of the
Gloster F9/37 , both twin-engine designsndash the prototype F9/37 had used the radialBristol Taurus . The Ministry requirement for the F9/37, a cannon-armed fighter (the Hurricane and Spitfire were armed with machine guns only at this point), was curtailed and there was no further progress with the design. The Whirlwind, despite having excellent low-altitude performance, proved uneconomical compared with single-engined fighters, and also suffered as a consequence of the Peregrine reliability problems. Low production rates of the Peregrine caused delays in delivery tosquadron use.While reliability problems were not uncommon for Rolls-Royce's new engine designs of the era, the company's testing department was told to spend all of their time on developing the more powerful Merlin to maturity. As a result of the Merlin's priority, the unreliable Peregrine was abandoned, its production ending in 1940. Other cannon-armed fighters were becoming available and the Whirlwind was tightly designed around the Peregrine so changing to a different engine was not a feasible option. Only 141 Whirlwinds and a corresponding number of Peregrines (301) [Lumsden 2003, p.183.] were built.
Applications
*
Gloster F9/37 ,
*Heinkel He 70
*Westland Whirlwindpecifications (Peregrine I)
"Data from:" Lumsden [Lumsden 2003, p.198.] pistonspecs
type=12-cylinder supercharged liquid-cooled 60 degree Vee aircraft piston engine
bore=5 inches (127 mm)
stroke=5.5 inches (140 mm)
displacement=1,295.9 in³ (21.24 L)
length=73.6 in (1869 mm)
diameter=
width=27.1 in (688 mm)
height=41.0 in (1041 mm)
weight=1,140 lb (517 kg)
valvetrain=Overhead camshaft
supercharger=Gear-drivencentrifugal type supercharger , single speed, +9 psi boost
turbocharger=
fuelsystem=Downdraught carburettor
fueltype=Petrol
oilsystem=
coolingsystem=Liquid cooled, 70% water/30%Ethylene glycol
power=885 hp (660 kW) at 3,000 rpm, +9 psi boost (bmep = 180.3psi)
specpower=0.68 hp/in³ (31.1 kW/L)
compression=6:1
fuelcon=
specfuelcon=
oilcon=
power/weight=0.77 lb/hpSee also
*
List of aircraft engines References
Notes
Bibliography
* Lumsden, Alec. "British Piston Engines and their Aircraft". Marlborough, Wiltshire: Airlife Publishing, 2003. ISBN 1-85310-294-6.
External links
* [http://www.stobbe.dk/library/engines/rolls_royce/images/RR-Peregrine.jpgPhoto of RR Peregrine]
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