Anzani 3
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

From 1905 to 1915,
Alessandro Anzani Anzani was an engine manufacturer founded by the Italian Alessandro Anzani (1877–1956), which produced proprietary engines for aircraft, cars, boats, and motorcycles in factories in Britain, France and Italy. Overview From his native Italy, ...
built a number of three-
cylinder A cylinder () has traditionally been a three-dimensional solid, one of the most basic of curvilinear geometric shapes. In elementary geometry, it is considered a prism with a circle as its base. A cylinder may also be defined as an infinite ...
fan engines and
radial engine The radial engine is a reciprocating engine, reciprocating type internal combustion engine, internal combustion engine configuration in which the cylinder (engine), cylinders "radiate" outward from a central crankcase like the spokes of a wheel. ...
s, one of which powered
Louis Blériot Louis Charles Joseph Blériot ( , also , ; 1 July 1872 – 1 August 1936) was a French aviator, inventor, and engineer. He developed the first practical headlamp for cars and established a profitable business manufacturing them, using much of t ...
's 1909 cross-channel flight. An
Anzani Anzani was an engine manufacturer founded by the Italian Alessandro Anzani (1877–1956), which produced proprietary engines for aircraft, cars, boats, and motorcycles in factories in Britain, France and Italy. Overview From his native Italy, ...
three-cylinder engine that powers a
Blériot XI The Blériot XI is a French aircraft from the Aviation in the pioneer era, pioneer era of aviation. The first example was used by Louis Blériot to make the first flight across the English Channel in a heavier-than-air aircraft, on 25 July 1909. ...
operated by
The Shuttleworth Collection The Shuttleworth Collection is a working aviation, automotive and agricultural collection located at Old Warden Aerodrome in Bedfordshire, England. History The collection was founded in 1928 by aviator Richard Ormonde Shuttleworth. While fl ...
in England is thought to be the oldest airworthy engine in the world.


Design and development

Alessandro Anzani began building motorcycle engines in France around 1905. Unusually, his motors were
air-cooled Air-cooled engines rely on the circulation of air directly over heat dissipation fins or hot areas of the engine to cool them in order to keep the engine within operating temperatures. Air-cooled designs are far simpler than their liquid-cooled ...
rather than
water-cooled Cooling tower and water discharge of a nuclear power plant Water cooling is a method of heat removal from components and industrial equipment. Evaporative cooling using water is often more efficient than air cooling. Water is inexpensive and no ...
, making them light. His first designs were two-cylinder V-engines, and he rode machines powered by them to records and race success in 1905 and 1906. In the same period he had developed a three-cylinder version, more powerful than the twins. As the image shows, the engine fit neatly into the
motorcycle frame A motorcycle frame is a motorcycle's core structure. It supports the engine, provides a location for the steering and motorcycle suspension, rear suspension, and supports the rider and any passenger or luggage. Also attached to the frame are the ...
. Engines with cylinders arranged radially but only in the upper half-circle were termed ''fan'' type, or semi-radials; by about 1910 other manufacturers were building e.g. five-cylinder fan engines, most notably R.E.P. Three-cylinder fans were known as ''W'' or ''W-3'' engines. The appeal of the fan configuration was that, because all the cylinder were above the horizontal there was little danger of the plugs being fouled by the lubricating oil. The disadvantage, particularly for an aircraft engine, was the extra weight required to counterbalance the pistons. In response to the growing interest in aviation in France after the Wright brothers' visit in 1908, Anzani produced the first of a series of three-cylinder fan flight engines. The cylinders were each a single iron casting and the one-piece crankcase was aluminium. Pistons were steel with cast rings. In most of these the outer cylinders were at 60° to the central one, though a contemporary diagram''Flight'' 30 October 1909 p.691 shows one, described as the cross channel engine, with a 55° angle. They were all air-cooled inlet-over-exhaust engines; each exhaust valve was controlled from below by a cam in the crankcase. Each was mounted in a cell to the side of the cylinder, with the automatic, atmospheric pressure-driven spring-loaded inlet valve immediately above it, partly to minimise volume and partly to help cool the hot exhaust valve. Most contemporary and pre-1921 sources agree that the bores of these early engines were between 100 and 105 mm (3.93 and 4.13 in),''Flight'' 30 October 1909 pp.691–2''Flight'', 31 July 1909 p. 456Vivian Pt 4 Ch III but strokes between 120 and 150 mm (4.72 and 5.90 in) are quoted. Most state the output of these engines at about 18 kW (24 hp) at around 1,400–1,600 rpm. An engine of this sort famously powered
Louis Blériot Louis Charles Joseph Blériot ( , also , ; 1 July 1872 – 1 August 1936) was a French aviator, inventor, and engineer. He developed the first practical headlamp for cars and established a profitable business manufacturing them, using much of t ...
's Type XI monoplane across La Manche (the
English Channel The English Channel, also known as the Channel, is an arm of the Atlantic Ocean that separates Southern England from northern France. It links to the southern part of the North Sea by the Strait of Dover at its northeastern end. It is the busi ...
) on 25 July 1909. Contemporary sources differ on its bore, stroke and swept volume. The first description of the successful machine in ''Flight'' describes the engine as having dimensions of 100 × 150 mm, or a capacity of 3.53 litres. However, a few months later they printed the engineering drawing of the 55° engine, which has dimensions of 103 x 120 mm marked on it, clearly captioned as "used ... in the cross-Channel flight". If their identification was right, then Bleriot used a 3.00-litre engine. A head-on photograph of the cross-channel aircraftSanger p.125 also shows a 55° engine. Even before the channel flight, Anzani was selling more powerful versions with larger bores: a 120 mm bore, 4.4-litre (269 cu in) variant produced 26 kW (35 hp) and a 135 mm bore, 6.4-litre (390 cu in) engine gave 36 kW (45 hp). These fan engines remained in production until at least 1913, though there were important improvements. The exhaust valve was moved to the cylinder head and operated by rockers via push rods, and a mixing chamber was arranged in the crankcase. The 1913 three-cylinder Anzani fan engine had a cylinder separation of 72°, presumably to lighten the counterbalance. By this stage it had its inlet manifold at the rear of the engine to minimise airflow cooling of the fuel air mixture.


Radial (Y) engines

Anzani was aware of the weight cost of the counterweight in the fan configuration and by December 1909 he had a symmetric 120° three-cylinder radial engine running. One example was a 3.1 litre (186 cu in) unit producing 22 kW (30 hp) at 1,300 rpm. Although termed the Y engine after its symmetric cylinder arrangement, it ran in an inverted Y position so that the plugs, mounted on the upper in-plane side of the two lower cylinders were less than 30° below the horizontal and less prone to oiling than one serving a piston at 180° from upright. Radials are smoother running than the less symmetric fan engines as well as lower weight but with the low power available from their three cylinders they had limited applications. They led, however, to Anzani's two-row radial engines, beginning with the 6-cylinder radials, two Ys on a common crankshaft. In the 21st century a restored Bleriot XI bearing the French Blériot factory serial number 56 — said to be the oldest flyable aircraft in the Western Hemisphere, bearing the American registration ''N60094'' â€
is still flown in the United States
on summer and early autumn weekends with one of these 120° cylinder angle "Y-type" radial engines.


Variants


Anzani 3-cylinder fan engines

;Output power: bore×stroke: capacity ;10–12 hp (7.5–9 kW): 3.35 in × 3.35 in (85 mm × 85 mm): 88.5 cu in (1.45 L) ;12–15 hp (9–11 kW): 3.35 in × 3.94 in (85 mm × 100 mm): 104 cu in (1.70 L) ;25–30 hp (19–23 kW): 4.13 in × 5.12 in (105 mm × 130 mm): 206 cu in (3.38 L) ;40–45 hp (30–34 kW): 5.32 in × 5.92 in (135 mm × 150 mm): 393 cu in (6.44 L) ;45–50 hp (34–38 kW):


Anzani 3-cylinder inverted Y radial engines

;40 hp


Applications

* ANBO-I (3.38 L engine) *
Blériot XI The Blériot XI is a French aircraft from the Aviation in the pioneer era, pioneer era of aviation. The first example was used by Louis Blériot to make the first flight across the English Channel in a heavier-than-air aircraft, on 25 July 1909. ...
*
Caproni-Pensuti triplane The Caproni-Pensuti 2 was a small single-engine sports triplane aircraft designed and built in Italy just before the end of World War I. It had a wingspan of only 4.0 m or a little over 13 ft. Design and development The Pensuti 2 was a ...
* Deperdussin Type A *
Dufaux 4 __NOTOC__ The Dufaux 4 was an experimental aircraft built in Switzerland in 1909 and which was originally constructed as an unnamed biplane, the third aircraft constructed by the brothers Armand and Henri Dufaux. The aircraft was entirely con ...
* Fokker V.40 *
Ford Flivver The Ford Flivver is a single-seat aircraft introduced by Henry Ford as the "Model T of the Air". After a fatal crash of a prototype into the ocean off Melbourne, Florida, production plans were halted. Development The Ford Trimotor was Henry Ford ...
* Medwecki HL-2 *
Müller G.M.G. II The Müller G.M.G. II was a German single engine, tandem seat sports monoplane from 1928. Its high wing was unusually mounted compared to other monoplanes. Design and development The G.M.G. II was a high wing, strut braced monoplane of wooden co ...
* Perry Beadle T.1 *
Raab-Katzenstein RK.9 Grasmücke The Raab-Katzenstein RK.9 Grasmücke (Hedge-sparrow) was a 1920s Germany, German two-seat touring, advertising and trainer aircraft, training biplane. It was one of many designs from several countries aiming to provide low cost flying and was qui ...
* Sikorsky S-1 * Sikorsky S-2 * Stelmaszyk S.1 Bozena * VIH Holland H.1


Surviving engines

The restored and flyable Blériot XI, with French Blériot factory serial number 56 and registry number ''N60094'' at
Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome The Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome is a living museum in Red Hook, New York, Red Hook, New York, adjacent to the town of Rhinebeck (town), New York, Rhinebeck. Founded in 1958, it owns many examples of airworthy aircraft from the Aviation in the pioneer ...
uses one of these Anzani three-cylinder "true radial" engines for its straight-line
short distance "hop" flights
Another Blériot XI, with British registration ''G-AANG'' and said to be only three weeks older than the Old Rhinebeck example, is allowed to fl
similar short 'hops'
at the
Shuttleworth Collection The Shuttleworth Collection is a working aviation, automotive and agricultural collection located at Old Warden Aerodrome in Bedfordshire, England. History The collection was founded in 1928 by aviator Richard Ormonde Shuttleworth. While ...
. Its original "fan-type" Anzani three-cylinder engine is thought to be the oldest airworthy aircraft engine in the world. A 1910 Deperdussin monoplane that is also restricted to straight 'hops' uses a 'Y'-type Anzani engine.Shuttleworth Collection - Deperdussin
Retrieved: 5 January 2012
One Anzani Y-type radial engine, along with 1925 ANBO-I aircraft it powered, since 1930s is displayed at
Lithuanian Aviation Museum The Lithuanian Aviation Museum () is located in Kaunas, Lithuania. The museum was officially opened in 1983. The permanent collection of the museum contains more than 18 000 displays of different fields of technology. The major part of the collecti ...
in
Kaunas Kaunas (; ) is the second-largest city in Lithuania after Vilnius, the fourth largest List of cities in the Baltic states by population, city in the Baltic States and an important centre of Lithuanian economic, academic, and cultural life. Kaun ...
,
Lithuania Lithuania, officially the Republic of Lithuania, is a country in the Baltic region of Europe. It is one of three Baltic states and lies on the eastern shore of the Baltic Sea, bordered by Latvia to the north, Belarus to the east and south, P ...
.


Engines on display

*The Shuttleworth Collection also holds preserved examples of Anzani three-cylinder engines on static display. *At the Museo Nacional de Aeronáutica Argentina there is a three-cylinder Anzani semiradial in working order installed on a Bleriot 11. A Y three-cylinder engine is on display at the Engines hall at the same Museum *Brooklands Museum, Weybridge, U.K. has an Anzani 3-cylinder fan engine on static display.


Specifications


See also


References


Notes


Bibliography

* * * * * * * *


External links


Anzani 72° fan engine start-upRestored Anzani 3-cylinder "fan" engine runup, from the Humgarian Vintage Glider ClubAnzani Y-type replica startsOld Rhinebeck's Anzani-powered Blériot XI "hops" for a short flight
{{Anzani aeroengines Anzani aircraft engines Radial engines 1900s aircraft piston engines