Japanese Aircraft Engine Identification Systems
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Japanese aero-engines for military aircraft were given a wide variety of designations depending on the customer. This led to much confusion, particularly among the Allied forces, where a single engine type could have up to six different designations. This situation emerged because of the almost total lack of co-operation in weapons procurement between the
IJAAS The Imperial Japanese Army Air Service (IJAAS) or Imperial Japanese Army Air Force (IJAAF; ) was the aviation force of the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA). Its primary mission was to provide tactical close air support for ground forces, as well a ...
(大日本帝國陸軍航空隊 - Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun Kokutai - Imperial Japanese Army Air Service) and the
IJNAS The (IJNAS) was the air arm of the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN). The organization was responsible for the operation of naval aircraft and the conduct of aerial warfare in the Pacific War. The Japanese military acquired its first aircraft in ...
(大日本帝國海軍航空隊 - Dai-Nippon Teikoku Kaigun Koukuu-tai - Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service). Engines could have designations in any or all of these designation systems: ;Army Hatsudoki experimental designation: (''
Kawasaki Ha40 The Kawasaki Ha40, also known as the Army Type 2 1,100 hp Liquid Cooled In-line and Ha-60, was a license-built Daimler-Benz DB 601, Daimler-Benz DB 601Aa 12-cylinder liquid-cooled inverted-vee aircraft engine. The Imperial Japanese Army ...
'') ;Army long designation: (e.g. '' Army Type 99 900hp Air Cooled Radial'') ;Navy experimental designation: ('' Nakajima NK9B'') ;Navy Name designation: ( '' Nakajima Homare 11'') ;Manufacturers designation: ('' Nakajima NBA'') ;Unified system introduced by the Ministry of Munitions in April 1942: ( Kawasaki Ha-60) ''Data from:''Japanese Aircraft 1910–1941 & Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War & Japanese Aircraft Engines


Army Hatsudoki system

Experimental engines for Army aircraft were given ハ Ha – (エンジン - Hatsudoki) numbers whilst under design and testing. The Army Ha numbers had no intrinsic meaning and were only sequentially allocated. Sub types could be identified by suffixes -kai, -ko etc., or -I, -II etc.. e.g.: Nakajima Ha115


Army long designation system

Once an engine had been accepted for service in Army aircraft it was given a long designation which denoted the year of introduction, power, cooling method and layout: e.g.: Army Type 100 1,450hp Air Cooled Radial – (Nakajima Ha111) The two or three digit Type number denoted the that the engine was introduced, identical to the Type numbers used in Japanese aircraft long designations from 1925 (From 1927 to 1930 the Type number sometimes denoted the Shōwa or Taisho year ): After the Type number the power of the engine was denoted in horsepower: *1250 hp After the power designator the type of engine was denoted: *Air-cooled Radial Sub-types were designated by suffixes. *Model 1


Navy experimental designation

The IJNAS introduced a designation system for experimental engines and those under development / test before production. Once the engine entered service this designation was replaced by the name or unified system. Formed from four character groups the IJNAS experimental designation system consisted of e.g. Nakajima NK9B ;First character for manufacturer :A - Aichi :G - Hitachi :I - Ishikawajima :K - Kawasaki :M - Mitsubishi :N - Nakajima :Y – Naval Air Technical Arsenal (Yokosuka and Hiro) ;Second Character for engine attributes :K - Air cooled :E - Liquid Cooled :D - Diesel ;Third Character for the design number ;Fourth Character for the revision code :A - first revision ;B - second revision, and so on.


Navy name designation

The simplest of all the systems the IJNAS allocated name characters to engines combined with Model and revision numbers, introduced to reduce confusion and also to reduce the intelligence value of the designation to enemies. e.g. Nakajima Homare 11 - ()


Manufacturers designation

Some engines were never allocated a designation or there is no record of such. In which case they are usually identified by the manufacturers designation. e.g. Mitsubishi A4


Unified IJAAS / IJNAS designation system

From 1942 the Ministry of Munitions in
Japan Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asia, Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea ...
instituted a Unified aero-engine designation system in an attempt to reduce confusion caused by previous systems. The new system prefixed engine designations with ハ Ha – (エンジン - Hatsudoki) followed by code numbers identifying each engine in terms of layout, no of cylinders, cooling method and sub-series model numbers. Thus the Mitsubishi Ha-33-62 金星 Kinsei *Mitsubishi - manufacturer *ハ Ha (エンジン Hatsudoki) - engine. *3 - air-cooled 14-cylinder double-row radial engine. *3 - 140 mm bore, 150 mm stroke. *62 - 60 series engine, second revision. *金星 Kinsei - name Each engine designation in this system started with the Hatsudoki short hand character, represented by Ha in English, followed by two numbers classifying the engine: The first digit represented the engine classification: # Air-cooled inline engine. # Air-cooled single-row radial engine. # Air-cooled 14-cylinder double-row radial engine. # Air-cooled 18-cylinder double-row radial engine. # Air-cooled, more than 18-cylinders, multi-row radial engine. # Liquid-cooled 12-cylinder engine. # Liquid-cooled, more than 12-cylinders engine. # Diesel engine. # Special engine. The second digit represented the bore and stroke of the engine: # 130/160 # 140/130 # 150/170 # 140/150 # 140/160 # 130/150 After the classification digits a two digit number gave the model number and revision state. Model numbers were given as: *00 – baseline Model, usually prototypes *10 *20 *30 *40 *50 *60 etc.etc. A revision (or modification) state number replaced the second digit of the model number: *10 – Model 10 baseline version *11 – Model 10 revision 1 *12 – Model 10 revision 2 *23 – Model 20 revision 3 *62 – Model 60 revision 2 Coincidentally one engine was assigned the same numerical designation in the IJAAS and joint designation systems;
Nakajima Ha-45 Homare The Nakajima Homare (誉, "praise" or, more usually, "honour") was an air-cooled twin-row 18 cylinder radial Japanese aircraft engine manufactured during World War II. Producing almost 2,000 horsepower, it was used widely by both the Imperial Ja ...
.


Calendars and Type numbers

''Data from:''


Table of japanese aero-engine designations


See also

*
Japanese military aircraft designation systems The Japanese military aircraft designation systems for the Imperial period (pre-1945) had multiple designation systems for each armed service. This led to the Allies' use of code names during World War II, and these code names are still better kno ...
*
British military aircraft designation systems British military aircraft designations are used to refer to aircraft types and variants operated by the armed forces of the United Kingdom. Since the end of the First World War, aircraft types in British military service have generally been know ...
*
List of RLM aircraft designations This is a list of aircraft type numbers allocated by an institution under the direction of '' Heereswaffenamt'' (before May 1933) and the Reich Air Ministry The Ministry of Aviation (, abbreviated RLM) was a government department during the p ...
for the Third Reich *
Mark (designation) The word ''mark'', followed by number, is a method of designating a version of a product. It is often abbreviated as Mk or M. This use of the word possibly originates from the use of physical marks made to measure height or progress. Furthermore ...
*
Type (designation) The word "type" followed by a number is a common way to name a weapon or product in a production series, similar in meaning to " mark". "Type" was used extensively by the Japanese and Chinese militaries beginning in the 1920s, and is still in curr ...
*
World War II Allied names for Japanese aircraft The World War II Allied names for Japanese aircraft were reporting names, often described as codenames, given by Allied personnel to Imperial Japanese aircraft during the Pacific campaign of World War II. The names were used by Allied personnel ...


References


Bibliography

* * *{{cite book, last=Mawhinney, first=Robert, title=Japanese Aircraft Engines, publisher=NASM, location=Washington D.C., url=http://www.enginehistory.org/Japanese/mawhinney_book.shtml, access-date=2013-12-01, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131103141946/http://www.enginehistory.org/Japanese/mawhinney_book.shtml, archive-date=2013-11-03, url-status=dead


External links


Japanese Military Aircraft Designations (after 1945)
Aircraft engines Japanese designation systems