Rolls-Royce Eagle 22
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for the First World War era engine, see Rolls-Royce Eagle
The Rolls-Royce Eagle 22 was a 24 cylinder sleeve valve aero engine of 46.2 Litres (2,820 cubic inches) displacement. Produced in the late 1940s it was liquid cooled, of flat H configuration with two crankshafts and capable of 3,200 hp (2,387 kW) at 18 psi boost.
The Eagle was extremely powerful, but was never fitted to a production front-line fighter, as it was overshadowed by a new wave of jet engines, such as the Rolls-Royce Derwent and Nene. Approximately 50 Eagles were produced. It was used in the prototypes of the Westland Wyvern fighter/torpedo bomber.
General characteristics
- Type: 24-cylinder liquid-cooled H-type aircraft piston engine
- Bore:
- Stroke:
- Displacement: 2,820 in³ (46.2 L)
- Dry weight:
Components
- Cooling system: Liquid-cooled
Performance
- Power output: 3,200 hp (2,387 kW) at 18 psi (124.1 kPa) of boost
- Specific power: 1.13 hp/in³ (51.7 kW/L)
- Power-to-weight ratio:
- Rolls-Royce Eagle, the Eagle 22's First World War namesake;
- Rolls-Royce Crecy, another powerful late-war Rolls-Royce piston engine.
Piston engines
Buzzard · Condor · Crecy · Eagle · Eagle 22 · Exe · Falcon · Goshawk · Griffon · Hawk · Kestrel · Merlin · Pennine · Peregrine · "R" · Vulture
Turbojets
Avon · Derwent · Nene · Olympus · RB106 / Thames · RB108 · Soar · Tay · Welland
Turbofans
Adour · AE 3007 · BR700 · Conway · F136 · Pegasus · RB199 · RB211 · RB401 · Spey · Tay · Trent
Turboshafts / Turboprops
AE 1107C-Liberty · AE 2100 · Clyde · Dart · Gem · Gnome · Model 250 · MTR390 · RTM322 · T56 · Trent · Tyne