List of aircraft engines
This is an alphabetical list of aircraft engines by manufacturer.
Lists of aircraft |
---|
2
2si
3
3W
Source: RMV[1]
- 3W-110
- 3W-112
- 3W-170
- 3W-210
- 3W-220
A
Abadal
Source: RMV[1] (Francisco Serramalera Abadal)
- Abadal Y-12 350/400hp 120 mm × 140 mm (4.7 in × 5.5 in)[2]
ABC
(All British Engine Co Ltd.) Source: Lumsden[3]
- ABC 8 hp
- ABC 30hp V-4 3.75 mm × 3.125 mm (0.1476 in × 0.1230 in)[2][4]
- ABC 45hp V-6 3.75 mm × 3.125 mm (0.1476 in × 0.1230 in)[2][4]
- ABC 60hp V-8 3.75 mm × 3.125 mm (0.1476 in × 0.1230 in)[2][4]
- ABC 85hp V-6 5 mm × 4.5 mm (0.20 in × 0.18 in)[2][4]
- ABC 100hp V-8 5 mm × 4.5 mm (0.20 in × 0.18 in)[2][4]
- ABC 115 hp[4]
- ABC 170hp V-12 5 mm × 4.5 mm (0.20 in × 0.18 in)[2][4]
- ABC 225hp V-16 5 mm × 4.5 mm (0.20 in × 0.18 in)[2][4]
- ABC 1,000hp W-24[5]
- ABC Dragonfly
- ABC Gadfly
- ABC Gnat
- ABC Hornet
- ABC Mosquito
- ABC Scorpion
- ABC Wasp
- ABC type 10 APU[6]
- ABC type 11 APU[6]
ABECO
Source: RMV[1]
- ABECO GEM
Aberg
Source: RMV[1]
- Type Sklenar
ABLE
Source: RMV, Able Experimental Aircraft Engine Co.[7] (Able Experimental Aircraft Engine Co., Altimizer, Hoverhawk (US))
- ABLE 2275
- ABLE 2500
- ABLE VW x 2 Geared Drive
ACAE
Source: RMV[1]
- (See (AVIC)
Accurate Automation Corp
- Accurate Automation AT-1500
- Accurate Automation AT-1700
Ace
(Ace American Engr Corp, Horace Keane Aeroplane Co, North Beach, Long Island NY.)
ACE
(American Cirrus Engine Inc) Source: RMV[1][8]
- ACE Cirrus
- ACE LA-1 19?? (ATC 31) = 140 hp 7RA. Evolved into Jacobs LA-1.
- ACE Mk III 1929 (ATC 30, 44) = 90 hp 310ci 4LAI; (44) for 110 hp supercharged model.
- ACE Mk III Hi-Drive
- ACE Ensign
ACT
(Aircraft Cylinder and Turbine Co) Source: RMV[1]
- ACT Super 600
Adams
Source: RMV[1]
- Adams (UK) 4 Cylinder in-line of 140 HP
- Adams (UK) 8 V
Adams-Dorman
Source: RMV[1]
- Adams-Dorman 60/80 HP
Adams-Farwell
(Adams Company, Dubuque, Iowa / F.O. Farwell) Source: RMV[1]
- Adams-Farwell 36hp 5-cyl rotary engine 4.25 in × 3.25 in (108 mm × 83 mm)[2][8][4][8]
- Adams-Farwell 50 HP[8]
- Adams-Farwell 55hp 5-cyl rotary 5.25 in × 5 in (133 mm × 127 mm)[2][8]
- Adams-Farwell 63hp 5-cyl rotary 5.625 in × 5 in (142.9 mm × 127.0 mm)[2][4][8]
- Adams-Farwell 72hp 5-cyl rotary 6 in × 6 in (150 mm × 150 mm)[2][4][8]
- Adams-Farwell 280hp 6cyl double rotary 6 in × 6 in (150 mm × 150 mm)[2][8]
- Adams-Farwell 6-cyl double rotary 5 in × 5 in (130 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Adams-Farwell 10-cyl double rotary 5 in × 5 in (130 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Adams-Farwell 14-cyl double rotary 5 in × 5 in (130 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Adams-Farwell 18-cyl double rotary 5 in × 5 in (130 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Adams-Farwell KM 11[8]
ADC
Source: Lumsden[3]
- ADC Airdisco
- ADC Cirrus
- ADC Nimbus
- ADC Airsix
- ADC BR2[1]
- ADC Viper[1]
- ADC Airdisco-Renault[1]
Adept-Airmotive
Source: RMV[1]
- Adept 280 N
- Adept 300 R
- Adept 320 T
Ader
Source: RMV[1]
- Ader Eole engine (Vapour)
- Ader Avion engine (Vapour)
- Ader 2V
- Ader 4V
Adler
Source: RMV[1]
Admiralty
Source: RMV[1]
Adorjan & Dedics
Source: RMV[1]
- Adorjan & Dedics 2V
Advance Engines
Source: RMV[1]
- Advance 4V, 20/25 HP
Advanced Engine Design
Source: RMV[1]
- Advanced Engine Design Spitfire 1 Cylinder
- Advanced Engine Design Spitfire 2 Cylinder
- Advanced Engine Design Spitfire 3 Cylinder
- Advanced Engine Design Spitfire 4 Cylinder
- Advanced Engine Design K2-1000
- Advanced Engine Design 110 HP (BMW Conversion)
- Advanced Engine Design 220 LC
- Advanced Engine Design 440 LC
- Advanced Engine Design 660 LC
- Advanced Engine Design 880 LC
- Advanced Engine Design 530 (Kawasaki Conversion)
AEADC
(Aircraft Engine & Accessory Development Corporation) Source: RMV[1]
AEC
Source: RMV[1]
- AEC Keane
Aeolus Flugmotor
Source: RMV[1]
Aerien CC
Source: RMV[1]
- Aerien 20/25 HP
- Aerien 30 HP
Aermacchi
Source: RMV[1]
- Aermacchi MB-2
Aero & Marine
- Aero & Marine 50 HP
Aero Adventure (engines)
Source: RMV[1]
- Aero Adventure GFL-2000
Aero Conversions Inc.
Source: RMV[1] (See AeroConversions)
Aero Development
Source: RMV[1] (See SPEER)
Aero Engines Ltd.
(formerly William Douglas (Bristol) Ltd.)
Aero Motion
Source: RMV[1]
- Aero Motion 0-100
- Aero Motion 0-101
Aero Motors
Source: RMV[1]
- Aero Motors Aerobat 150 HP
Aero Pixie
Source: RMV[1]
- Aero Pixie 153 cc, 2T
Aero Prag
Source: RMV[1]
- Aeroprag KT-422
- Aeroprag AP-45
- Aeroprag TP-422
Aero Products
(Aero Products Aeronautical Products Corp, Naugatuck CT.) Source: RMV[1]
- Aero Products Scorpion 100 HP
Aero Sled
Source: RMV[1]
- Aero Sled Twin Flat, 20 HP
Aero Sport International
Source: RMV[1]
- Aero Sport International Wade Aero (WANKEL) 2 Types
Aero Sport Power
Source: RMV[1]
- Aero Sport Power Up-Rated Lycomings and Continentals
Aero Thrust
Source: RMV[1]
Aero Turbines Ltd
Source: RMV[1]
AeroTwin Motors Corporation
(Henderson, Nevada, United States)
Aerodaimler
Source: RMV[1]
Aeroconversions
Source: RMV[1] (AeroConversions, Inc. (AeroVee), Oshkosh, Wisconsin)
- AeroVee 2180
Aerojet
(Aerojet-General Corporation)
- Aerojet LR59[10]
- Aerojet LR87[10]
- Aerojet LR91[10]
- Aerojet Titan II engine[10]
- Aerojet Titan III transstage engine[10]
- Aerojet Ablestar[10]
- Aerojet Able[10]
- Aerojet M-1[10]
- Aerojet Hawk motor[10] (for Hawk SAM)
- Aerojet Polaris motor[10]
- Aerojet Minuteman motor[10]
- Aerojet Senior[10]
- Aerojet 2.2KS-11000[11]
- Aerojet 2.2KS-33000[11]
- Aerojet 2.5KS-18000[10]
- Aerojet 5KS-4500[11]
- Aerojet 12AS-250 Junior[11]
- Aerojet 14AS-1000[11]
- Aerojet 15KS-1000[10]
- Aerojet 15NS-250[10]
- Aerojet AJ-260 - largest solid rocket motor ever built, recently still in existence at the former Aerojet-Dade facility
Aeromarine Company
Source: RMV[1]
- Aeromarine Company D5-1 (Pulse-Jet)
Aeromarine
- Aeromarine AL[1]
- Aeromarine NAL[1]
- Aeromarine S[1]
- Aeromarine S-12[1]
- Aeromarine AR-3[8]
- Aeromarine AR-3-40[8]
- Aeromarine AR-5[8]
- Aeromarine AR-7[1]
- Aeromarine AL-24[1]
- Aeromarine B-9[1]
- Aeromarine B 45 degree V-8 170hp 3.625 in × 5.125 in (92.1 mm × 130.2 mm)[2][8]
- Aeromarine B 90 degree V-8 166hp 3.625 in × 5.125 in (92.1 mm × 130.2 mm)[2][8]
- Aeromarine D-12 150hp 4.3125 in × 5.125 in (109.54 mm × 130.18 mm)[2][8]
- Aeromarine K-6 100hp 4.3125 in × 5.125 in (109.54 mm × 130.18 mm)[2][8]
- Aeromarine L-6 130hp 4.25 in × 6.5 in (108 mm × 165 mm)[2][1]
- Aeromarine L-6-D (direct drive)[2][9]
- Aeromarine L-6-G (geared)[2][9]
- Aeromarine L-8 192hp 4.25 in × 6.5 in (108 mm × 165 mm)[2][8]
- Aeromarine RAD[8]
- Aeromarine T-6[8]
- Aeromarine U-6[8]
- Aeromarine U-6-D[1]
- Aeromarine U-8[1]
- Aeromarine U-8-873[1]
- Aeromarine U-8D[8]
- Aeromarine 85hp 1914[8]
- Aeromarine 90hp 6-cyl in-line 4.3125 in × 5.125 in (109.54 mm × 130.18 mm)[2][9]
- Aeromarine 100hp V-8 3.5 in × 5.125 in (88.9 mm × 130.2 mm)[2][1][8]
Aeromax
Source: RMV[1]
- Aeromax 100 I-F-B
- Aeromax 100 L-D
Aeromotion
See AMI
Aeromotor
(Detroit Aeromotor. Const. Co) Source: RMV[1]
Aeronamic
Source: RMV[1]
- Aeronamic ATS
Aeronautical Engineering Co.
Source: RMV[1]
- Aeronautical Engineering 9-cyl radial 200 HP
Aeronautical Manufacturing
Source: RMV[1]
Aeronca
- Aeronca E-107 (-A)[1]
- Aeronca E-113 (-A,-B, -C,-CB,-CD, CBD)[1]
- Aeronca O-107
- Aeronca O-113
Aeronco
(Aeronautical Corporation of Great Britain Ltd.)? Source: RMV[1]
Aeroplane
(Aeroplane Motors) Source: RMV[1]
- Aeroplane 59hp V-8 3.98 in × 4.72 in (101 mm × 120 mm)[2]
Aeroprotech
Source: RMV[1]
- Aeroprotech VW 2.3
Aerosila
(APU'S, APP'S) Source: RMV[1]
- Aerosila TA-4 FE
- Aerosila 6 A/U
- Aerosila 8 N/K
- Aerosila 12
- Aerosila 12-60
- Aerosila 14 (-032,-130,-35)
- Aerosila 18-100 (-200)
- GTTP-300
Aerosport
Aerosud-Marvol
Source: RMV[1]
Aerostar
Source: RMV[1]
Aerotech engines
Source: RMV[1]
- Aerotech 2 Cylinder 2T
Aerotech-PL
Source: RMV[1]
- Aerotech-PL EA81, Subaru conversion
- Aerotech-PL VW conversion
- Aerotech-PL BMW conversion
- Aerotech-PL Suzuki conversion
- Aerotech-PL Guzzi conversion
Aerotechnik
Source: RMV[1]
- Aerotechnik Tatra-100
- Aerotechnik Tatra-102
- Aerotechnik Hirth (Lic)
- Aerotechnik Mikron (Lic)
- Aerotechnik Tatra-714 (VW)
Aerotek (USA)
Source: RMV[1]
- Aerotek Mazda RX-7 (conversion)
AeroVee
(See Aero Conversions)[1]
AES
(See Rev-Air)[1]
AFECO
(Joint Arab-French venture)[1]
Affordable Turbine Power
Source: RMV[1]
- Affordable Turbine Power Model 6.5
AFR
Source: RMV[1]
- AFR BMW Conversion
- AFR R 100 70/80 hp
- AFR R 1100D 90/100 hp
- AFR R 1100S 98 hp
- AFR R 1150RT 95 hp
- AFR R 1200GS 100 hp
Agilis
(Agilis Engines) Sources: RMV[1][12][13]
- Agilis TF-800
- Agilis TF-1000
- Agilis TF-1200
- Agilis TF-1400
- Agilis TF-1500
- Agilis TJ-60 (MT-60)
- Agilis TJ-75
- Agilis TJ-80
- Agilis TJ-400
Agusta
Ahrbecker Son and Hankers
Source: RMV[1]
- Ahrbecker Son and Hankers 10 HP
- Ahrbecker Son and Hankers 20 HP
- Ahrbecker Son and Hankers 1 Cylinder – vapor
AIC
(Aviation Ind. China. See Catic and Carec)[1]
Aichi
Source:Gunston 1989[15] except where noted.
- Aichi AC-1
- Aichi Atsuta (License-built Daimler-Benz DB 601A for IJN)(Atsuta 31)
- Kawasaki Ha40 (IJAAS designation)
- Kawasaki Ha-60 (unified designation system)
- Aichi Ha-70 (Coupled Atsuta 30s)
- Aichi AE1A[1] (Atsuta 21)
- Aichi AE1P[1] (Atsuta 32)
AICTA
(AICTA Design Work, Prague, Czech Republic)
AIDC
Source: RMV[1]
Aiello
- Aiello Experimentals, various models[1]
Aile Volante
Air Repair Incorporated
Source: RMV[1] (Jacobs License)
(Jacobs-Page License)
Air Ryder
Source: RMV[1]
- Air Ryder Subaru EA-81 (Conversion)
Air Technical Arsenal
Source: RMV[1]
- Air Technical Arsenal TSU-11
- Air Technical Arsenal TR-30
Air-Craft Engine Corp
Source: RMV[1]
- Air-Craft Engine Corp LA-1
Aircat
(Detroit Aircraft Eng. Corp.) Source: RMV[1]
- Aircat Radial 5 cylinders
Aircooled Motors
(See Franklin)
Aircraft
( Aircraft Engine Co Inc, Oakland CA.)
- Aircraft 1911 80hp
Aircraft Engine Develop.
- Alfaro Axial
- "Baby" Twin-flat
Aircraft Engine Services
- AES -V300T
Aircraft Engine Specialists
- Millenium (Up-rated Lyc. and Cont)
Aircraft Holding Corp.
- Murray Ajax
- Murray Atlas
Aircraft & Ind. Motor Corp.
(See Schubert)
Airculture
Airdelta
- Hiro[1]
AiResearch
(See Garrett, Allied Signal and Honeywell)
Airex
Airmotive-Perito
See ADAPT
- Airmotive-Perito 280N
- Airmotive-Perito 300R
- Airmotive-Perito 320T
Airship
- Airship A-Tech 100 Diesel[1]
Airtrike
(AirTrike GmbH i.L., Berlin, Germany)
AISA
Source: RMV[1]
- Ramjet on rotor
Aixro
Source: RMV[1]
- Aixro XF-40
- Aixro XH-40
- Aixro XP-40
- Aixro XR-30
- Aixro XR-40
- Aixro XR-50
Ajax
Source: RMV[1]
- Ajax 7-cyl rotary
- Ajax 6-cyl radial (2 rows of 3 cyls.), 80 HP
Akkerman
- Akkerman Model 235 30 HP, special fuel[1]
Akron
- Funk E200
- Funk E4L[1]
Albatross
(Albatross Co Detroit)
Aldasoro
- Aldasoro aero engine[1]
Alexander
Alfa Romeo
(Societa per Azioni Alfa Romeo) Data from:Italian Civil & Military Aircraft 1930–1945[18]
- Romeo 600hp V-12[2]
- Alfa Romeo V-6 diesel[19]
- Alfa Romeo V-12 diesel[19][20]
- Alfa Romeo D2
- Alfa Romeo 100 or RA.1100[1]
- Alfa Romeo 101 or RA.1101[1]
- Alfa Romeo 110
- Alfa Romeo 111
- Alfa Romeo 115
- Alfa Romeo 116
- Alfa Romeo 121
- Alfa Romeo 122 R.C.38
- Alfa Romeo 125
- Alfa Romeo 126
- Alfa Romeo 127
- Alfa Romeo 128
- Alfa Romeo 129
- Alfa Romeo 131
- Alfa Romeo 135
- Alfa Romeo 136
- Alfa Romeo 138 R.C.23/65
- Alfa Romeo RA.1000
- Alfa Romeo RA.1050
- Alfa Romeo RA.1100 or AR.100[1]
- Alfa Romeo RA.1101 or AR.101[1]
- Alfa Romeo AR.318
- Alfa Romeo Dux
- Alfa Romeo Jupiter
- Alfa Romeo Lynx
- Alfa Romeo Mercury
- Alfa Romeo Pegasus
Alfaro
- Alfaro baby engine
- Alfaro 155 hp 4-cyl barrel engine
Allen
Alliance
- Alliance Warrior 7-cyl radial
Allied
- Allied Monsoon Licensed manufacturer of French Règnier 4L
AlliedSignal
Allis-Chalmers
Source: Gunston[15]
Allison
- Allison V-1410 (IV-1410 inverted air-cooled Liberty)
- Allison IV-1410
- Allison VG-1410 (IV-1410 inverted air-cooled Liberty)
- Allison V-1650
- Allison V-1710
- Allison V-3420
- Allison X-4520
- Allison 250 (T63)(T703)
- Allison 252[21]
- Allison 500 (T40)
- Allison 501 (D – T56)(F – T38)
- Allison 503
- Allison 504
- Allison 545[22]
- Allison 550[21]
- Allison 578-DX
- Allison J33
- Allison J35
- Allison J56
- Allison J71
- Allison J89
- Allison J102
- Allison T38
- Allison T39
- Allison T40
- Allison T44
- Allison T54
- Allison T56
- Allison T61[21]
- Allison T63
- Allison T71
- Allison T78[22]
- Allison T80
- Allison T406 (AE1107)
- Allison T701 (Allison 501-M62)
- Allison T703 (Allison 250)
- Allison TF32
- Allison TF41 (RR Spey)
- Allison GMA 200
- Allison GMA 500
- Allison AE1107
- Allison AE3010
- Allison AE3012
- Allison PD-37 Pyrodyne
Almen
Alvaston
Alvis
Source: Lumsden[3]
American Cirrus Engine (ACE)
See: ACE
American Engineering Corporation
Source: RMV[1]
- ACE Keane
American Helicopter
- American Helicopter PJ49 Pulsejet
- American Helicopter XPJ49-AH-3
American
- American 1911 rotary
- American S-5 radial
AMCEL
(AMCEL Propulsion Company)
- AMCEL controllable solid fuel rocket[10]
AMI
(AeroMotion Inc.)
- AeroMotion Twin[24]
- AeroMotion O-100 Twin
- AeroMotion O-101 Twin
AMT
A.M.U.A.L
(Établissement A.M.U.A.L)
Angle
- Angle 100hp Radial
Ansaldo
(Gio. Ansaldo & C. / San Giorgio)
Antoinette
- Antoinette 32hp V-8 80 mm × 80 mm (3.1 in × 3.1 in)[2]
- Antoinette 46hp?
- Antoinette 64hp V-16 80 mm × 80 mm (3.1 in × 3.1 in)[2]
- Antoinette 67hp V-8 110 mm × 105 mm (4.3 in × 4.1 in)[2]
- Antoinette 165hp V-16
- Antoinette 134hp V-8 110 mm × 105 mm (4.3 in × 4.1 in)[2]
- Antoinette 55hp V-8[2]
- Antoinette V-32[2]
Anzani
(Société des Moteurs Anzani) Source:[15][19][26] For British Anzani products see: British Anzani
Air-cooled Anzani engines
- Anzani V-2[2]
- Anzani 14hp 3-cyl fan 85 mm × 85 mm (3.3 in × 3.3 in)[2]
- Anzani 15hp 3-cyl fan 85 mm × 100 mm (3.3 in × 3.9 in)[2]
- Anzani 24.5hp 3-cyl fan 105 mm × 130 mm (4.1 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Anzani 31.6hp 3-cyl fan 120 mm × 130 mm (4.7 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Anzani 42.3hp 3-cyl fan 135 mm × 150 mm (5.3 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Anzani 10-12hp 3-cyl fan 85 mm × 85 mm (3.3 in × 3.3 in)
- Anzani 12-15hp 3-cyl fan 85 mm × 100 mm (3.3 in × 3.9 in)
- Anzani 25-30hp 3-cyl fan 105 mm × 130 mm (4.1 in × 5.1 in)
- Anzani 30-35hp 3-cyl fan 120 mm × 130 mm (4.7 in × 5.1 in)
- Anzani 40-45hp 3-cyl fan 135 mm × 150 mm (5.3 in × 5.9 in)
- Anzani 45-50hp 3-cyl fan[2]
- Anzani 30hp 3-cyl radial 105 mm × 120 mm (4.1 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- Anzani 45hp 5-cyl radial[2]
- Anzani 60hp 5-cyl radial
- Anzani 40-45hp 6-cyl radial 90 mm × 120 mm (3.5 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- Anzani 50-60hp 6-cyl radial 105 mm × 120 mm (4.1 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- Anzani 70hp 6-cyl radial 105 mm × 120 mm (4.1 in × 4.7 in)
- Anzani 80hp 6-cyl radial 115 mm × 140 mm (4.5 in × 5.5 in)[27]
- Anzani 95hp 7-cyl radial
- Anzani 60-70hp 10-cyl radial {{cvt|90|x|120|mm})[2]
- Anzani 80hp 10-cyl radial
- Anzani 100-110hp 10-cyl radial {{cvt|105|x|140|mm})[2]
- Anzani 95-100hp 10-cyl radial {{cvt|105|x|145|mm})[2]
- Anzani 125hp 10-cyl radial {{cvt|115|x|150|mm})[2]
- Anzani 125hp 10-cyl radial {{cvt|115|x|155|mm})[2]
- Anzani 200hp 10-cyl radial[2]
- Anzani 100hp 14-cyl radial {{cvt|105|x|140|mm})[2]
- Anzani 150-160hp 14-cyl radial {{cvt|90|x|120|mm})[27]
- Anzani 200hp 20-cyl radial {{cvt|105|x|140|mm})[2]
Water-cooled Anzani engines
ARDEM
(Avions Roger Druine Engines M)
- Ardem 4 CO2
Ares
(Ares ltd., Finland)
- Ares diesel Cirrus[[30]
Argus Motoren
Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Argus Type I (4-cyl. 50-70hp 124 mm × 130 mm (4.88 in × 5.12 in))[2][31]
- Argus Type II (4-cyl. 100hp 140 mm × 140 mm (5.51 in × 5.51 in))[2]
- Argus Type III (6-cyl. 110hp 124 mm × 130 mm (4.88 in × 5.12 in))[2]
- Argus Type IV (4-cyl. 140hp 150 mm × 170 mm (6.1 in × 6.5 in))[2]
- Argus Type V (6-cyl. 140hp 140 mm × 140 mm (5.51 in × 5.51 in))[2]
- Argus Type VI (6-cyl. 140hp 150 mm × 170 mm (6.1 in × 6.5 in))[2]
- Argus Type VII (6-cyl. 115-130hp 130 mm × 130 mm (5.12 in × 5.12 in))[2]
- Argus Type VIII (6-cyl. 190hp 150 mm × 145 mm (5.91 in × 5.7 in))[2]
- Argus As I 4-cylinder, 100-hp, year 1913[32]
- Argus As II, 6-cylinder, 120-hp, year 1914[33]
- Argus As III 6-cylinder upright inline
- Argus As 5 24-cylinder in-line radial (6 banks of four cylinders)
- Argus As VI 700hp V-12[29]
- Argus As VIA[29]
- Argus As 7 9R 700 hp[31]
- Argus As 8 4-cylinder inverted inline[31]
- Argus As 10 8-cylinder inverted V[31]
- Argus As 12 16H 550 hp[31]
- Argus As 16 4-cylinder horizontally-opposed 35hp[34]
- Argus As 17
- Argus As 014 pulse jet engine for V-1 flying bomb and Tornado boat
- Argus As 044[31]
- Argus As 16 4-cylinder inverted inline 40 hp[31]
- Argus As 17 6-cylinder inverted inline 225 hp / 285 hp[31]
- Argus As 401 development and renumbering of the As 10
- Argus As 402[31]
- Argus As 403 radial engine project, not built.
- Argus As 410 12-cylinder inverted V[31]
- Argus As 411 12-cylinder inverted V[31]
- Argus As 412 24-cylinder H-block, prototyped[31]
- Argus As 413 similar to 412, never built[31]
- Argus 109-014
- Argus 109-044[31]
- Argus 115hp 6-cylinder upright inline 130 mm × 130 mm (5.1 in × 5.1 in)[9]
- Argus 130hp 6-cylinder upright inline 130 mm × 130 mm (5.1 in × 5.1 in)[9]
- Argus 145hp 6-cylinder upright inline 140 mm × 140 mm (5.5 in × 5.5 in)[9]
- Argus 190hp 6-cylinder upright inline 150 mm × 145 mm (5.9 in × 5.7 in)[9]
Argyll
(Argylls Ltd.)
- Argyll 120hp[2]
Armstrong Siddeley
Sources: Piston engines, Lumsden,[3] gas turbine and rocket engines, Gunston.[15]
Piston Engines
- Armstrong Siddeley Terrier
- Armstrong Siddeley Mastiff
- Armstrong Siddeley Boarhound
- Armstrong Siddeley Cheetah
- Armstrong Siddeley Civet
- Armstrong Siddeley Cougar
- Armstrong Siddeley Deerhound
- Armstrong Siddeley Genet
- Armstrong Siddeley Genet Major
- Armstrong Siddeley Hyena
- Armstrong Siddeley Jaguar
- Armstrong Siddeley Leopard
- Armstrong Siddeley Lynx
- Armstrong Siddeley Mongoose
- Armstrong Siddeley Ounce
- Armstrong Siddeley Panther
- Armstrong Siddeley Serval
- Armstrong Siddeley Tiger
- Armstrong Siddeley Wolfhound
Gas turbines
- Armstrong Siddeley Adder
- Armstrong Siddeley ASX
- Armstrong Siddeley Double Mamba
- Armstrong Siddeley Mamba
- Armstrong Siddeley Python
- Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire
- Armstrong Siddeley Viper
Rocket engines
- Armstrong Siddeley Alpha
- Armstrong Siddeley Beta
- Armstrong Siddeley Delta
- Armstrong Siddeley Gamma
- Armstrong Siddeley Screamer
- Armstrong Siddeley Snarler
- Armstrong Siddeley Spartan
- Armstrong Siddeley Stentor
Armstrong-Whitworth
Arrow SNC
Arsenal
(Arsenal de l'Aéronautique) Source:Gunston[15]
Asahina
- Asahina 9-cyl 100hp rotary [2]
Ashmusen
(Ashmusen Manufacturing Company, Providence, Rhode Island)
Aspin
(F.M. Aspin & Company)
- Aspin Flat-Four[30]
Aster
Astrodyne
(Astrodyne Inc.)
ATAR
( Atelier Technique Aéronautique de Rickenbach - pre SNECMA take-over)
- ATAR 101
- ATAR 103
- ATAR 104 ( Vulcain)
- ATAR 201
- ATAR 202
- ATAR 203
Atwood
(Atwood Aeronautic Company, Williamsport, PA / Harry N. Atwood]]
- Atwood 12-180[2]
- Atwood M-1 (1916)
- Atwood M-2 (1916)
- Atwood Twin Six
Aubier & Dunne
Data from:Italian Civil & Military Aircraft 1930–1945[18]
Austin
(Austin Motor Company)
Austro-Daimler
Source:Gunston[15]
- Austro-Daimler 35-40hp 4-cyl. (35-40hp 100 mm × 120 mm (3.94 in × 4.72 in))[2][4]
- Austro-Daimler 65-70hp 4-cyl. (65-70hp 120 mm × 140 mm (4.72 in × 5.51 in))[2][4]
- Austro-Daimler 90hp 6-cyl. (90hp 120 mm × 140 mm (4.72 in × 5.51 in))[2]
- Austro-Daimler 120hp 6-cyl. (120hp 130 mm × 175 mm (5.12 in × 6.89 in))[2][4]
- Austro-Daimler 160hp 6-cyl.
- Austro-Daimler 185hp 6-cyl.
- Austro-Daimler 200hp 6-cyl. (200hp 135 mm × 175 mm (5.31 in × 6.89 in))[2][9]
- Austro-Daimler 210hp 6-cyl.
- Austro-Daimler 225hp 6-cyl.
- Austro-Daimler 300hp V-12
- Austro-Daimler 360hp 6-cyl (360hp 130 mm × 175 mm (5.12 in × 6.89 in))[2]
- Austro-Daimler 400hp V-12 (400hp 130 mm × 175 mm (5.12 in × 6.89 in))[2]
- Austro-Daimler D-35 (400hp 130 mm × 175 mm (5.12 in × 6.89 in))[2]
Austro Engine
- Austro Engine E4 (AE 300) Diesel R4
- Austro Engine E8
- Austro Engine AE50R
- Austro Engine AE75R
- Austro Engine AE80R
- Austro Engine AE500
- Austro Engine GIAE110R
Ava
(L'Agence General des Moteurs Ava)
Avco Lycoming
See:Lycoming
Avia
(Avia Wytwórnia Maszyn Precyzjnych)
- Avia 3[30]
- Avia Vr-30
- Avia Vr-36
- Avia WZ-7[10]
- Avia WZ-100[10]
Avia
(Avia Akciova Spolecnost pro Prumysel Letecky)
Avia
(Avia Narodny Podnik)
Aviadvigatel
Aviatik
AMT
(Aviation Microjet Technology)
A.V. Roe
- A.V. Roe 20hp 2-cyl.[3]
Avro
- Avro Alpha[3]
Avro Canada
Source:Gunston[15]
Axelson
- Axelson A-7-R
- Axelson-Floco B
Axial Vector Engine Corporation
Aztatl
B
Bailey Aviation
Baradat – Esteve
(Claudio Baradat Guillé & Carlos Esteve)
- Baradat toroidal engine[1]
Basse und Selve
(Basse & Selve, Altena (Westf) Flugmotorenwerke)
- Basse und Selve BuS. 120hp (125 mm × 160 mm (4.9 in × 6.3 in) 120-130hp)[2]
- Basse und Selve BuS.III 150 hp
- Basse und Selve BuS.IV (160 mm × 200 mm (6.3 in × 7.9 in) / 155 mm × 200 mm (6.1 in × 7.9 in) 260hp / 270hp)[2]
- Basse und Selve BuS.IVa 300 hp[9]
Bates
Data from:[19]
- Bates 29hp V-4
Bayerische
(Bayerische Motoren Gesellschaft)
- Bayerische 7-cyl 50hp rotary[2]
Beardmore
Source: Lumsden[3]
- Beardmore 90 hp (120 mm × 140 mm (4.7 in × 5.5 in))[2]
- Beardmore 120 hp (130 mm × 175 mm (5.1 in × 6.9 in))[2]
- Beardmore 160 hp (142 mm × 175 mm (5.6 in × 6.9 in))[2][9]
- Beardmore Pacific
- Beardmore Simoon
- Beardmore Cyclone
- Beardmore Tornado
- Beardmore 12-cyl opposed diesel[19]
- Beardmore Typhoon
- Galloway Adriatic
- Galloway Atlantic[9]
- Siddeley-Deasy Puma[9]
- Siddeley Tiger
Béarn
(Construction Mécanique du Béarn / Société de Construction et d'Exploitation de Matériels et de Moteurs)
- Béarn 6C
- Béarn 6D[41][6]
- Béarn 6D-O7
- Béarn 12A
- Béarn 12B
Beatty
Beck
Beecher
(B.L. Beecher Company, New Haven, Connecticut)
- Beecher 8HOA[2]
Bell Aerosystems Company
- Bell Model 117
- Bell Model 8001
- Bell Model 8048
- Bell Model 8081
- Bell Model 8096
- Bell Model 8096-39
- Bell Model 8096A
- Bell Model 8096B
- Bell Model 8096L
- Bell Model 8247
- Bell Model 8533
- Bell XLR-81
- Bell XLR-81-BA-3
- Bell XLR-81-BA-5
- Bell XLR-81-BA-7
- Bell XLR-81-BA-11
- Bell XLR-81-BA-13
- Bell Hustler[21]
- Bell Nike-Ajax engine[21]
Bentley
Source: Lumsden[3]
Benz
Source:Gunston[15]
- Benz 100hp (4-cyl 130 mm × 180 mm (5.1 in × 7.1 in))[2]
- Benz 195hp (V-8 125 mm × 140 mm (4.9 in × 5.5 in))[2]
- Benz 230hp (6-cyl 145 mm × 190 mm (5.7 in × 7.5 in))[2]
- Benz F-B (6-cyl 90hp 106 mm × 150 mm (4.2 in × 5.9 in))[2]
- Benz F-D (6-cyl 110hp 116 mm × 160 mm (4.6 in × 6.3 in))[2]
- Benz F-BF (6-cyl 160hp 130 mm × 180 mm (5.1 in × 7.1 in))[2]
- Benz Bz.II
- Benz Bz.III - straight six
- Benz Bz.IIIa - unrelated
- Benz Bz.IIIav (6-cyl 240hp 140 mm × 190 mm (5.5 in × 7.5 in))[2]
- Benz Bz.IIIb (V-8 195-200hp 135 mm × 135 mm (5.3 in × 5.3 in))[2]
- Benz Bz.IIIbo
- Benz Bz.IIIbm
- Benz Bz.IV (6-cyl 230hp 145 mm × 190 mm (5.7 in × 7.5 in))[2]
- Benz Bz.IVa
- Benz Bz.V (V-12 400hp 145 mm × 170 mm (5.7 in × 6.7 in))[2]
- Benz Bz.Vb (V-12 450hp 135 mm × 150 mm (5.3 in × 5.9 in))[2]
- Benz Bz.VI (V-12 500-625hp 145 mm × 190 mm (5.7 in × 7.5 in))[2]
- Benz Bz.VIv (V-12 500-575hp 165 mm × 200 mm (6.5 in × 7.9 in))[2]
Berliner
(Emile Berliner)
- Berliner 6hp rotary helicopter engine
Bertin
Besler
(SEE: Doble-Besler)
Better Half
B.H.P.
(Beardmore-Halford-Pullinger)
- B.H.P 160hp
- B.H.P 200hp
Binetti
- Binetti B-300[2]
Blackburn
Source: Lumsden[3]
Blackburne
(Burney and Blackburne) Source: Lumsden[3]
Bloch
(Avions Marcel Bloch)
BMW
Source:Gunston[15] except where noted (Bayerische Motorenwerke – Bavarian Motor Company))
- BMW Sytlphe 5-cyl rotary 110 mm × 130 mm (4.3 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- BMW I
- BMW II
- BMW III
- BMW IIIa
- BMW IV
- BMW V
- BMW Va
- BMW VI
- BMW VIIa
- BMW VIII
- BMW IX
- BMW X
- BMW 003 axial-flow turbojet
- BMW 112 12-cylinder, (prototype)
- BMW 114
- BMW 116
- BMW 117[31]
- BMW 132
- BMW 139
- BMW 801
- BMW 802
- BMW 803
- BMW 804
- BMW 805[31]
- BMW 109-002 (Bramo 109-002)
- BMW 109-003
- BMW 109-018
- BMW 109-028
- BMW 109-510[31]
- BMW 109-511[31]
- BMW 109-528
- BMW 109-548[31]
- BMW 109-558[31]
- BMW 109-708[31]
- BMW 109-718[31]
- BMW P-3306[31]
- BMW P-3307[31]
- BMW MTU 6011[43]
- BMW 6002
- BMW 6011
- BMW 6012(MTU 6012) Turboshaft engine[10]
- BMW 8025[10]
- BMW 8026[10]
- BMW GO-480-B1A6
- BMW-Lanova 114 V-4 9-cyl. radial diesel engine[20]
- BMW M2 B15 - 2 cyl. air-cooled boxer
Boeing
Source:Pelletier[44] except where noted
- Boeing T50
- Boeing T60
- Boeing 500
- Boeing 502
- Boeing 514[21]
- Boeing 520
- Boeing 540 gas turbine engine (turboprop)
- Boeing 550
- Boeing 551 gas turbine engine (turboprop)
- Boeing 553 gas turbine engine (turboprop)
Boitel
(Achille Boitel)
- Boitel soleil[35]
Boland
(Boland Aeroplane and Motor Company)
- Boland 60hp V-8 (4 in × 4 in (100 mm × 100 mm))[2]
- Boland 70hp V-8 (4 in × 4.5 in (100 mm × 110 mm))[2]
- Boland 100hp V-8 (4.5 in × 5.5 in (110 mm × 140 mm))[2]
- Boland 125hp V-8
Bonner
(Aero Bonner Ltd.)
- Bonner Super Sapphire[36]
Borzecki
(Jozef Borzecki)
- Borzecki 2RB
- Borzecki JB 2X250
Botali
- Botali Diesel – eight-cylinder air-cooled 118 hp[20]
Bramo
(Brandenburgische Motorenwerke – Brandenburg motor company) Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Bramo Sh.14A[35]
- Bramo 301[31]
- Bramo 314
- Bramo 322
- Bramo 323 Fafnir
- Bramo 325[31]
- Bramo 328[31]
- Bramo 329 Twin Fafnir
- Bramo 109-002
- Bramo 109-003
Brandner
Breda
(Società Italiana Ernesto Breda)
- Breda 320hp V-8[2]
Breguet-Bugatti
- Breguet-Bugatti U.16
- Breguet-Bugatti U.24
- Breguet-Bugatti U.24bis
- Breguet-Bugatti Quadrimotor Type A
- Breguet-Bugatti Quadrimotor Type B
- Breguet-Bugatti H-32B
Breitfeld & Danek
- Breitfeld & Danek Perun I 6-cylinder 170 hp
- Breitfeld & Danek Perun II 6-cylinder 276 hp
- Breitfeld & Danek BD-500 500hp
Breese
(Vance Breese)
- Breese 40hp 3-cyl radial[2]
Breuer
(Breuer Werke G.m.b.H.)
Brewer
(Captain R.W.A. Brewer)
Briggs & Stratton
(Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, United States)
Bristol
Sources: Piston engines, Lumsden,[3] gas turbine and rocket engines, Gunston.[15]
- Bristol Aquila
- Bristol Centaurus
- Bristol Cherub
- Bristol Draco
- Bristol Hercules
- Bristol Hydra
- Bristol Jupiter
- Bristol Lucifer
- Bristol Mercury
- Bristol Neptune
- Bristol Olympus
- Bristol Orion sleeve-valve
- Bristol Orion turbo-prop/shaft
- Bristol Orpheus
- Bristol Pegasus (radial engine)
- Bristol BE53 Pegasus (later, BS53 the Harrier engine)
- Bristol Perseus
- Bristol Phoebus
- Bristol Phoenix diesel radial[19][20]
- Bristol Proteus
- Bristol Taurus
- Bristol Theseus
- Bristol Thor
- Bristol Titan
- Bristol BE.25[11]
- Bristol BRJ.1 6in ramjet, Initial development model using Boeing combustor.
- Bristol BRJ.2 16in ramjet. Scaled up BRJ1 with Boeing combustor.
- Bristol BRJ.2/5 16in M2 ramjet. Used on early Red Duster. Known to the MoS as BT.1 Thor
- Bristol BRJ.3 16in M2 ramjet. Fitted with NGTE combustor and used on XRD. Rated at 100,000 lbf (440 kN) at M3, Ø = 16 in (41 cm)
- Bristol BRJ.4/1 16in M2 ramjet. Used on early Red Duster and Bloodhound I. Known to the MoS as BT.2 Thor
- Bristol BRJ.5/1 16in M2 ramjet. Used on Bloodhound II. Became BT.3 Thor
- Bristol BRJ.601 16in M3 ramjet. Tested on Bobbin.
- Bristol BRJ.701 23in M3 ramjet project study.
- Bristol BRJ.801[21]
- Bristol BRJ.801 18in M3 ramjet. Initial M3 ramjet developed for Stage 1¾ Blue Envoy.
- Bristol BRJ.811 18in M3 ramjet. M3 ramjet developed for Stage 1¾ Blue Envoy.
- Bristol BRJ.824 18in M3 ramjet. Cancelled with Blue Steel Mk2.
Bristol Siddeley
- Bristol Siddeley BE.53
- Bristol Siddeley BE.58[21]
- Bristol Siddeley BS.53 Pegasus
- Bristol Siddeley BS.59[10]
- Bristol Siddeley BS.100
- Bristol Siddeley BS.143
- Bristol Siddeley BS.347
- Bristol Siddeley BS.358
- Bristol Siddeley BS.360
- Bristol Siddeley BS.605[45]
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1001 Bristol Siddeley M2.4 - 4.2 ramjet.
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1002 Bristol Siddeley M4.5 ramjet.
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1003 Odin Bristol Siddeley M3.5 ramjet, Odin.
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1004 Bristol Siddeley M2.3 ramjet.
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1005
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1006 Bristol Siddeley M4 research ramjet. Became R.2 research engine.
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1007
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1008 Bristol Siddeley M1.2 ramjet.
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1009 Bristol Siddeley M3 ramjet. Modified BT.3 Thor intended for proposed Bloodhound III. Modified nozzle, intake and diffuser.[10]
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1010
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1011 Rated at 40000lb (177.9KN).
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1012 Bristol Siddeley combination powerplant for APD 1019 and P.42. Used Olympus or BS.100 turbomachinery, bypass duct burning and ramjets.
- Bristol Siddeley BS.1013 Bristol Siddeley ramjet study for stand-off missile. Possibly for Pandora.
- Bristol Siddeley/SNECMA M45G
- Bristol Siddeley/SNECMA M45H
- Bristol Siddeley Gamma Mk.201[10] (for Black Knight)
- Bristol Siddeley Gamma Mk.301[10] (for Black Knight)
- Bristol Siddeley Gnome
- Bristol Siddeley Gyron Junior[10]
- Bristol Siddeley Stentor[10]
- Bristol Siddeley Double Spectre[10]
- Bristol Siddeley PR.23[21]
- Bristol Siddeley PR.37[10]
- Bristol Siddeley Cumulus[10][22]
- Bristol Siddeley Nimbus
- Bristol Siddeley Orpheus
- Bristol Siddeley Sapphire
- Bristol Siddeley Spartan I[10]
- Bristol Siddeley Viper
- Bristol Siddeley BSRJ.801
- Bristol Siddeley BSRJ.824[10]
- Bristol Siddeley NRJ.1
- Bristol Siddeley R.1 Bristol Siddeley research ramjet.
- Bristol Siddeley R.2 Bristol Siddeley research ramjet.
British Anzani
For French Anzani engines see: Anzani
- British Anzani 35hp 2-cyl.[3]
- British Anzani 45hp 6-cyl.[3]
- British Anzani 60hp 6-cyl.[3]
- British Anzani 100hp 10-cyl.[3]
British Salmson
(British Salmson Engines Limited)
British Rotary
- British Rotary 100hp 10-cyl. rotary[2] ( A mis-identification of the British Anzani 10-cyl????)
Brooke
(Brooke, Chicago)
Brott
(A. Brott, Denver, Colorado)
Brouhot
Bucherer
- Bucherer 2-cyl rotary[2]
Buchet
Bücker
- Bücker M 700
Budworth
(David Budworth Limited)
Bugatti
(Ettore Bugatti)
- Bugatti 8[2]
- Bugatti U-16[2]
- Bugatti Type 14
- Bugatti Type 34 U-16
- Bugatti Type 50B
- Bugatti Type 60
Burgess-White
(W. Starling Burgess, Rollin H. White / Burgess Company of Marblehead, MA and White Company of Cleveland, OH)
Burlat
(Société des Moteurs Rotatifs Burlat)
- Burlat 8cyl. 35hp rotary - 26 kW (35 hp) @ 1800 rpm, 95 mm × 120 mm (3.74 in × 4.72 in). 85 kg (187 lb). 6 500F[50][2][27]
- Burlat 8cyl. 60hp rotary - 45 kW (60 hp) @ 1800 rpm, 120 mm × 120 mm (4.72 in × 4.72 in), 120 kg (264 lb), 11000F[50][2][27]
- Burla 8cyl. 75hp rotary - 56 kW (75 hp) @ 1800 rpm, 120 mm × 170 mm (4.72 in × 6.69 in), 140 kg (308 lb), 11000F[50][2]
- Burlat 16cyl. 120hp rotary - 89 kW (120 hp)p @ 1750 rpm, 120 mm × 120 mm (4.72 in × 4.72 in), 225 kg (495 lb), 22000 F[50][2][27]
Burnelli
(Burnelli Aircraft Limited)
- Burnelli AR-3
Burt
(Peter Burt)
- Burt 180hp V-12[2]
C
CAC
(Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation)
- CAC R-975 Cicada
- CAC R-1340
- CAC R-1830
- CAC Merlin
CAE
See:Teledyne CAE
Caffort
(Anciens Etablissements Caffort Frères)
Cal-Aero
( Cal-aero Institute, California)
- Cal-Aero XLC-1[52]
Call
(Henry L. Call)
CAM
(Canadian Airmotive Inc.)
- CAM TURBO 90[53]
Cameron
(Cameron Aero Engine Division / Everett S. Cameron)
Campini
Source:Gunston[15]
CANSA
(Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino – Costruzioni Aeronautiche Novaresi S.A.)
- CANSA C.80[18]
Carden Aero Engines
Source:Ord-Hume.[54]
CAREC
(China National Aero-Engine Corporation)
Casanova
(Ramon Casanova)
- Casanova pulse-jet[1]
Cato
Caunter
Centrum
- Centrum 150hp 6-cyl radial[2]
Ceskoslovenska Zbrojovka
Data from:[19]
- Ceskoslovenska Zbrojovka ZOD 260-B 2-stroke radial diesel engine – 260 hp[20]
CFM International
Chaise
(Societe Anonyme Omnium Metallurgique et Industriel / Etablissements Chaise et Cie)[55]
- Chaise 12hp V-2
- Chaise 30hp V-4[35][16]
- Chaise 4A 101hp
- Chaise 4B 120hp (14° inverted V-4)[56]
- Chaise 4Ba
Chamberlin
- Chamberlin L-236
- Chamberlin L-267
Changzhou
(Changzhou Lan Xiang Machinery Works)
Charomskiy
Source:Gunston[15]
- Charomskiy AN.1
- Charomskiy ACh-30
- Charomskiy ACh-31[57]
- Charomskiy ACh-32[57]
- Charomskiy ACh-39[57]
- Charomskiy M-40[57]
Chelomey
- Chelomey D-3 Pulse-jet
- Chelomey D-5 Pulse-jet
- Chelomey D-6 Pulse-jet
- Chelomey D-7 Pulse-jet
Chenu
- Chenu 50-65hp 4-cyl DD 110 mm × 190 mm (4.3 in × 7.5 in)[27][2]
- Chenu 75hp 6-cyl in-line 110 mm × 190 mm (4.3 in × 7.5 in)[27]
- Chenu 90hp 4-cyl GD 120 mm × 130 mm (4.7 in × 5.1 in)[27][2]
- Chenu 80-90hp 6-cyl DD[2]
- Chenu 80-90hp 6-cyl GD[2]
- Chenu 200-250hp 6-cyl DD 150 mm × 120 mm (5.9 in × 4.7 in)[27](for dirigibles)[2]
Chevrolair
Chevrolet
Chinese Aero-engines
Chotia
- Chotia 460[36]
Christoffersen
(Christoffersen Aircraft Company)
Chrysler
Church
(Jim Church)
- Church J-3 Marathon
- Church V-248 V-8[60]
Cicaré Aeronáutica
Cirrus
Source:Gunston[15]
Cisco Motors
Citroen
- Citroen 2cyl Citroën 2CV – 18 hp@N/A rpm
- Citroen 4cyl Citroën GS 1.2 – 65 hp@5700rpm
Clapp's Cars
Clément-Bayard
(Gustave Adolphe Clément-Bayard) Data from:[19]
- Clément-Bayard 30hp 2-cyl HOW[2] 130.2 mm × 111.1 mm (5.125 in × 4.375 in)
- Clément-Bayard 29hp 4-cyl in-line[2] 100 mm × 120 mm (3.94 in × 4.72 in)
- Clément-Bayard 40hp 4-cyl in-line[2] 100 mm × 120 mm (3.94 in × 4.72 in)
- Clément-Bayard 100hp 4-cyl in-line 135 mm × 160 mm (5.3 in × 6.3 in)[27]
- Clément-Bayard 118.5hp 4-cyl in-line[2] 190 mm × 230 mm (7.48 in × 9.06 in)
- Clément-Bayard 117.5hp 6-cyl in-line[2] 155 mm × 185 mm (6.1 in × 7.28 in)
- Clément-Bayard 250hp 6-cyl in-line[2] 155 mm × 200 mm (6.1 in × 7.87 in) (for dirigibles)
- Clément-Bayard 50hp 7-cyl Radial[2] 100 mm × 115 mm (3.94 in × 4.53 in)
- Clément-Bayard 300hp 8-cyl in-line[2] 165 mm × 225 mm (6.5 in × 8.86 in) (for airships)
- Clément-Bayard V-16[2] (for airships)
Cleone (engine manufacturer)
- Cleone 1930 25hp 2-cyl hor opp 2 stroke
Clerget
(Société Clerget-Blin et Cie / Pierre Clerget) Source:Lumsden[3] except where noted
- Clerget 50hp 7-cyl water-cooled radial (1907)[61]
- Clerget 50hp 4-cyl[2] 110 mm × 120 mm (4.33 in × 4.72 in)
- Clerget 100hp 4-cyl[2] 140 mm × 160 mm (5.51 in × 6.3 in)
- Clerget 200hp V-8[2] 140 mm × 160 mm (5.51 in × 6.3 in)[61]
- Clerget 2K 16hp[2] 83 mm × 100 mm (3.25 in × 3.94 in)[61]
- Clerget 4V 40 hp 4-cyl in-line water-cooled (1908)[61]
- Clerget 4W 40 hp 4-cyl in-line water-cooled (1910)[61]
- Clerget 7Y 60hp[2] 120 mm × 120 mm (4.72 in × 4.72 in)
- Clerget 7Z 80hp[2] 120 mm × 150 mm (4.72 in × 5.91 in)[9]
- Clerget 7Z[2] 120 mm × 155 mm (4.72 in × 6.1 in)
- Clerget 9A (Diesel radial engine)[15][61]
- Clerget 9B 130 hp[2] 120 mm × 160 mm (4.72 in × 6.3 in)[9]
- Clerget 9BF British version 140 hp[2] 120 mm × 160 mm (4.72 in × 6.3 in)
- Clerget 9C[61]
- Clerget 9F[2] 120 mm × 172 mm (4.72 in × 6.77 in)
- Clerget 9J 100hp[2] 105 mm × 140 mm (4.13 in × 5.51 in)
- Clerget 9Z 110 hp[9]
- Clerget 11A 200 hp variable compression[2]
- Clerget 11Eb 200 hp[2] 120 mm × 190 mm (4.72 in × 7.48 in)[9]
- Clerget 11G 250 hp[2] 120 mm × 190 mm (4.72 in × 7.48 in) 5.7:1 compression
- Clerget 14D[61]
- Clerget 14E[61]
- Clerget 14F[35][61][62] (Diesel radial engine)
- Clerget 14U[61]
- Clerget 16H diesel v-16
- Clerget 16SS diesel[61]
- Clerget 16X 400hp[2] 130 mm × 130 mm (5.12 in × 5.12 in)[9][61]
- Clerget 18 rotary 300hp[2]
- Clerget 32 diesel[61]
- Clerget Type Transatlantique (H type)[15]
- Clerget monocylinder powder powdered coal test engine[61]
- Clerget monocylinder 2x variable compression[61]
- Clerget monocylinder 4x variable compression[61]
- Clerget 180-2T V-8 2x variable compression[61]
- Clerget 180-4T V-8 4x variable compression[61]
- Clerget 100hp diesel 1928 9-cyl. radial[35]
- Clerget 200hp diesel 1929 9-cyl. radial[35]
- Clerget 250hp diesel 9-cyl. radial[35]
- Clerget 300hp diesel 9-cyl. radial[20][35]
Cleveland
(Walter C. Willard / Cleveland Aero Engines)
- Cleveland 150hp 6-cyl axial engine 6x130 mm × 150 mm (5 in × 6 in)[2]
Cleveland
(Cleveland Engineering Laboratories Company)
- Cleveland Weger 400hp 6-cyl 2-stroke radial 4.25 in × 5 in (108 mm × 127 mm)[2]
C.L.M.
(Compagnie Lilloise de Moteurs S.A)
- Lille 6As 6-cyl opposed piston 2-stroke diesel (Junkers Jumo 205 licence built)[17][63]
- Lille 6Brs (600hp)[63]
CMB
(Construction Mécanique du Béarn)
- See: Béarn
CNA
(Compagnia Nazionale Aeronautica)
Coatalen
Source:Brew[64]
- Coatalen 12Vrs-2[17] diesel
Colombo
Combi
- Combi 150hp 6-cyl[2]
Comet
(Comet Engine Corp, Madison WI.)
- Comet 130hp
- Comet 5
- Comet 7-D 1928 (ATC 9) = 150hp 612ci 7RA.
- Comet 7-E 1929 (ATC 47) = 165hp 612ci 7RA.
- Comet 7-RA 1928 (ATC 9) = 130hp 7RA.
Compagnie Lilloise de Moteurs
Conrad
(Deutsche Motorenbau G.m.b.H.)
- Conrad C.III – (licence built by N.A.G. as the C.III N.A.G.)
Continental
Note: Continental use military style O-nnn designations even when there is no military designation allocated.
- Continental 141[45][21]
- Continental 142[45]
- Continental 160[21]
- Continental 217A[45]
- Continental 220[21]
- Continental 320[21]
- Continental 324[21]
- Continental TS-325
- Continental 352[21]
- Continental 354
- Continental 356
- Continental 500
- Continental TP-500
- Continental A40
- Continental A50
- Continental A65
- Continental A70
- Continental A75
- Continental A80
- Continental A90
- Continental A100
- Continental C75
- Continental C85
- Continental C90
- Continental C115
- Continental C125
- Continental C140
- Continental C145
- Continental C175
- Continental E165
- Continental E185
- Continental E225
- Continental E260
- Continental GR9-A
- Continental GR18[24]
- Continental GR36[24]
- Continental Tiara 4-180
- Continental Tiara 6-260
- Continental Tiara 6-285
- Continental Tiara 6-320
- Continental Tiara 8-380
- Continental Tiara 8-450
- Continental Voyager 200
- Continental Voyager 300
- Continental Voyager 370
- Continental Voyager 550
- Continental O-110
- Continental O-170
- Continental O-190
- Continental O-200
- Continental O-240
- Continental O-255
- Continental O-270 (Tiara)
- Continental O-280
- Continental O-300
- Continental O-315
- Continental IO-346
- Continental O-360
- Continental O-368 (4cyl. O-550)
- Continental O-405 (Tiara)
- Continental O-470
- Continental O-520
- Continental O-526
- Continental O-540 (Tiara)
- Continental O-550
- Continental OL-200
- Continental OL-370
- Continental-Honda OL-370
- Continental OL-550
- Continental OL-1430
- Continental V-1650 (Merlin)
- Continental V-1430
- Continental IV-1430
- Continental I-1430
- Continental XH-2860
- Continental R-545
- Continental R-670
- Continental W670
- Continental TD-300
- Continental Model R-20
- Continental J69
- Continental J87[21]
- Continental J100
- Continental RJ35 Ramjet
- Continental RJ45 Ramjet
- Continental RJ49 Ramjet
- Continental T51
- Continental T65
- Continental T67
- Continental T69
- Continental T72
- Continental Titan X340
- Continental Titan X320
- Continental Titan X370
Cors-Air
Cors-Air srl, Barco di Bibbiano, Italy
- Cors-Air M19 Black Magic
- Cors-Air M21Y
- Cors-Air M25Y Black Devil
Corvair
(conversions and derivatives of the Chevrolet Corvair engine)
- AeroMax Aviation AeroMax 100
- Clapp's Cars Spyder Standard
- Magsam/Wynne (Del Magsam / William Wynne)
Cosmos Engineering Company
Source: Lumsden[3]
- Cosmos Jupiter
- Cosmos Lucifer
- Cosmos Mercury
- Cosmos Hercules 1,000hp - 18x6.25 in × 7.5 in (159 mm × 191 mm)[2]
Coventry Victor
Crankless Engines Company
C.R.M.A.
(Société de construction et de Reparationde Materiel Aéronautique)
- C.R.M.A. Type 102
Curtiss
- Curtiss 250hp V-12 1649 cu in[9] AB?
- Curtiss 25-30hp
- Curtiss A-2 (9hp V-2)[2]
- Curtiss A-4[2]
- Curtiss A-8[2]
- Curtiss B-4[2]
- Curtiss AB
- Curtiss B-8[2]
- Curtiss C-1[2]
- Curtiss C-2
- Curtiss C-4[2]
- Curtiss C-6[15][2]
- Curtiss C-12[2]
- Curtiss CD-12[65][2]
- Curtiss Crusader
- Curtiss D-12[15]
- Curtiss E-4[2][66]
- Curtiss E-8 100hp V-8[2]
- Curtiss H[2]
- Curtiss I[2]
- Curtiss K[2]
- Curtiss H-1640 Chieftain[15]
- Curtiss K-6[15][2]
- Curtiss K-12[15][2]
- Curtiss S[2]
- Curtiss L[2]
- Curtiss O[2]
- Curtiss OX-2[2]
- Curtiss OX-5[15]
- Curtiss OXX-2[66][2]
- Curtiss OXX-3
- Curtiss OXX-5
- Curtiss OXX-6
- Curtiss R-600 Challenger
- Curtiss R-1454
- Curtiss V V-8[2]
- Curtiss V-2 V-8[66][2]
- Curtiss V-3 V-8[2]-8[2]
- Curtiss V-4 V-12[2]
- Curtiss V-1400[15]
- Curtiss V-1460
- Curtiss V-1550
- Curtiss V-1570 Conqueror
- Curtiss VX[2]
Curtiss-Kirkham
Curtiss-Wright
- Curtiss-Wright RJ41 Ramjet
- Curtiss-Wright RJ47 Ramjet
- Curtiss-Wright RJ51 Ramjet
- Curtiss-Wright RJ55 Ramjet
- Curtiss-Wright RC2-60 Wankel engine
- Curtiss-Wright R-600 Challenger
- Curtiss-Wright LR-25
Cuyuna Development Company and 2si
- Cuyuna 215R – aircraft engine
- Cuyuna 340 – aircraft engine
- Cuyuna 430 – aircraft and snowmobile engine
Chinese Aero-engines
D
D-Motor
(Deerlijk, Belgium)
D'Hennian
Daiichi Kosho Company
(Japan)
Daimler-Benz
(Daimler-Benz Abteil Gesellschaft) Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Daimler 1900 flugmotor[31]
- Daimler 1910 4-cyl. 55hp[31]
- Daimler J4L airship engine
- Daimler J8L airship engine
- Daimler-Benz 1926 2-cyl.[35]
- Daimler-Benz F.2[35]
- Daimler-Benz 750hp V-12 diesel[35]
- Mercedes-Benz LOF.6 airship diesel engine[30]
- Daimler NL.1 - Zeppelin motor
- Daimler-Benz OF 2 4-stroke v-12 diesel
- Daimler-Benz DB 600
- Daimler-Benz DB 601
- Daimler-Benz DB 602 V-16 diesel
- Daimler-Benz DB 603
- Daimler-Benz DB 604 (X-24)
- Daimler-Benz DB 605
- Daimler-Benz DB 606 (Coupled DB 601)
- Daimler-Benz DB 607 (Diesel)
- Daimler-Benz DB 609 (IV-16)
- Daimler-Benz DB 610 (Coupled DB 605)
- Daimler-Benz DB 612
- Daimler-Benz DB 613 (Coupled DB 603G)
- Daimler-Benz DB 614
- Daimler-Benz DB 615 (Coupled DB 614)
- Daimler-Benz DB 616
- Daimler-Benz DB 617
- Daimler-Benz DB 618 (Coupled DB 617)
- Daimler-Benz DB 619 (Coupled DB 609)
- Daimler-Benz DB 620 (Coupled DB 628)
- Daimler-Benz DB 621
- Daimler-Benz DB 622
- Daimler-Benz DB 623
- Daimler-Benz DB 624
- Daimler-Benz DB 625
- Daimler-Benz DB 626
- Daimler-Benz DB 627
- Daimler-Benz DB 628
- Daimler-Benz DB 629
- Daimler-Benz DB 630 W-36(Coupled W-18)
- Daimler-Benz DB 631
- Daimler-Benz DB 632
- Daimler-Benz DB 670
- Daimler-Benz DB 720 (PTL 6)
- Daimler-Benz DB 721 (PTL 10)[67]
- Daimler-Benz DB 730 (ZTL 6)[31][67]
- Daimler-Benz 109-007 (Turbofan)[31]
- Daimler-Benz 109-016 (Turbojet)
- Daimler-Benz 109-021 (Turbojet)
- Daimler-Benz PTL 6[10]
- Daimler-Benz PTL 10[67]
- Daimler-Benz ZTL 6[31]
- Daimler-Benz ZTL 6000
- Daimler-Benz ZTL 6001
- Daimler-Benz ZTL 109-007
- Daimler F7502
- Daimler-Versuchmotor F7506
- Daimler D.IIIb - (V-8, not related to Mercedes D.III)
- Mercedes 50hp 4-cyl in-line[2]
- Mercedes 60hp 4-cyl in-line 110 mm × 140 mm (4.3 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Mercedes 70hp 4-cyl in-line inverted 120 mm × 140 mm (4.7 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Mercedes 80hp 6-cyl in-line 105 mm × 140 mm (4.1 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Mercedes 90hp 4-cyl in-line 140 mm × 150 mm (5.5 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Mercedes 120hp 4-cyl in-line (airship engine) 175 mm × 165 mm (6.9 in × 6.5 in)[2]
- Mercedes 160hp 6-cyl in-line 140 mm × 160 mm (5.5 in × 6.3 in)[2]
- Mercedes 180hp 6-cyl in-line 160 mm × 180 mm (6.3 in × 7.1 in)[2]
- Mercedes 240hp 8-cyl in-line 140 mm × 160 mm (5.5 in × 6.3 in)[2]
- Mercedes 240hp V-8 (airship engine) 175 mm × 165 mm (6.9 in × 6.5 in)[2]
- Mercedes 260hp 6-cyl in-line 160 mm × 180 mm (6.3 in × 7.1 in)[2]
- Mercedes 650hp V-12 235 mm × 250 mm (9.3 in × 9.8 in)[2]
- Mercedes Typ E4F 70hp 120 mm × 140 mm (4.7 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Mercedes Typ E6F 100hp 120 mm × 140 mm (4.7 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Mercedes Typ J4L 120hp 160 mm × 170 mm (6.3 in × 6.7 in)[2]
- Mercedes Typ J8L 240hp V-8 160 mm × 170 mm (6.3 in × 6.7 in)[2]
- Mercedes W-18 [2]
- Mercedes Fh 1256
- Mercedes D.I
- Mercedes D.II
- Mercedes D.III
- Mercedes D.IIIa
- Mercedes D.IIIaü
- Mercedes D.IIIav
- Mercedes D.IV
- Mercedes D.IVa
Damblanc-Mutti
Daniel
(Daniel Engine Company)
- Daniel 7-cyl rotary[2]
Dansette-Gillet
- Dansette-Gillet Type A 45hp 4-cyl in-line 105 mm × 160 mm (4.1 in × 6.3 in)[27]
- Dansette-Gillet Type C 32hp 4-cyl in-line 98 mm × 125 mm (3.9 in × 4.9 in)[27]
- Dansette-Gillet Type D 70hp 4-cyl in-line 130 mm × 160 mm (5.1 in × 6.3 in)[27]
- Dansette-Gillet 100hp 6-cyl in-line 130 mm × 160 mm (5.1 in × 6.3 in)[27]
- Dansette-Gillet 120hp V-8 114 mm × 160 mm (4.5 in × 6.3 in)[27]
- Dansette-Gillet 200hp 6-cyl in-line 180 mm × 200 mm (7.1 in × 7.9 in)[27]
Darracq
( Société Anonyme Darracq ) Data from:[19]
Dassault
(Générale Aéronautique Marcel Dassault)
- Dassault MD.30 Viper
- Dassault R.7 Farandole[21]
Day
(Charles Day)
- Day 25hp 5-cyl[2]
Dayton
(Dayton Airplane Engine Co.)
- Dayton Bear[29]
de Dietrich
- de Dietrich 4-cyl in-line[2]
de Dion-Bouton
de Havilland
Sources: Piston engines, Lumsden,[3] gas turbine and rocket engines, Gunston.[15]
Piston engines
Gas turbines
Rockets
de Laval
- de Laval T42
Deicke
(Arthur Deicke)
Delafontaine
- Delafontaine Diesel – seven-cylinder air-cooled
Delage
- Delage 12C.E.D.irs[69][70]
- Delage Gvis
DeltaHawk
Demont
(Messrs Demont, Puteaux, France)
- Demont 300hp 6-cyl double acting rotary 175 mm × 80 mm (6.9 in × 3.1 in)[2]
Deschamps
Data from:[19] (D.J.Deschampsdesigner – Lambert Engine & machine Co.,Illinois manufacturer)
- Deschamps v-12 inverted 2-stroke diesel
Detroit Aero
- Detroit Aero 25-30hp 2OA[2]
DGEN
- DGEN 380[71]
Diamond Engines
- Diamond Engines GIAE 50R
- Diamond Engines GIAE 75R
- Diamond Engines GIAE-110R
Diemech Turbine Solutions
(DeLand, Florida, United States)
- Diemech TJ 100
- Diemech TP 100
Diesel Air
(Diesel Air Limited, Olney, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom)
DKW
(A.G.-Werk DKW, Zschopau S.a.)
- DKW FL 600W[72]
Doble-Besler
- Doble-Besler V-2 steam engine
Dobrotvorskiy
- Dobrotvorskiy MB-100
- Dobrotvorskiy MB-102
Dobrynin
Source:Gunston[15]
Dongan
(a.k.a. Harbin Engine Factory)
Dodge
- Dodge 125hp 6-cyl rotary Victory 5 in × 6 in (130 mm × 150 mm)[2]
Dongan
(a.k.a. Harbin Engine Factory)
Dodge
- Dodge 125hp 6-cyl rotary 5 in × 6 in (130 mm × 150 mm)[2]
Dorman
(W. H. Dorman and Co., Ltd)
Douglas
Douseler
- Douseler 40hp 4-cyl in-line[2]
Dreher
(Dreher Engineering Company)
Duesenberg
(Fred Duesenberg / Duesenberg Motors Corporation, elizabeth, New Jersey)
- Duesenberg Special A[76]
- Duesenberg Special A3[76]
- Duesenberg H 850 hp V-16 6 in × 7.5 in (150 mm × 190 mm)[2][9][76]
- Duesenberg 100hp 4-cyl. direct drive in-line 4.75 in × 7 in (121 mm × 178 mm)[2]
- Duesenberg 125hp 4-cyl. geared in-line 4.75 in × 7 in (121 mm × 178 mm)[2][9][76]
- Duesenberg 300hp V-12 4.875 in × 7 in (123.8 mm × 177.8 mm)[2][9][76]
- Duesenberg A-44 70hp 4-cyl 4.375 in × 6 in (111.1 mm × 152.4 mm)[2]
Dufaux
- Dufaux 5-cyl tandem double-acting in-line engine[2]
Dushkin
(Leonid Dushkin)
- Dushkin D-1-A-1100
- Dushkin RD-A-150
- Dushkin RD-A-300
- Dushkin S-155
- Dushkin RD-2M
Dutheil et Chalmers
Data from:[19] (some sources erroneously as Duthiel-Chambers)
- Dutheil et Chalmers 20hp O-2 125 mm × 120 mm (4.9 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- Dutheil et Chalmers 25hp O-2 128 mm × 130 mm (5.0 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Dutheil et Chalmers 37.25hp O-2 110 mm × 300 mm (4.3 in × 11.8 in)[2]
- Dutheil et Chalmers 40hp O-4 125 mm × 120 mm (4.9 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- Dutheil et Chalmers 50hp O-4
- Dutheil et Chalmers 60hp O-6 125 mm × 120 mm (4.9 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- Dutheil et Chalmers 72.5hp O-6 128 mm × 130 mm (5.0 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Dutheil et Chalmers 76hp O-4
- Dutheil et Chalmers 38hp OP-2
- Dutheil et Chalmers 56.5hp O-3 110 mm × 300 mm (4.3 in × 11.8 in)[2]
- Dutheil et Chalmers 75hp O-4 110 mm × 300 mm (4.3 in × 11.8 in)[2]
- Dutheil et Chalmers 97hp O-4 125 mm × 300 mm (4.9 in × 11.8 in)[2]
- Dutheil et Chalmers 100hp O-4 160 mm × 140 mm (6.3 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Dutheil et Chalmers 72.5hp O-6 128 mm × 130 mm (5.0 in × 5.1 in)[2]
Dux
- Dux Hypocycle[57]
Dyna-Cam
E
Easton
Data from:[19]
ECi
(Engine Components Inc.)
- ECi O-320
- ECi Titan X320
- ECi Titan X340
- ECi Titan X370
Ecofly
(Ecofly GmbH, Böhl-Iggelheim, Germany)
Edelweiss
Eggenfellner Aircraft
E.J.C.
Elbridge
(Elbridge Engine Company)
- Elbridge A 2IW 6-10hp 3.75 in × 3.5 in (95 mm × 89 mm)[2]
- Elbridge C 3IW 18-30hp 4.625 in × 4.5 in (117.5 mm × 114.3 mm)[2]
- Elbridge 4-cyl 4IW 4.625 in × 4.5 in (117.5 mm × 114.3 mm)[2]
- Elbridge Featherweight 3-cyl 3IW 30-40hp 4.625 in × 4.5 in (117.5 mm × 114.3 mm)[2]
- Elbridge Featherweight 4-cyl 4IW 40-60hp 4.625 in × 4.5 in (117.5 mm × 114.3 mm)[2]
- Elbridge Featherweight 6-cyl 6IW 60-90hp 4.625 in × 4.5 in (117.5 mm × 114.3 mm)[2]
- Elbridge Aero Special 4IW 50-60hp 4.625 in × 4.5 in (117.5 mm × 114.3 mm)[2]
Electravia
(Vaumeilh, France)
Electric Aircraft Corporation
(Cliffside Park, New Jersey, United States)
Elektromechanische Werke
Elizalde SA
Source:Gunston[15]
- Elizalde A
- Elizalde A6?
- Elizalde Dragon
- Elizalde Super Dragon[35]
- Elizalde Sirio
- Elizalde Tigre IV
- Elizalde Tigre VI[6]
- Elizalde Tigre VIII[6]
- Elizalde Tigre XII[6]
Ellehammer
(Jacob Christian Hansen Ellehammer)
- Elllehammer 3-cyl radial
- Elllehammer 5-cyl radial
- Elllehammer rotary engine[2]
Emerson
- Emerson 100hp 6-cyl[2]
EMG
(EMG Engineering Company / Eugene M. Gluhareff)
Emrax
(Emrax d.o.o., Kamnik, Slovenia, formerly known as Enstroj of Radomlje)
Endicott
- Endicott 60hp 3-cyl 2-stroke[2]
Engine Alliance
Engineered Propulsion Systems
(Engineered Propulsion Systems)
Engineering Division
ENMA
(Empresea Nacional de motores de Aviacion S.A.)
- ENMA Alcion[10][11]
- ENMA Beta
- ENMA Flecha[10][11]
- ENMA Sirio[11]
- ENMA Tigre
- ENMA A-1 Alcion[10][11]
- ENMA F-IV Flecha[10][11]
- ENMA Flecha F.1[10][11]
- ENMA Sirio S2[10]
- ENMA Sirio S3[10]
- ENMA S-VII Sirio[11]
- ENMA 4.(2L)-00-93[10]
- ENMA 7.E-CR.15-275[10]
- ENMA 7.E-C20-500[10]
- ENMA 7.E-CR20-600[10]
- ENMA 7.E-CR.15-275[10]
- ENMA 7.E-CR.15-275[10]
- ENMA 9.E-C.29-775[10]
E.N.V.
(London & Parisian Motor Company / E.N.V. Motor Syndicate Ltd.)
- E.N.V. Type A 50hp @ 1,000rpm 100 mm × 130 mm (3.94 in × 5.12 in)[78][3]
- E.N.V. Type C 65hp @ 1,180rpm 100 mm × 130 mm (3.94 in × 5.12 in)[78][3]
- E.N.V. Type D 40hp @ 1,400rpm 85 mm × 90 mm (3.35 in × 3.54 in)[78][3]
- E.N.V. Type F 88hp @ 1,500rpm 105 mm × 110 mm (4.13 in × 4.33 in)[78][3]
- E.N.V. Type FA (France only) 88hp @ 1,500rpm 105 mm × 110 mm (4.13 in × 4.33 in)[78][3]
- E.N.V. Type H (O-4) 90 mm × 90 mm (3.54 in × 3.54 in)[3][78]
- E.N.V. Type T 100hp @ 1,000rpm 130 mm × 150 mm (5.12 in × 5.91 in)[78][3]
- E.N.V. 40hp V-8 85 mm × 90 mm (3.35 in × 3.54 in)[2]
- E.N.V. 62hp V-8 105 mm × 110 mm (4.13 in × 4.33 in)[2]
- E.N.V. 75hp V-8 100 mm × 130 mm (3.94 in × 5.12 in)[2]
- E.N.V. 100hp V-8 100hp @1,620rpm 95 mm × 165 mm (3.74 in × 6.50 in)[78][2]
- E.N.V. 1914 100hp V-8[3]
- E.N.V. 1909 25/30hp O-4 24hp @ 1,200rpm 109 mm × 110 mm (4.29 in × 4.33 in)[78][3]
- E.N.V. 1910 30hp O-4 30hp @ 1,200rpm 80 mm × 120 mm (3.15 in × 4.72 in)[78][3]
ERCO
Esselbé
- Esselbé 65hp 7-cyl rotary 110 mm × 120 mm (4.33 in × 4.72 in)[2]
Etoile
- Etoile 400hp[2]
Eurojet
Source:Gunston[15]
Europrop
F
F&S
- F&S K 8 B
Fahlin
- Fahlin Plymouth conversion[35]
Fairchild
(Fairchild Engine & Airplane Corporation)
- For Ranger / Fairchild Ranger engines see: Ranger
Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Fairchild Caminez 4-cylinder[79][29]
- Fairchild Caminez 8 cylinder[79]
- Fairchild J44
- Fairchild J63
- Fairchild J83
- Fairchild T46
Fairdiesel
Fairey
Source: Lumsden[3]
Falconer
(Ryan Falconer Racing Engines)
- Falconer L-6
- Falconer V-12
Farcot
Farina
(S.A. Stabilimenti Farina)
Farman
Source:Liron[80][81] Note: Farman engine designations differ from other French manufacturers in using the attributes as the basis of the designation, thus; Farman 7E ( 7-cyl radial E - Etoile / Star / Radial) or Farman 12We ( W-12 fifth type - the e is not a variant or sub-variant it is the type designator). As usual there are exceptions such as the 12Gvi, 12B, 12C and 18T.
- Farman 7E
- Farman 8V 200hp[2]
- Farman 8Va
- Farman 8Vi
- Farman 9E
- Farman 9EA
- Farman 9EArs
- Farman 9EB[30]
- Farman 9EBr
- 8Farman 9ECr
- Farman 9FBr
- Farman 12B
- Farman 12Bfs
- Farman 12Brs
- Farman 12C
- Farman 12Crs[30]
- Farman 12Crvi
- Farman 12D
- Farman 12Drs
- Farman 12G inverted V-12 350 hp
- Farman 12Goi
- Farman 12Gvi
- Farman 12V
- Farman 12Va
- Farman 12W
- Farman 12Wa 40° W-12 1919
- Farman 12Wb
- Farman 12Wc
- Farman 12Wd
- Farman 12We
- Farman 12Wh
- Farman 12Wiars
- Farman 12Wirs
- Farman 12Wkrs
- Farman 12Wkrsc
- Farman 12Wl
- Farman 18T
- Farman 18W
- Farman 18WA 120 mm × 180 mm (4.7 in × 7.1 in), 450 kW (600 hp)[2]
- Farman 18WD
- Farman 18WE 130 mm × 160 mm (5.1 in × 6.3 in), 520 kW (700 hp)
- Farman 18W.I. 110 mm × 125 mm (4.3 in × 4.9 in), 370 kW (500 hp)
- Farman 18W.I.rs
Fasey
- Fasey 200hp V-12 127 mm × 127 mm (5.0 in × 5.0 in)[2]
Fatava
(Favata?)[27]
Faure and Crayssac
Fedden
(Roy Fedden Ltd.)
- Fedden Cotswold
- Fedden 6A1D-325 (185hp 6HO)[6][1]
- Fedden G6A1D-325 (geared)[6][1] 6AID-325?
Fiat
Data from:Italian Civil & Military Aircraft 1930–1945[18]
- Fiat twin Airship engine[9]
- Fiat V-8 ca. 1919 400 hp?[9]
- Fiat SA8/75 (50hp V-8 air-cooled) 110 mm × 105 mm (4.3 in × 4.1 in)[2] 1908[82]
- Fiat S.54[1]
- Fiat S.55 (V-8 water-cooled 1912)[82][1]
- Fiat S.56A[1]
- Fiat S.76A[1]
- Fiat A.10
- Fiat A.12
- Fiat A.14
- Fiat A.15[2]
- Fiat A.16[2]
- Fiat A.18[2]
- Fiat A.20
- Fiat A.22
- Fiat A.24
- Fiat A.25
- Fiat A.30
- Fiat A.33[1]
- Fiat A.33 R.C.35[1]
- Fiat A.38 R.C.15/45[6]
- Fiat A.50
- Fiat A.52[6]
- Fiat A.53
- Fiat A.54
- Fiat A.55[35]
- Fiat A.58[35]
- Fiat A.58 C.
- Fiat A.58 R.C.
- Fiat A.59
- Fiat A.59 R.
- Fiat A.60
- Fiat A.70[30]
- Fiat A.70 S.
- Fiat A.74
- Fiat A.76
- Fiat A.78[35]
- Fiat A.80
- Fiat A.82
- Fiat A.82 R.C.42S
- Fiat A.83
- Fiat A.83 R.C.24/52[6]
- Fiat AS.2 Schneider Trophy 1926
- Fiat AS.3
- Fiat AS.5 Schneider Trophy 1929
- Fiat AS.6 Schneider Trophy 1931
- Fiat AS.8
- Fiat RA.1000
- Fiat RA.1050 R.C.58 Tifone
- Fiat ANA Diesel – six in-line, water-cooled – 220 hp
- Fiat AN.1 Diesel
- Fiat AN.2 Diesel
- Fiat 4002[14]
- Fiat 4004
- Fiat 4023
- Fiat 4024
- Fiat 4032[14]
- Fiat 4301
- Fiat 4700
- Fiat D.16[1]
Firewall Forward Aero Engines
FKFS
(Forschungsinstitut für Kraftfahrwesen und Fahrzeugmotoren Stuttgart - Research Institute of Automotive Engineering and Vehicle Engines Stuttgart)
Flader
Source:Geen and Cross[84]
- Flader J55[84] Type 124 Lieutenant
- Flader T33[84] Type 125? Brigadier
Fletcher
FNM
(Fábrica Nacional de Motores)
Ford
- Ford O-145
- 4 Cylinder X engine
- 8 Cylinder X engine
- Ford PJ31 Pulsejet, see Republic-Ford JB-2
- Ford V-1650 Liberty V-12
Fox
(Dean Manufacturing Company, Newport, Kentucky)
- Fox 45hp 3-cyl in-line 2-stroke 4 in × 4 in (100 mm × 100 mm)[2]
- Fox 36hp 4-cyl in-line 2-stroke 3.5 in × 3.5 in (89 mm × 89 mm)[2]
- Fox 60hp 4-cyl in-line 2-stroke 4 in × 4 in (100 mm × 100 mm)[2]
- Fox 90hp 6-cyl in-line 2-stroke 4 in × 4 in (100 mm × 100 mm)[2]
- Fox 200hp 8-cyl in-line 2-stroke 6 in × 6 in (150 mm × 150 mm)[2]
- Fox De-luxe 50hp 4-cyl in-line 2-stroke 4.75 in × 4.25 in (121 mm × 108 mm)[2]
Franklin
Source:Gunston.[15]
- Franklin 2A4-45
- Franklin 2A4-49
- Franklin 2A-110
- Franklin 2A-120
- Franklin 2AL-112
- Franklin 4A-225
- Franklin 4A-235
- Franklin 4A4-100
- Franklin 4A4-75
- Franklin 4A4-85
- Franklin 4A4-95
- Franklin 4AC-150
- Franklin 4AC-171
- Franklin 4AC-176
- Franklin 4AC-199
- Franklin 4AC
- Franklin 4ACG-176
- Franklin 4ACG-199
- Franklin 4AL-225
- Franklin 6A-335
- Franklin 6A-350
- Franklin 6A3
- Franklin 6A4
- Franklin 6A4-125
- Franklin 6A4-130
- Franklin 6A4-135
- Franklin 6A4-140
- Franklin 6A4-145
- Franklin 6A4-150
- Franklin 6A4-165
- Franklin 6A4-200
- Franklin 6A8-215
- Franklin 6A8-225-B8
- Franklin 6AC-264
- Franklin 6AC-298
- Franklin 6AC-403
- Franklin 6ACG-264
- Franklin 6ACG-298
- Franklin 6ACGA-403
- Franklin 6ACGSA-403
- Franklin 6ACSA-403
- Franklin 6ACT-298
- Franklin 6ACTS-298
- Franklin 6ACV-245
- Franklin 6ACV-298
- Franklin 6ACV-403 (O-405? most likely company designation)
- Franklin 6AG-335
- Franklin 6AG4-185
- Franklin 6AG6-245
- Franklin 6AGS-335
- Franklin 6AGS6-245
- Franklin 6AL-315
- Franklin 6AL-335
- Franklin 6AL-500
- Franklin 6ALG-315
- Franklin 6ALV-335
- Franklin 6AS-335
- Franklin 6AS-350
- Franklin 6V-335-A
- Franklin 6V-335-A1A
- Franklin 6V-335-A1B
- Franklin 6V-335-B
- Franklin 6V-335
- Franklin 6V-350
- Franklin 6V4
- Franklin 6V4-165
- Franklin 6V4-178
- Franklin 6V4-200
- Franklin 6V4-335
- Franklin 6V6-245-B16F
- Franklin 6V6-245
- Franklin 6V6-300-D16FT
- Franklin 6V6-300
- Franklin 6VS-335
- Franklin 8AC-398
- Franklin 8ACG-398
- Franklin 8ACG-538
- Franklin 8ACGSA-538
- Franklin 8ACSA-538
- Franklin 12AC-596
- Franklin 12AC-806
- Franklin 12ACG-596
- Franklin 12ACG-806
- Franklin 12ACGSA-806
- Franklin O-150
- Franklin O-170
- Franklin O-175
- Franklin O-180 (Franklin 4AC-176-F3)
- Franklin O-200
- Franklin O-300
- Franklin O-335
- Franklin O-405
- Franklin O-425-13
- Franklin O-425-2
- Franklin O-425-9
- Franklin O-425
- Franklin O-540
- Franklin O-595
- Franklin O-805
- Franklin Sport 4
Fredrickson
(World's Motor Company, Bloomington, Illinois)
Frontier
(Frontier Iron Works, Buffalo, New York)
Fuji
(Fuji Jukogyo Kabushiki Kaisha - Fuji heavy industries Co. Ltd.)
Fuscaldo
- Fuscaldo 90hp[85]
Funk
(Akron Aircraft Company / Funk Aircraft Company)
- Funk Model E
G
Gaggenau
- Gaggenau 4-cyl in-line[2]
Galloway
(Galloway Engineering Company ltd.)
Garrett
(Garrett AiResearch) Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
Now under Honeywell management/design/production
- AiResearch GTC 85[45] Gas generator for McDonnell 120
- AiResearch GTP 30[45][22]
- AiResearch GTP 70[45][22]
- AiResearch GTP 331[45]
- AiResearch GTG series
- AiResearch GTU series
- AiResearch GTCP 36[45]
- AiResearch GTCP 85[45][22]
- AiResearch GTCP 95[45]
- AiResearch GTCP 105[45][22]
- AiResearch GTCP 165[45]
- AiResearch GTCP 660[45]
- AiResearch TPE-331
- AiResearch TSE-331[22]
- AiResearch TSE-231
- AiResearch ETJ-131
- AiResearch ETJ-331
- AiResearch TJE-341
- AiResearch 600
- AiResearch 700
- Garrett ATF3
- Garrett TFE1042
- Garrett TFE1088
- Garrett TFE76
- Garrett TFE731
- Garrett TSE331
- Garrett TPE331
- Garrett TPF351
- Garrett T76
- Garrett F104
- Garrett F109
- Garrett F124
- Garrett F125
- Garrett JFS 100-13A[86]
Garuff
- Garuff A – aircraft diesel engine
GE Honda Aero Engines
Geiger Engineering
(Seigendorf, Hirschaid, Oberfranken, Germany)
- Geiger HDP 10
- Geiger HDP 12
- Geiger HDP 13.5
- Geiger HDP 16
- Geiger HDP 25
- Geiger HDP 32
- Geiger HDP 50
GEN Corporation
(Japan)
General Aircraft Ltd.
General Electric
- General Electric 7E
- General Electric CF6
- General Electric CF34
- General Electric CF700
- General Electric CFE738
- General Electric CJ610
- General Electric CJ805
- General Electric CJ810[21]
- General Electric CT7
- General Electric CT58[45]
- General Electric CTF39
- General Electric GE1[45]
- General Electric GE4[45]
- General Electric GE1/10[45]
- General Electric GE15
- General Electric GE27
- General Electric GE36 (UDF)
- General Electric GE37
- General Electric GE38
- General Electric GE90
- General Electric GE9X
- General Electric GEnx
- General Electric H75
- General Electric H80
- General Electric H85
- General Electric I-A
- General Electric I-16
- General Electric I-20
- General Electric/Allison I-40
- General Electric TG-100
- General Electric TG-110
- General Electric/Allison TG-180
- General Electric TG-190
- General Electric X39
- General Electric X211
- General Electric X24A
- General Electric X84
- General Electric X353-5
- General Electric F101
- General Electric F103
- General Electric F108
- General Electric F110
- General Electric F118
- General Electric F120
- General Electric F127
- General Electric F128
- General Electric F136
- General Electric F138
- General Electric F400
- General Electric F404
- General Electric T407
- General Electric F412
- General Electric F414
- General Electric F700
- General Electric J31
- General Electric J33
- General Electric J35
- General Electric J39
- General Electric J47
- General Electric J53
- General Electric J73
- General Electric J77
- General Electric J79
- General Electric J85
- General Electric J87
- General Electric J93[45]
- General Electric J97
- General Electric J101 (GE15)
- General Electric JT12A[45]
- General Electric T31
- General Electric T41
- General Electric T58
- General Electric T64[45]
- General Electric T407
- General Electric T408
- General Electric T700 (GE12)
- General Electric T708
- General Electric TF31
- General Electric TF34
- General Electric TF35
- General Electric TF37
- General Electric TF39[45]
General Electric/Rolls-Royce
General Motors Research
- General Motors Research X-250[41]
General Ordnance
(General Ordnance Company, Derby, Conn.)
Giannini
Glushenkov
Source:Gunston.[15]
- Glushenkov TVD-10
- Glushenkov TVD-20
- Glushenkov GTD-3
Gnome et Rhône
Source:[15][19] except where noted
- Gnome 1906 25hp rotary – prototype Gnome rotary engine
- Gnome 34hp 5-cyl rotary 100 mm × 100 mm (3.9 in × 3.9 in)[19][2]
- Gnome 123hp 14-cyl rotary 110 mm × 120 mm (4.33 in × 4.73 in)[19]
- Gnome 1907 50hp
- Gnome 7 Gamma 70hp 130 mm × 120 mm (5.1 in × 4.7 in)[2][3]
- Gnome 14 Gamma-Gamma[3][2]
- Gnome 9 Delta 100hp 124 mm × 150 mm (4.9 in × 5.9 in)[2][3]
- Gnome 18 Delta-Delta 200hp[2]
- Gnome 7 Lambda 80hp 124 mm × 140 mm (4.9 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Gnome 14 Lambda-Lambda 160hp[2]
- Gnome 7 Sigma 60hp 120 mm × 120 mm (4.7 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- Gnome 14 Sigma-Sigma 120hp[2]
- Gnome 7 Omega 50hp 110 mm × 120 mm (4.3 in × 4.7 in)[2][3]
- Gnome 14 Omega-Omega 100hp[3][2]
- Gnome Monosoupape 7 Type A 80hp 110 mm × 150 mm (4.3 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Gnome Monosoupape 9 Type B-2 100hp 110 mm × 150 mm (4.3 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Gnome Monosoupape 11 Type C 190hp 115 mm × 170 mm (4.5 in × 6.7 in)[2]
- Gnome Monosoupape 9 Type N 165/170hp 115 mm × 170 mm (4.5 in × 6.7 in)[2]
- Gnome Monosoupape 18 Type Double-N 300hp[2]
- Gnome 600hp 20-cyl radial 140 mm × 170 mm (5.5 in × 6.7 in)[2]
- Gnome-Rhône 5B
- Gnome-Rhône 5K Titan
- Gnome-Rhône 7K Titan Major
- Gnome-Rhône 9A Jupiter
- Gnome-Rhône 9K Mistral
- Gnome-Rhône 14K Mistral Major
- Gnome-Rhône 14M Mars
- Gnome-Rhône 14N
- Gnome-Rhône 14P
- Gnome-Rhône 14R
- Gnome-Rhône 18L
- Gnome-Rhône 18R
- Gnome-Rhône 28T[41]
Gobe
- Gobe 2-stroke engine[2]
Gobrón-Brillié
(Gustave Gobrón and Eugène Brillié)
Goebel
(Georg Goebel of Darmstadt) / (ver Gandenbergesche Maschinen Fabrik)
- Goebel 2-cyl. 20/25hp HOA[1]
- Goebel Type II 100/110hp 7-cyl. rotary 138 mm × 150 mm (5.4 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Goebel Type III 200/230hp 9-cyl. rotary 138 mm × 290 mm (5.4 in × 11.4 in)[2]
- Goebel Type V 50/60hp 7-cyl. rotary 105 mm × 105 mm (4.1 in × 4.1 in)[2]
- Goebel Type VI 30/40hp 7-cyl. rotary 94 mm × 95 mm (3.7 in × 3.7 in)[2]
- Goebel 170hp 9-cyl rotary[1]
- Goebel 170hp 11-cyl rotary[1]
- Goebel 180hp 11-cyl rotary[1]
Grade
(Hans Grade)
Great Plains Aviation Supply
(Bennington, Nebraska, United States)
Green
(Green Engine Co Ltd./ Gustavius Green)
- Green 32hp 4-cyl in-line 4.13 in × 4.73 in (105 mm × 120 mm)[78]
- Green 60hp 4-cyl in-line 5.52 in × 5.75 in (140 mm × 146 mm)[78]
- Green 82hp V-8 4.57 in × 5.52 in (116 mm × 140 mm)[2][3][78]
- Green C.4
- Green D.4
- Green E.6
- Green 150hp 6-cyl in-line 5.59 in × 7.01 in (142 mm × 178 mm)[2]
- Green 260-275hp V-12 1914[3]
- Green 300hp V-12 5.59 in × 7.01 in (142 mm × 178 mm)[2][9][78]
- Green 450hp W-18 5.59 in × 7.01 in (142 mm × 178 mm)[2] 1914[9][78]
Grégoire-Gyp
(Pierre Joseph Grégoire / Automobiles Grégoire)
Grey Eagle
Grizodubov
(S.V. Grizodubov)
- Grizodubov 1910 40hp 4-cyl.[57]
Guiberson
(Guiberson Diesel Engine Company) Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Guiberson A-918[35]
- Guiberson A-980 – 210 hp (160 kW)[35]
- Guiberson A-1020 – 340 hp (250 kW)[35]
- Guiberson T-1020 - 210 hp (160 kW) (tank engine?)[35]
- Guiberson T-1400 - 250 hp (190 kW) (tank engine)[6]
Guizhou
Gyro
( Gyro Motor Company, 774 Girard Street, NW, Washington DC)[91]
H
Haacke
(Haacke Flugmotoren)Source: RMV[1]
- Haacke HFM 2 - 2cyl. 25/28 hp 112 mm × 140 mm (4.4 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Haacke HFM 2a - 2cyl. 35 hp 120 mm × 140 mm (4.7 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Haacke HFM 3 - 3cyl. fan 40 hp[2]
- Haacke 55/60hp 5-cyl. radial[2]
- Haacke 60/70hp radial[2]
- Haacke 90hp 7-cyl. radial[2]
- Haacke 120hp 10-cyl. radial[2]
HAL
(Hindustan Aeronautics Limited)
- HAL HPE-2
- HAL PTAE-7
- HAL HJE-2500
- HAL HTSE-1200
Hall-Scott
(Hall-Scott Motor Car Co)
- Hall-Scott 60 hp (A-2?)
- Hall-Scott A-1[92][2][15]
- Hall-Scott A-2 90° V-8 60hp 4 in × 4 in (100 mm × 100 mm)[2][15]
- Hall-Scott A-3 90° V-8 80hp 4 in × 5 in (100 mm × 130 mm)[2][15]
- Hall-Scott A-4 90° V-8 100hp 5 in × 5 in (130 mm × 130 mm)[2][15]
- Hall-Scott A-5 6-cyl in-line 125hp 5 in × 7 in (130 mm × 180 mm)[2][15]
- Hall-Scott A-5a 6-cyl in-line 150hp 5.25 in × 7 in (133 mm × 178 mm)[2][15]
- Hall-Scott A-7 4-cyl in-line 90/100hp 5 in × 7 in (130 mm × 180 mm)[2][15]
- Hall-Scott A-7a 4-cyl in-line 100hp 5.25 in × 7 in (133 mm × 178 mm)[2][15]
- Hall-Scott A-8 60° V-12 450/500hp 5 in × 7 in (130 mm × 180 mm)[2][15]
- Hall-Scott L-4 (Liberty 4-cyl) 125hp 5 in × 7 in (130 mm × 180 mm)[2][15]
- Hall-Scott L-6 (Liberty 6-cyl) 225hp 5 in × 7 in (130 mm × 180 mm)[2][9][15]
Hallett
(Hallett Aero Motors Corp, Inglewood CA.)
- Hallett H-526 7-cyl radial 130hp[29]
Hamilton
- Hamilton DOHC V-8[2]
Hamilton Sundstrand
- Sundstrand T100
Hansa-Lloyd
(Hansa-LLoyd Werke AG)
- Hansa-LLoyd V-16[2]
Hansen-Snow
(W.G. Hansen & L.L. Snow, Pasadena, CA)
- Hansen-Snow 35hp 4-cyl in-line 4 in × 4.5 in (100 mm × 110 mm)[2]
Hardy-Padmore
- Hardy-Padmore 100hp 5-cyl rqdial 4 in × 4 in (100 mm × 100 mm)[2]
Harkness
(Donald (Don) Harkness, built by Harkness & Hillier Ltd)
Harriman
(Harriman Motors Company, South Glastonbury, Conn.)
Harris-Gassner
- Harris-Gassner 50/60hp V-8[2]
Harroun
(Ray Harroun)
- Harroun 24hp 2-cyl HOA 4 in × 4 in (100 mm × 100 mm)[2]
Hart
Hartland
- Hartland 125hp
Hatsukaze
H.C.G.
(Les Établissements lipton)
- H.C.G. 2-cyl HOA[16]
Heath
(Heath Aircraft Corp)
Heath
(Heath Aerial Vehicle Company, Chicago Illinois)
- Heath 25/30hp 4-cyl in-line[2]
Heath-Henderson
Heinkel
(Heinkel-Hirth Motorenwerke) Source:[15]
- Heinkel HeS 1
- Heinkel HeS 2
- Heinkel HeS 3
- Heinkel HeS 6[31]
- Heinkel HeS 8
- Heinkel HeS 9[31]
- Heinkel HeS 10[31]
- Heinkel HeS 11[31]
- Heinkel HeS 21[31]
- Heinkel HeS 30[31]
- Heinkel HeS 35[31]
- Heinkel HeS 36[31]
- Heinkel HeS 40[31]
- Heinkel HeS 50d[31]
- Heinkel HeS 50z[31]
- Heinkel HeS 053[14]
- Heinkel HeS 60[31]
- Heinkel 109-001
- Heinkel 109-006
- Heinkel 109-011
- Heinkel 109-021
Helium
- Helium 45hp 3-cyl radial 90 mm × 90 mm (3.5 in × 3.5 in)[27]
- Helium 60hp 3-cyl radial 100 mm × 100 mm (3.9 in × 3.9 in)[27]
- Helium 75hp 5-cyl radial 90 mm × 90 mm (3.5 in × 3.5 in)[27]
- Helium 100hp 5-cyl radial 100 mm × 100 mm (3.9 in × 3.9 in)[27]
- Helium 45hp 3-cyl rotary 2-stroke 90 mm × 90 mm (3.5 in × 3.5 in)[27]
- Helium 60hp 3-cyl rotary 2-stroke 100 mm × 100 mm (3.9 in × 3.9 in)[27]
- Helium 100hp 5-cyl rotary 2-stroke 100 mm × 100 mm (3.9 in × 3.9 in)[27]
- Helium 120hp 6-cyl rotary 2-stroke 100 mm × 100 mm (3.9 in × 3.9 in)[27]
- Helium 200hp 10-cyl rotary 2-stroke 100 mm × 100 mm (3.9 in × 3.9 in)[27]
- Helium 120hp 6-cyl rotary 2-stroke 100 mm × 100 mm (3.9 in × 3.9 in)[27]
- Helium 200hp 10-cyl rotary 2-stroke 100 mm × 100 mm (3.9 in × 3.9 in)[27]
Helwan
- Helwan E-300
Hendee
(Hendee Mfg Co| / Indian (motorcycle))
Henderson
(Henderson Motorcycle Company)
- Henderson 6hp 4-cyl in-line 2.375 in × 2.1875 in (60.33 mm × 55.56 mm)[2]
Herman
- Herman 45hp
- Herman 70hp
Hermes Engine Company
Hewland
Hexatron Engineering Co., Inc.
- Hexadyne P60
- Hexadyne O-49
Hiero
(Otto Hieronimus – designer – several manufacturers)
- Hiero 50/60hp 4-cyl in-line (1908/1909)[2]
- Hiero 6 – generic title for all the Hiero 6-cyl. engines
- Hiero B
- Hiero C
- Hiero D
- Hiero E 200 hp (149.1 kW) - 230 hp (171.5 kW)
- Hiero L 172 kW (231 hp)
- Hiero N
- Hiero 85/95hp 4-cyl in-line 130 mm × 150 mm (5.1 in × 5.9 in)[2][93]
- Hiero 145hp 145 hp (108.1 kW) (probably designated Hiero B or Hiero C )[94]
- Hiero 185hp 185 hp (138.0 kW) (probably designated Hiero D)
- Hiero 180/190hp 4-cyl inline 160 mm × 150 mm (6.3 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Hiero 200hp 6-cyl inline 135 mm × 180 mm (5.3 in × 7.1 in)[2][94]
- Hiero 230/240hp 6-cyl inline 140 mm × 180 mm (5.5 in × 7.1 in)[2]
- Hiero 240/250hp 6-cyl inline HC 135 mm × 180 mm (5.3 in × 7.1 in)[2]
- Hiero 200/220hp V-8[2][94]
- Hiero 300/320hp 6-cyl inline 155 mm × 200 mm (6.1 in × 7.9 in)[2]
- Hiero 270/280hp 6-cyl inline 160 mm × 150 mm (6.3 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Hiero 35/40hp 2-cyl HOA 140 mm × 180 mm (5.5 in × 7.1 in)[2]
Hiller
- Hiller 1910
- Hiller 30hp
- Hiller 60hp
- Hiller 90hp
Hiller Aircraft
- Hiller 8RJ2B – ramjet for the Hiller YH-32 Hornet[11]
Hilz
Hindustan Aeronautics Limited/HAL
(Hindustan Aircraft Limited / Hindustan Aeronautics / HAL)
- HAL P.E.90H[10]
- HAL HJE-2500[67]
- GTRE GTX-35VS Kaveri(Developed by GTRE of DRDO)
- HAL/Turbomeca Shakti
- PTAE-7
- GTSU-110
Hiro
- Hiro Type 14 500hp water-cooled W-12[95]
- Hiro Type 61 (typo?)
- Hiro Type 90 600 hp water-cooled W-12[95]
- Hiro Type 91 500 hp water-cooled W-12[15][95]
- Hiro Type 94 1,180 hp water-cooled W-18[95]
Hirth
(Heinkel-Hirth Motoren G.m.b.H.)
- Hirth HM 4 (prototype HM504?)
- Hirth HM 6 (prototype HM506?)
- Hirth HM 8 (prototype HM508?)
- Hirth HM 60[15]
- Hirth HM 150
- Hirth HM 500
- Hirth HM 501
- Hirth HM 504[15]
- Hirth HM 506[15]
- Hirth HM 508[15]
- Hirth HM 512[15]
- Hirth HM 515
- Hirth F-10[96](pp486-7)
- Hirth F-23[97]
- Hirth F-30[97]
- Hirth F-33[97]
- Hirth F-36
- Hirth F-40
- Hirth F-102 – 2-cylinder two stroke 26 hp (19 kW)
- Hirth F-263[97]
- Hith O-280
- Hith O-280R
- Hirth 2702[97]
- Hirth 2703[97]
- Hirth 2704[97]
- Hirth 2706[97]
- Hirth 3002
- Hirth 3202
- Hirth 3203
- Hirth 3502
- Hirth 3503
- Hirth 3701
- Heinkel HeS 1 – the first operational jet engine
- Heinkel HeS 3 – the first jet engine to fly
- Heinkel-Hirth HeS 30 – a.k.a. 006, perhaps the best early German design, cancelled for what turned out to be very bad reasons
- Heinkel-Hirth HeS 40 – "constant volume" combustion engine
- Heinkel-Hirth HeS 50 – ducted-fan unit for long-duration flight
- Heinkel-Hirth HeS 60 – HeS 50 with an additional turbine stage
- Heinkel-Hirth HeS 011 – advanced twin-spool design, not completed
Hispano-Suiza
(Société Française Hispano-Suiza)
- Hispano-Suiza 4B? 75hp 4 in-line
- Hispano-Suiza 5Q
- Hispano-Suiza 6M 250hp[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 6Ma 220hp
- Hispano-Suiza 6Mb 220hp[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 6Mbr 250hp
- Hispano-Suiza 6O
- Hispano-Suiza 6P[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 6Pa[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 8A
- Hispano-Suiza 8B
- Hispano-Suiza 8F
- Hispano-Suiza 9Q licensed Wright J-6 / R-975 Whirlwind
- Hispano-Suiza 9T licensed Clerget 9C, diesel radial[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 9V licensed Wright R-1820 Cyclone
- Hispano-Suiza 12B (1945)[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12G (W-12)[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12Ga (W-12)
- Hispano-Suiza 12Gb (W-12)[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12H[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12Ha[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12Hb[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12Hbr[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12J[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12K[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12Kbrs[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12L[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12Lb[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12Lbr[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12Lbrx[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 12M
- Hispano-Suiza 12N
- Hispano-Suiza 12X
- Hispano-Suiza 12Y
- Hispano-Suiza 12Z
- Hispano-Suiza 14AA radial
- Hispano-Suiza 14AB radial
- Hispano-Suiza 14H radial[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 14Hbs
- Hispano-Suiza 14Hbrs 600hp radial[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 14U diesel radial
- Hispano Suiza 18R
- Hispano-Suiza 18S[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 24Y
- Hispano-Suiza 24Z[98][6]
- Latécoère-(Hispano-Suiza) 36Y[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 48H[98]
- Hispano-Suiza 48Z[98]
- Hispano-Suiza Tay
- Hispano-Suiza Verdon
- Hispano-Suiza R.300[82]
- Hispano-Suiza R.800[82]
- Hispano-Suiza J-5 Whirlwind
- Hispano-Suiza Type 31
- Hispano-Suiza Type 34
- Hispano-Suiza Type 35
- Hispano-Suiza Type 36
- Hispano-Suiza Type 38
- Hispano-Suiza Type 39
- Hispano-Suiza Type 40
- Hispano-Suiza Type 41
- Hispano-Suiza Type 42
- Hispano-Suiza Type 42VS
- Hispano-Suiza Type 43
- Hispano-Suiza Type 44
- Hispano-Suiza Type 45
- Hispano-Suiza Type 50 Ga W-12 450hp
- Hispano-Suiza Type 51 Ha V-12 450hp
- Hispano-Suiza Type 52 Ja V-12 350hp
- Hispano-Suiza Type 57 Mb V-12 500hp
- Hispano-Suiza Type 61
- Hispano-Suiza Type 72
- Hispano-Suiza Type 73
- Hispano-Suiza Type 76
- Hispano-Suiza Type 77
- Hispano-Suiza Type 79
- Hispano-Suiza Type 80[99]
- Hispano-Suiza Type 82
- Hispano-Suiza Type 89 12Z
- Hispano-Suiza Type 90
- Hispano-Suiza Type 93
Hitachi
Source:Gunston.[15]
- Hitachi Ha-12
- Hitachi Ha-13
- Hitachi Ha-42
- Hitachi Ha-47
- Hitachi GK2
- Hitachi GK4
- Hitachi GK2 Amakaze
- Hitachi Kamikaze
- Hitachi Hatsukaze
- Hitachi Tempu
HKS
Hodge
(New Britain Machine Company / G.O. Hodge)
- Hodge 320hp 18-cyl radial 4 in × 4 in (100 mm × 100 mm)[2]
Hofer
(Al Hofer)
- Hofer 10-12hp 4cyl in-line 3.125 in × 3.75 in (79.4 mm × 95.3 mm)[2]
Holbrook
(Holbrook Aero Supply)
- Holbrook 35hp[2]
- Holbrook 50hp
Honda
- Honda HFX-01[100]
- Honda HFX20[100]
- Honda HF118
- GE-Honda HF120
Honeywell
Hopkins & de Kilduchevsky
- Hopkins & de Kilduchevsky 30-40hp
- Hopkins & de Kilduchevsky 60-80hp
Howard
- Howard 120hp 6-cyl in-line 150 mm × 105 mm (5.9 in × 4.1 in)[2]
Hudson
(John W Hudson)
- Hudson 100hp 10-cyl radial 4.3125 mm × 4.75 mm (0.16978 in × 0.18701 in)[2]
Hummel
( James Morris (Morry) Hummel of Bryan, Ohio)
- Hummel 28hp 1/2 VW
- Hummel 32hp 1/2 VW
- Hummel 45hp 1/2 VW
- Hummel 50hp VW
- Hummel 60hp VW
- Hummel 70hp VW
- Hummel 85hp VW
HuoSai
(HuoSai - Piston engine)
Hurricane
- Hurricane C-450
I
IAE
(International Aero Engines)
- IAE V2500
- IAE V2500 SuperFan
I.Ae.
(Instituto Aerotécnico)
- I.Ae. 16 El Gaucho[101]
- I.Ae. 19R El Indio[14][102]
- IA IAO-1600-RX/1[14]
IAME
(Ital-American Motor Engineering)
IAR
(Industria Aeronautică Română)
ICP
(ICP srl)
IHI
(Ishikawajima-Harima Jukogyo Kabushiki Kaisha – Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co. Ltd. / Ishikawajima Aircraft Company Limited / IHI)
- Ishikawajima Tsu-11[103] thermojet
- Ishikawajima TR-10[103]
- Ishikawajima TR-12[103]
- Ishikawajima Ne-20[103]
- Ishikawajima Ne-20-kai
- Ishikawajima Ne-30 Turbojet Engine of 850 kg
- Ishikawajima Ne-330 Turbojet of 1,320 hp
- IHI JR100[104][45]
- IHI JR200[104]
- IHI JR220[104]
- IHI XJ11[104]
- Ishikawajima-Harima F3
- IHI Corporation F5
- IHI Corporation F7
- Ishikawajima-Harima J3[14]
- Ishikawajima-Harima XF5
- Ishikawajima-Harima T64-IHI-10[45]
- Ishikawajima-Harima T58-IHI-8B BLC[45]
IL
(Instytut Lotnictwa – Aviation Institute)
ILO
- ILO F 12/400
Imaer
Imperial
(Imperial Airplane Society)
- Imperial 35-70hp (various 6cyl rotary engines)
- Imperial 100hp (12cyl rotary)
IAR
(Industria Aeronautică Română)
In-Tech
(In-Tech International Inc.)
- In-Tech Merlyn[24]
Innodyn
(Innodyn L.L.C.)
International
Data from:[19]
Ion
(Gabriel Ion)
- Ion airship steam engine]]
Irwin
(Irwin Aircraft Co)
- Irwin 79 Meteormotor (a.k.a. X)[29]
Isaacson
(Isaacson Engine (Motor Supply Co.) / R.J. Isaacson)
- Isaacson 45hp 7-cyl. radial 1910, possibly same engine as 60 hp!
- Isaacson 50hp (5-cyl. radial 1910)
- Isaacson 60hp (7-cyl. radial 1910)[3]
- Isaacson 6-cyl. radial
- Isaacson 50hp 7-cyl. radial 3.54 in × 4.53 in (90 mm × 115 mm)[2]
- Isaacson 65hp 7-cyl. radial 4.33 in × 5.12 in (110 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Isaacson 100hp 14-cyl. radial 3.54 in × 4.53 in (90 mm × 115 mm)[2]
- Isaacson 100hp 9-cyl. rotary 4.72 in × 5.91 in (120 mm × 150 mm)[2]
- Isaacson 200hp 18-cyl. rotary 4.72 in × 5.91 in (120 mm × 150 mm)[2]
Ishikawajima
See:' IHI
Isotov
Source:Gunston[15]
- Isotov GTD-350
- Isotov TV-2-117
- Isotov TV-3-117[36]
- Isotov TVD-850[36]
Isotta Fraschini
(Note:The company did not use a hyphen in the title, despite many contemporary and later references which insert one) Data from:Italian Civil & Military Aircraft 1930–1945[18]
- Isotta Fraschini A.120 R.C.40 – (inverted version of Asso XI)[35]
- Isotta Fraschini L.121 R.C.40 – (version of Asso XI)[35]
- Isotta Fraschini L.170
- Isotta Fraschini L.180 I.R.C.C.15/40 inverted W-18[35]
- Isotta Fraschini L.180 I.R.C.C.45 inverted W-18[35]
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 80[15]
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 80T[29]
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 80 R.I.
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 120 R.C.40[35]
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 200[29]
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 250 probably misidentification of Asso 200
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 450 Caccia[29]
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 500
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 500 AQ (AQ - Alta Quota - high altitude)
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 500 R.I.
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 750[35] (140x170=47105cc/2875cuin)
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 750 R
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 750 R.C.
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 750 R.C.35[35]
- Isotta Fraschini Asso IX
- Isotta Fraschini Asso IX R.C.45
- Isotta Fraschini Asso 1000[15] (150x180=57256cc/3494cuin)
- Isotta Fraschini Asso Caccia
- Isotta Fraschini Asso XI
- Isotta Fraschini Asso (racing)
- Isotta Fraschini Beta
- Isotta Fraschini Gamma
- Isotta Fraschini Delta
- Isotta Fraschini Zeta
- Isotta Fraschini Sigma[105]
- Isotta Fraschini Astro 7 C.21[35]
- Isotta Fraschini Astro 7 C.40[35]
- Isotta Fraschini Astro 14 C.40
- Isotta Fraschini Astro 14 R.C.40[35]
- Isotta Fraschini V.4[9][15]
- Isotta Fraschini V.5[9][15]
- Isotta Fraschini V.6[15]
- Isotta Fraschini V.7 (V-12) 140 mm × 180 mm (5.51 in × 7.09 in)[2]
- Isotta Fraschini V.8 (V-8) 150 mm × 170 mm (5.91 in × 6.69 in)[2]
- Isotta Fraschini V.9 (6 in-line) 150 mm × 180 mm (5.91 in × 7.09 in)[2][25]
- Isotta Fraschini 245hp[9]
- Isotta Fraschini K.14
- Isotta Fraschini 80T
Ivchenko
Source:Gunston.[15]
- Ivchenko AI-4 Flat four
- Ivchenko AI-7 tip-drive ramjet
- Ivchenko AI-9 GTC/APU
- Ivchenko AI-10 Five-cylinder radial
- Ivchenko AI-14
- Ivchenko AI-20
- Progress AI-22
- Ivchenko AI-24 Turboprop
- Ivchenko AI-25
- Ivchenko AI-26
- Progress AI-222
- Ivchenko AI-450S
- Progress D-18T
- Progress D-27
- Lotarev D-36
- Lotarev D-136
- Lotarev D-236T
- Progress D-436
IWL
(Industriewerke Ludwigsfelde - see:Pirna )
J
Jabiru
Jack & Heinz
- Jack & Heinz O-126[6]
Jacobs
Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Jacobs 35 hp
- Jacobs B-1
- Jacobs L-3
- Jacobs L-4
- Jacobs L-5
- Jacobs L-6
- Jacobs LA-1
- Jacobs LA-2
- Jacobs O-200
- Jacobs O-240A[6]
- Jacobs O-240L[6]
- Jacobs O-360A (air-cooled)[6]
- Jacobs O-360L (liquid-cooled)[6]
- Jacobs R-755
- Jacobs R-830
- Jacobs R-915
Jaenson
- Jaenson 300hp V-8 140 mm × 180 mm (5.51 in × 7.09 in)[2]
Jalbert-Loire
- Jalbert-Loire 4-cyl. 160 hp
- Jalbert-Loire 6-cyl. 235 hp
- Jalbert-Loire 16-H – 16-cyl. 600 hp
Jameson
(Jameson Aero Engines Ltd.)
Janowski
(Jaroslaw Janowski)
- Janowski Saturn 500[36]
J.A.P.
(John Alfred Prestwich) Data from:[19]
Japanese rockets and Pulse-jets
- Type4 I-Go Model-20 (Rocket)
- Tokuro-1 Type 2 (Rocket)
Javelin
Jendrassik
Source:Gunston.[15]
J.E.T
(James Engineering Turbines Ltd)
- J.E.T Cobra[107]
JetBeetle
Jetcat
- Jetcat P160[108]
- Jetcat P200[109]
- Jetcat P400[110]
Johnson
JLT Motors
(Boos, Seine-Maritime, France)
JPX
- JPX 4TX75
- JPX D160
- JPX PUL 212
- JPX PUL 425
- JPX D-320
Junkers
(Junkers Flugzeug und Motorenwerke / Junkers Motorenbau [Jumo]) Source:Kay[111]
- Jumo 4 later Jumo 204
- Jumo 5 later Jumo 205
- Junkers L1 air-cooled in-line 6 4-stroke petrol
- Junkers L2
- Junkers L3
- Junkers L4
- Junkers L5
- Junkers L5G
- Junkers L55
- Junkers L7
- Junkers L8
- Junkers L88
- Junkers L10
- Junkers Jumo 204
- Junkers Jumo 205
- Junkers Jumo 206
- Junkers Jumo 207
- Junkers Jumo 208
- Junkers Jumo 209
- Junkers Jumo 210
- Junkers Jumo 211
- Junkers Jumo 213
- Junkers Jumo 218
- Junkers Jumo 222
- Junkers Jumo 223
- Junkers Jumo 224
- Junkers Jumo 225
- Junkers Jumo 109-004
- Junkers Jumo 109-006 (Junkers/Heinkel 109-006)
- Junkers Jumo 109-012[31]
- Junkers Jumo 109-022[31]
- Junkers Mo3 diesel opposed-piston aero-engine prototype[2]
- Junkers Fo2 Petrol opposed-piston 6-cyl/12piston horizontal
- Junkers Fo3 diesel opposed-piston aero-engine prototype[29]
- Junkers Fo4 diesel opposed-piston aero-engine prototype
- Junkers SL1 company designation for Fo4
K
Kalep
(Fyodor Grigoryevich Kalep)
Kawasaki
Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Kawasaki Ha9 – License-built BMW VI for IJAAF
- Kawasaki Ha40 – License-built Daimler-Benz DB 601A for IJAAF
- Kawasaki Ha-60
- Kawasaki Ha140
- Kawasaki Ha201 – twin Ha40s with common gearbox
- Kawasaki KAE-240[14]
- Kawasaki 440 engine.
- Kawasaki KJ12
Kelly
- Kelly 200hp 2-stroke 4-cyl inline 6.5 in × 6.3 in (170 mm × 160 mm)[2]
Kemp
(a.k.a. Grey Eagle )
Ken Royce
- Ken-Royce 5E
- Ken-Royce 5G
- Ken-Royce 7G
Kessler
KFM
(KFM (Komet Flight Motor) Aircraft Motors Division of Italian American Motor Engineering)
Kiekhaefer
- Kiekhaefer O-45
- Kiekhaefer V-105
Kimball
- Kimball Beetle K
- Kimball Gnat M
King
(Brewster & Co / Chas. B. King)
- King 550hp V-12 5.5 in × 7 in (140 mm × 180 mm)[2]
King-Bugatti
Kinner
Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Kinner 60 hp
- Kinner B-5
- Kinner B-54
- Kinner C-5
- Kinner C-7[35]
- Kinner SC-7[35]
- Kinner K-5
- Kinner O-550
- Kinner O-552
- Kinner R-5
- Kinner R-53
- Kinner R-55
- Kinner R-56
- Kinner R-370
- Kinner R-440
- Kinner R-540
- Kinner R-720
- Kinner R-1045-2
Kirkham
- Kirkham 50hp 4IL (C-4?) 4.3125 in × 5.125 in (109.54 mm × 130.18 mm)[2]
- Kirkham 75-85hp
- Kirkham 110hp
- Kirkham 180hp 9-cyl. radial
- Kirkham B-4 4.125 in × 4.75 in (104.8 mm × 120.7 mm)[2]
- Kirkham B-6 4.125 in × 4.75 in (104.8 mm × 120.7 mm)[2]
- Kirkham B-12
- Kirkham BG-6 (geared) 4.3125 in × 5.125 in (109.54 mm × 130.18 mm)[2]
- Kirkham C-4
- Kirkham K-12[66]
Kishi
- Kishi 70hp V-8 96 mm × 120 mm (3.8 in × 4.7 in)[2]
Klimov
Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Klimov M-100
- Klimov M-103
- Klimov M-105
- Klimov VK-106
- Klimov VK-107 (VK-107R – Mikoyan-Gurevich I-250)
- Klimov VK-108
- Klimov VK-109
- Klimov M-120[57]
- Klimov RD-33
- Klimov RD-45
- Klimov RD-500[112]
- Klimov VK-1
- Klimov VK-2
- Klimov VK-3
- Klimov VK-5
- Klimov VK-2500
- Klimov VK-800
- Klimov TV2-117
- Klimov TV3-117
- Klimov TV7-117
KHD
(Deutz and Humboldt-Deutz)
- Humboldt-Deutz 6 cyl. in-line diesel[113]
- Klöckner-Humboldt-Deutz diesel 8 cyl. rotary DZ 700?
- Klöckner-Humboldt-Deutz DZ 700[113]
- Klöckner-Humboldt-Deutz DZ 710 16-cylinder horizontally opposed diesel[31]
- Klöckner-Humboldt-Deutz DZ 720 32-cylinder H-block version of the 710[31]
- KHD T112[67]
- KHD T117[36]
- KHD T317[36]
Knox
(Knox Motors Company, Springfield Mass.)
- Knox 300hp V-12 4.75 in × 7 in (121 mm × 178 mm)[2]
- Knox H-106
- Knox R-266
Koerting
Kosoku
(Kosokudo Kikan KK)
- Kosoku KO-4[95]
Kolesov
- Kolesov RD-36-51
- Kolesov VD-7
Köller
(Dr. Kröber und Sohn GmbH, Treuenbritzen)
- Köller M3[114]
König
Konrad
(Oberbayische Forschungsanhalt Dr. Konrad)
Körting
- Körting Kg IV V-8[4]
- Körting 8 SL
Kossov
- Kossov MG-31F
Kostovich
(O.S. Kostovich)
Krautter
(Dipl. Ing. Willi Krautter)
- Krautter-Leichtflugmotor[31]
Kroeber
(Doktor Kroeber & Sohn G.m.b.H.)
Kruk
- Kruk rotary 130 mm × 130 mm (5.1 in × 5.1 in)[2]
Kuznetsov Design Bureau
Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Kuznetsov Type 022[21]
- Kuznetsov NK-2
- Kuznetsov NK-4
- Kuznetsov NK-6
- Kuznetsov NK-8
- Kuznetsov NK-12
- Kuznetsov NK-25
- Kuznetsov NK-32
- Kuznetsov NK-86
- Kuznetsov NK-87
- Kuznetsov NK-144
- Kuznetsov TV-2
- Kuznetsov 2TV-2F
L
L'Aisle Volante
- L'Aisle Volante C.C.4[35]
Labor
- Labor 70hp 4-cyl in-line 100 mm × 210 mm (3.9 in × 8.3 in)[27]
Lambert Engine Division
(Monocoupe Corporation – Lambert Engine Division)
- Lambert R-266[35]
- Lambert R-270
Lamplough
- Lamplough 6-cyl 2-stroke rotary 116 mm × 126 mm (4.6 in × 5.0 in)[2]
Lancia
(Lancia & Company. / Vincenzo Lancia)
- Lancia Tipo 4 (320hp)[115] 120.7 mm × 180 mm (4.75 in × 7.09 in)[2]
- Lancia Tipo 5 (600hp)[115] 150 mm × 180 mm (5.9 in × 7.1 in)[2]
Lange
Laviator
- Laviator 35hp 3-cyl rotary 2-stroke 110 mm × 100 mm (4.3 in × 3.9 in)[27]
- Laviator 50hp 6-cyl rotary 2-stroke 100 mm × 130 mm (3.9 in × 5.1 in)[2][27]
- Laviator 65hp 6-cyl rotary 2-stroke 100 mm × 130 mm (3.9 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Laviator 75hp 9-cyl rotary 2-stroke 100 mm × 130 mm (3.9 in × 5.1 in)[27]
- Laviator 100hp 12-cyl rotary 2-stroke 100 mm × 130 mm (3.9 in × 5.1 in)[27]
- Laviator 80hp 6-cyl 2-stroke water-cooled radial 100 mm × 130 mm (3.9 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Laviator 120hp 4IL 145 mm × 174 mm (5.7 in × 6.9 in)[2]
- Laviator 110hp 6IL 130 mm × 160 mm (5.1 in × 6.3 in)[2]
- Laviator 250hp 6IL 180 mm × 200 mm (7.1 in × 7.9 in)[2]
- Laviator 80hp V-8 100 mm × 130 mm (3.9 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Laviator 120hp V-8 114 mm × 160 mm (4.5 in × 6.3 in)[2]
- Laviator 200hp V-8 145 mm × 175 mm (5.7 in × 6.9 in)[2]
Lawrance
- Lawrance A-3 2OA 28hp [15]
- Lawrance B 60 hp 3-cyl.[9]
- Lawrance C-2
- Lawrance J-1[15]
- Lawrance J-2
- Lawrance L-2 65hp 4.25 in × 5.25 in (108 mm × 133 mm)[2][66]
- Lawrance L-3
- Lawrance L-4 a.k.a. 'Wright Gale'
- Lawrance L-5
- Lawrance L-64
- Lawrance N[15]
- Lawrance N-2 40HP 2OA 4.25 in × 4.25 in (108 mm × 108 mm)[2]
- Lawrance R[15]
- Lawrance R-1[66]
- Lawrance-Moulton A (France)[2]
- Lawrance-Moulton B (200hp V-8 USA) 4.75 in × 6.5 in (121 mm × 165 mm)[2]
- Lawrance 140hp 9-cyl radial 4.25 in × 5.25 in (108 mm × 133 mm)[2]
- Lawrance 200hp 9-cyl radial 4.5 in × 5.5 in (110 mm × 140 mm)[2]
Lawrence Radiation Laboratory
- Tory IIA (Project Pluto)
- Tory IIC (Project Pluto)
Le Gaucear
- Le Gaucear 150hp 10-cyl rotary[2]
Le Maitre et Gerard
- Le Maitre et Gerard 700hp V-8 180 mm × 210 mm (7.1 in × 8.3 in)[2]
Le Rhône
(Société des Moteurs Le Rhône)
- Le Rhône 7A
- Le Rhône 7B
- Le Rhône 7B2
- Le Rhône 7Z
- Le Rhône 9C
- Le Rhône 9J
- Le Rhône 9R
- Le Rhône 9Z
- Le Rhône 11F
- Le Rhône 14D[116]
- Le Rhône 18E (1912)
- Le Rhône 18E (1917)
- Le Rhône 28E
- Le Rhône K
- Le Rhône L
- Le Rhône M
- Le Rhône P
- Le Rhône R
LeBlond
Lee
- Lee 80hp
Lefèrve
(F. Lefèrve)
- Lefèrve 2-cyl. 33hp[16]
Lenape
- Lenape AR-3[35]
- Lenape LM-3 Papoose 3-cyl.
- Lenape LM-5 Brave 5-cyl.
- Lenape LM-7 Chief 7-cyl.
- Lenape LM-125 Brave (suspect should be LM-5-125)
- Lenape LM-365 Papoose (suspect should be LM-3-65)
- Lenape LM-375 Papoose (suspect should be LM-3-75)
Lessner
- Lessner 1908 4-cyl airship engine[57]
Levasseur
(León levasseur) see Antoinette
Levi
- Levi 7-cyl barrel engine[2]
LFW
- LFW 0
- LFW I
- LFW II
- LFW III
- LFW-12 X-1
LHTEC
Liberty
Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Liberty L-4
- Liberty L-6
- Liberty L-8
- Liberty L-12
- Liberty L-12 double-crankshaft[2]
- Liberty X-24[117]
Ligez
- Ligez 3-cyl rotary 115 mm × 130 mm (4.5 in × 5.1 in)[27]
Light
- Light Kitten 20
- Light Kitten 30
- Light Tiger 100
- Light Tiger 125
- Light Tiger Junior 50
Lilloise
see:C.L.M. (Compagnie Lilloise de Moteurs S.A)
Limbach
(Limbach Flugmotoren)
Lincoln
- Rocket 29hp
Lindequist
(Konsortiert Överingeniör Sven Lindequist's Uppfinninggar – Consortium Senior Engineer Sven Lindqvist Inventions)
- Lindewqiuist 1,000hp Stratospheric engine[35]
Les Long Long Harlequin
Lockheed
Source:Gunston.[15]
LOM
(Letecke Opravny Malesice, Praha)
Loravia
(Yutz, France)
Lorraine-Dietrich
(Société Lorraine des Anciens Établissements de Dietrich) Source:Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1938[35][118][119] except where noted
- Lorraine 3B licence-built Potez 3B?
- Lorraine 3D licence-built Potez 3B
- Lorraine 5P – 5 cyl radial
- Lorraine 6A – (AM) 110 hp
- Lorraine 6Ba - 6 cyl two-row radial 130CV
- Lorraine 7M Mizar – 7 cyl radial
- Lorraine 8A – V-8
- Lorraine 8Aa
- Lorraine 8Ab
- Lorraine 8Aby
- Lorraine 8B – V-8
- Lorraine 8Ba
- Lorraine 8Bb
- Lorraine 8Bd
- Lorraine 8Be
- Lorraine 9A
- Lorraine 9N Algol – Type 120 9 cyl radial
- Lorraine Dietrich 12Cc ? Dc in error?
- Lorraine 12? Hibis 450 hp
- Lorraine 12D – V-12
- Lorraine 12Da
- Lorraine 12Db
- Lorraine 12Dc
- Lorraine 12 DOO 460 hp O-12[17]
- Lorraine 12E Courlis – W-12 450 hp
- Lorraine 12F Courlis – W-12 600 hp
- Lorraine 12H Pétrel – V-12
- Lorraine 12Q Eider
- Lorraine 12Qo Eider
- Lorraine 12R Sterna – V-12 Type 111 700 hp
- Lorraine 12Rs Sterna – V-12 Type 111 700 hp
- Lorraine 12Rcr Radium – inverted V-12 with turbochargers 2,000 hp
- Lorraine 14A Antarès – 14 cylinder radial 500 hp
- Lorraine 14E – 14 cylinder radial 470 hp[120]
- Lorraine 14L Antarès – 14 cylinder radial 500 hp
- Lorraine 18F Sirius - Type 112
- Lorraine 18F.0 Sirius
- Lorraine 18F.00 Sirius
- Lorraine 18F.100 Sirius
- Lorraine 18G Orion – W-18
- Lorraine 18Ga Orion – W-18
- Lorraine 18Gad Orion – W-18
- Lorraine 18K – W-18
- Lorraine 18Ka
- Lorraine 18Kd
- Lorraine 18Kdrs
- Lorraine 24 – W-24 1,000 hp (3 banks of 8 cylinders)
- Lorraine 24E Taurus – 24 cyl in-line radial (six banks of 4-inline?) 1,600 hp
- Lorraine P5
- Lorraine AM (moteur d’Aviation Militaire (A.M.)) – derived from German 6-cyl in-line engines
- Lorraine Algol Junior – 230 hp
- Lorraine-Latécoère 8B
- Lorraine Diesel – built in 1932, rated at 200 hp
- Lorraine DM-400
Lotarev
(Vladimir Lotarev) (see also Ivchenko-Progress)
- Lotarev D-36[36]
- Lotarev D-136[36]
- Lotarev D-236-T
Loughead Aircraft Mfg Co
- Loughead XL-1
LPC
(Lockheed Propulsion Company)
- LPC Fang 1-KS-40
- LPC Sword 3.81-KS-4090
- LPC Meteor 33-KS-2800
- LPC Mercury 0.765-KS-53,600
- LPC Viper I-C 5.6-KS-5,400
- LPC Viper II-C 3.77-KS-8,040
- LPC Lance I-C 6.65-KS-38,800
LSA-Engines
(LSA-Engines GmbH, Berlin, Germany)
Lucas
(Lucas Aerospace)
Lutetia
(Marcel Echard / Moteurs Lutetia)
Lycoming
(Division of Textron)
- Lycoming O-145
- Lycoming O-160
- Lycoming O-233
- Lycoming IO-233
- Lycoming O-235
- Lycoming O-290
- Lycoming O-320
- Lycoming O-340
- Lycoming O-350
- Lycoming O-360
- Lycoming IO-390
- Lycoming O-435
- Lycoming O-480
- Lycoming O-530
- Lycoming O-540
- Lycoming O-541
- Lycoming IO-580
- Lycoming GSO-580
- Lycoming O-720
- Lycoming O-1230
- Lycoming R-500
- Lycoming R-530
- Lycoming R-645
- Lycoming R-680
- Lycoming H-2470
- Lycoming XR-7755 (36cyl 7,755ci)
- Lycoming AGT1500
- Lycoming AL55
- Lycoming ALF101
- Lycoming ALF502
- Lycoming LF507
- Lycoming LTC1
- Lycoming LTC4
- Lycoming LTP101
- Lycoming LTS101
- Lycoming PLF1A[67][22]
- Lycoming PLF1B[67][22]
- Lycoming F102 (ALF502)
- Lycoming F106 (ALF502)
- Lycoming F408 (Teledyne CAE 382)
- Lycoming J402 (Teledyne CAE 370/372/373)
- Lycoming T702 (PLT27)
- Lycoming T53
- Lycoming T55
- Lycoming TF40
Lyulka
Source:Gunston.[15]
- Lyulka TR-1
- Lyulka AL-5
- Lyulka AL-7
- Lyulka AL-21
- Lyulka AL-31
- Lyulka TS-31M[122]
M
M&D Flugzeugbau
- M&D Flugzeugbau TJ-42[123]
MAB
MacClatchie
- MacClatchie X-2 Panther
Macchi
- Macchi MB.2 – 2.cyl 20 hp@3000rpm
Macomber Avis Engine Co
(a.k.a. Macomber Rotary Engine Company)
M.A.N.
(Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg)
MAN-Rolls-Royce
- MAN-Rolls-Royce RB.193
- MAN-Rolls-Royce RB.153
- MAN-Rolls-Royce RB.145
- MAN-Rolls-Royce 6012[67]
- MAN-Rolls-Royce 6022[67]
Manfred Weiss
(Mannfred Weiss Flugzeug und Motorenfabrik)
- Manfred Weiss Sport I
- Manfred Weiss Sport III[30]
Manly
(Charles M. Manly)
- Manly 52.4hp 5-cyl radial 5 in × 5.5 in (130 mm × 140 mm)[2]
Mantovani
- Mantovani Citroën 2CV car engine conversion[1]
Marchetti
- Marchetti A
Mark
(Stahlwerk Mark Flugzeugbau)
Marcmotor
(Macerata, Italy)
- Marcmotor ROS100
- Marcmotor ROS125
- Marcmotor ROS200
Marlin-Rockwell
- Marlin-Rockwell 72hp
Marquardt Corporation
- Marquardt PJ40 Pulsejet
- Marquardt PJ46 Pulsejet
- Marquardt RJ30[11] Ramjet
- Marquardt RJ31 Ramjet
- Marquardt RJ34 Ramjet
- Marquardt RJ39 Ramjet
- Marquardt RJ43[10] Ramjet
- Marquardt RJ57[10] Ramjet
- Marquardt RJ59[10] Ramjet
- Marquardt MA-19[11][21]
- Marquardt MA-20[10][11][21]
- Marquardt MA-24[21]
- Marquardt MA-74
- Marquardt MA-196[24]
- Marquardt C-20
- Marquardt C-30
- Marquardt C-48
- Marquardt model C-20-85C
- Marquardt R-1E[24]
- Marquardt R-40A[24]
Martin
(Glenn L. Martin Motors Co.)
Maru
Masson
- Masson 50hp 6-cyl in-line[2]
Mathis
- Mathis G.2F[6][127]
- Mathis G.4[128]
- Mathis G.4F[6][127]
- Mathis G.4R[128][6]
- Mathis G.7[128][6]
- Mathis G.7R[128][6]
- Mathis G.8[128][6]
- Mathis G.8R[128][6]
- Mathis G.14R[128][6]
- Mathis G.14RS[128][6]
- Mathis G.1621[129]
- Mathis Vega 42[128]
- Mathis Vega 42-B[128]
- Mathis Vega 42-E[128]
- Mathis 175H
- Mathis 2G-60[127]
- Mathis 4G-60[127]
- Mathis 4G-B-60[127]
- Mathis 4G-B-62[127]
- Mathis BG-20[129]
Mawen
(Mawen S.A.)
Max Ams
(Max Ams machine Company)
- Max Ams 75hp V-8 3.9375 in × 5.125 in (100.01 mm × 130.18 mm)[2]
Maxim
(Hiram Maxim)
- Maxim 87hp 4-cyl in-line 5 in × 5.625 in (127.0 mm × 142.9 mm)[2]
Maximotor
- Maximotor 50hp
- Maximotor 60-70hp
- Maximotor 70-80hp
- Maximotor 80-100hp
- Maximotor 100hp
- Maximotor 120hp
- Maximotor 150hp
- Maximotor A-4 (50hp 4ILW) 4.5 in × 5 in (110 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Maximotor A-6 (75hp 6ILW) 4.5 in × 5 in (110 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Maximotor A-8 (110hp V-8)5 in × 5.5 in (130 mm × 140 mm)[2]
- Maximotor B-6 (115 6ILW) 5 in × 6 in (130 mm × 150 mm)[2]
- Maximotor 70hp 4-in-line 5.25 in × 5.5 in (133 mm × 140 mm)[2]
Maybach
- Maybach AZ (1909): 140 hp (100 kW)[130]
- Maybach DW 1914: 160 hp (120 kW)[130]
- Maybach IR 1914: 160 hp (120 kW)[130]
- Maybach BY
- Maybach CX 1915: 210 hp (160 kW)[130]
- Maybach HS 1915: 240 hp (180 kW)[130]
- Maybach HS D
- Maybach HS-Lu
- Maybach Mb.III – a new designation for the existing Maybach IR engine[131]
- Maybach Mb.IV – a new designation for the existing Maybach HS engine[131]
- Maybach Mb.IVa
- Maybach 300hp 6-inline Mb.IVa???[9]
- Maybach VL.I
- Maybach VL.II[132][30]
- Maybach 180hp 6IL[2]
- Maybach 200hp 6IL 150 mm × 190 mm (5.9 in × 7.5 in)[2]
- Maybach 300hp 6IL 165 mm × 180 mm (6.5 in × 7.1 in)[2]
Mayo
- Mayo 1915 (6LW)
McCulloch
(McCulloch Motors Corporation)
- McCulloch MC101
- McCulloch 104-100[10]
- McCulloch O-90
- McCulloch O-100[11]
- McCulloch O-150[11]
- McCulloch 4318A O-100-1[11]
- McCulloch 4318B O-100-2[11]
- McCulloch 4318C O[21]
- McCulloch 4318E YO-100-4[10]
- McCulloch TSIR-5190
- McCulloch 6150 O-150-1[10]
- McCulloch TC6150-J-2 O-150-4
- McCulloch 6318 O-150-2[11]
McDonnell
- McDonnell PJ42 Pulsejet
McDowell
(Geo. McDowell. Brooklyn NY.)
- McDowell Twin-Piston V-4 2-stroke[2]
Mead
(Mead Engine Co.)
- Mead 50hp 4-cyl in-line 4.75 in × 4.5 in (121 mm × 114 mm)[2]
Mekker
- Mekker Sport[133]
Menasco
(Menasco Motors Company) Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Menasco A-4 Pirate
- Menasco A-6 Buccaneer
- Menasco B-2
- Menasco B-4 Pirate
- Menasco B-6 Buccaneer
- Menasco C-4 Pirate
- Menasco C-6 Buccaneer[35]
- Menasco C-6S Super Buccaneer
- Menasco D-4 Pirate[134]
- Menasco D-4B Super Pirate[134]
- Menasco D-6S Super Buccaneer[134]
- Menasco M-50
- Menasco U-2 Unitwin[35]
- Menasco-Salmson B-2
- Menasco L-365
- Menasco XIV-2040 12 cylinder
- Menasco XH-4070 24 cylinder 6.00 in × 6.00 in (152 mm × 152 mm) = 4,071.5 cu in (66.720 l)
- Menasco RJ37 'A-J-20' Ramjet
Mengin
(Établissements Pierre Mengin)
Mercedes
see: Daimler-Benz
Merkulov
(Ivan A. Merkulov)
- Merkulov DM-4 ramjet[135]
Métallurgique
Data from:[19]
- Métallurgique 32hp 4-cyl in-line 100 mm × 150 mm (3.94 in × 5.91 in)[2]
- Métallurgique 40hp 4-cyl in-line 85 mm × 130 mm (3.35 in × 5.12 in)[4]
- Métallurgique 48hp 4-cyl in-line 125 mm × 150 mm (4.92 in × 5.91 in)[2]
- Métallurgique 60hp 4-cyl in-line 100 mm × 150 mm (3.94 in × 5.91 in)[4]
- Métallurgique 90hp 4-cyl in-line 125 mm × 150 mm (4.92 in × 5.91 in)[4]
Meteormotor
- Meteormotor 20-25hp
Meteor
(Meteor S.p.A. Constuzioni Aeronautiche)
Metropolitan-Vickers
Metz
(Metz Company, Waltham, Mass.)
- Metz 125hp rotary 6.75 in × 6.75 in (171 mm × 171 mm)[2]
Michel
Michigan
- Michigan 2-cyl 2-stroke rotary 5 in × 5 in (130 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Michigan Rover
Microturbo
- Microturbo TRB 13[53]
- Microturbo SG 18
- Microturbo TRS 18[138]
- Microturbo TRB 19[53]
- Microturbo TRS 25
- Microturbo TRI 40
- Microturbo TRI 60
- Microturbo TFA 66[53]
- Microturbo TRI 80
- Microturbo TFA 130[53]
- Microturbo J403
- Microturbo Cougar
- Microturbo Eclair[45][139]
- Microturbo Eclair II
- Microturbo Lynx
- Microturbo Noelle[139] (starter)
- Microturbo Emeraude[139] (starter)
- Microturbo Espadon[139] (starter)
- Microturbo Saphir 007[139] (starter)
Midwest
( Mid-West Engines Limited / Diamond engines / Austro Engine)
Miese
Data from:[19]
Mikulin
(Alexander Alexandrovich Mikulin)
- Mikulin AM-3M
- Mikulin AM-13
- Mikulin AM-34
- Mikulin AM-35
- Mikulin AM-37
- Mikulin AM-38
- Mikulin AM-39
- Mikulin AM-42
- Mikulin M-85
- Mikulin RD-3M
- Mikulin M-17
- Mikulin M-209
Mikulin-Stechkin
(A.A. Mikulin & B.S. Stechkin)
- AMBS-1
Milwaukee Tank
- Milwaukee Tank V-470
- Milwaukee Tank V-502
Miller
- Miller 22hp radial
Miller
(Harry A. Miller Manufacturing Company)
Minié
Data from:[140] (Établissements Minié, Colombes, Seine, France)
Mistral Engines
(Mistral Engines SA, Geneva, Switzerland)
- Mistral G-190
- Mistral G-200
- Mistral G-230-TS
- Mistral G-300
- Mistral G-360-TS
- Mistral K-200
- Mistral K-300
Mitsubishi
Source:
- Note: (Jap:ハ Ha) – (Jap:エンジン Hatsudoki) (engine)
- Mitsubishi Hi V-8 (Hispano-Suiza 8)
- Mitsubishi Hi V-12 (Hispano-Suiza Lb)
- Mitsubishi Shinten (Shinten 震天)
- Mitsubishi Zuisei (Zuisei 瑞星)
- Mitsubishi Kinsei (Kinsei 金星)
- Mitsubishi Kasei (Kasei 火星)
- Mitsubishi KR-10 (Tokuro-2 Rocket)
- Mitsubishi Nu-Go
- Mitsubishi Ha2
- Mitsubishi Ha6 (Kinsei 金星)
- Mitsubishi Ha26 (Zuisei 瑞星)
- Mitsubishi Ha101
- Mitsubishi Ha102
- Mitsubishi Ha104
- Mitsubishi Ha111
- Mitsubishi Ha112
- Mitsubishi Ha211
- Mitsubishi Ha212
- Mitsubishi Ha214
- Mitsubishi Tokuro-3 (Rocket)
- Mitsubishi Army Type 92 400hp Air Cooled Radial
- Mitsubishi Army Type 93 700hp Water Cooled In-line
- Mitsubishi Army Type 97 850hp Air-cooled Radial (Zuisei 瑞星)
- Mitsubishi Army Type 99 900hp Air Cooled Radial
- Mitsubishi Army Type 100 1,050hp Air Cooled Radial (Zuisei 瑞星)
- Mitsubishi Army Type 100 1,450hp Air Cooled Radial (Kasei 火星)
- Mitsubishi Army Type2 Rocket
- Mitsubishi Army Type3 Rocket
- Mitsubishi Army Type 4 1,250 hp Air-cooled Radial (Kasei 火星)
- Mitsubishi Army Type 4 1,500hp Air Cooled Radial (Kinsei 金星)
- Mitsubishi Army Type 4 1,900hp Air Cooled Radial
- Mitsubishi A2
- Mitsubishi A4
- Mitsubishi A5
- Mitsubishi A6(7)
- Mitsubishi A8
- Mitsubishi A9
- Mitsubishi A10
- Mitsubishi A14
- Mitsubishi MK1
- Mitsubishi MK2
- Mitsubishi MK4
- Mitsubishi MK8
- Mitsubishi MK9
- Mitsubishi MK10
- Mitsubishi Ha-31 (unified designation)
- Mitsubishi Ha-32 (unified designation)
- Mitsubishi Ha-33 (unified designation)
- Mitsubishi Ha-43 (unified designation)
- Mitsubishi MG-5
Modena Avio Engines
(Rubiera, Italy)
Monaco
(Monaco Motor and Engineering Co. Ltd.)
Monnett
(Monnett Experimental Aircraft), Data from:'[141]
- Monnett AeroVee
- Monnett 1600cc E-Vee
- Monnett 1600cc SuperVee
- Monnett 1700cc E-Vee
- Monnett 1700cc SuperVee
- Monnett 1835cc E-Vee
- Monnett 2007cc E-Vee
Morehouse
- Morehouse 15hp
- Morehouse 29hp
- Morehouse M-42
- Morehouse M-80
Mors
Data from:[19]
- Mors 30hp V-4 100 mm × 130 mm (3.9 in × 5.1 in)[2]
Mosler
(Mosler, Inc. of Hendersonville, North Carolina)
- Mosler MM CB-35[142]
- Mosler MM CB-40[142]
- Mosler Red 82X
- Mosler Red 82DX
- Mosler Red 82LB
Motor Sich
Motorav Industria
(Bocaiúva, Minas Gerais, Brazil)
Motorlet
- Motorlet M-701
- Motorlet M-601[36]
- Motorlet M-602
- Motorlet M-20
Mozhaiskiy
- Mozhaisky gas fired machine[57]
MTH Racing engines
(Austria)
MTR
MTU Aero Engines
- Daimler-Benz DB 720
- Daimler-Benz DB 721
- Daimler-Benz DB 730
- MTU 6012
- MTU 6022
Mudry
(Moteurs Mudry-Buchoux)
Mulag
- Mulag 90/113hp 6-cyl in-line 110 mm × 170 mm (4.3 in × 6.7 in)[2]
Murray-Willat
MWfly
(MWfy srl, Passirana di Rho, Italy)
N
N.A.G.
(Robert Conrad / Neue Automobil-Gesellschaft mbH)
- NAG 40hp 4-cyl in-line
- NAG C.I
- NAG C.II
- NAG C.III
- NAG F.1 4IL 55hp 118 mm × 100 mm (4.6 in × 3.9 in)[2]
- NAG F.2 4IL 60hp 120 mm × 120 mm (4.7 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- NAG F.3 4IL 100hp 135 mm × 165 mm (5.3 in × 6.5 in)[2]
- NAG F.4 6IL 150hp 135 mm × 165 mm (5.3 in × 6.5 in)[2]
- NAG Model 301 6IL 110hp 150 mm × 130 mm (5.9 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- NAG 185hp 6-cyl in-line[2]
Nagel
- Nagel 444
Nagliati
Nakajima
Source:
- Note: (Japanese:ハ Ha) – (Japanese:エンジン Hatsudoki) (engine)
- Nakajima Kotobuki (Kotobuki 寿)
- Nakajima Hikari
- Nakajima Homare (Homare 誉)
- Nakajima Mamoru (Mamoru 護)
- Nakajima Mamoru-Kai
- Nakajima Sakae (Sakae 栄)
- Nakajima Ha-1 NAH Kotobuki
- Nakajima Ha-5
- Nakajima Ha-5 Kai
- Nakajima Ha-8 NAP Hikari
- Nakajima Ha-10 NAZ
- Nakajima Ha-15 NWE W-18
- Nakajima Ha-17
- Nakajima Ha-20 NAS
- Nakajima Ha-23
- Nakajima Ha-25 Sakae
- Nakajima Ha-33 (Kasei 火星)
- Nakajima Ha-34
- Nakajima Ha-35 Model 11 (Sakae 栄)
- Nakajima Ha-35 Model 12 (Sakae 栄)
- Nakajima Ha-39 W-18
- Nakajima Ha-41
- Nakajima Ha-44
- Nakajima Ha-45
- Nakajima Ha-46
- Nakajima Ha-103 (Mamoru 護)
- Nakajima Ha-107
- Nakajima Ha-109
- Nakajima Ha-112
- Nakajima Ha-115-I (Sakae 栄)
- Nakajima Ha-115-II (Sakae 栄)
- Nakajima Ha-117
- Nakajima Ha-217
- Nakajima Army Type 97 650 hp Air-cooled Radial (Kotobuki 寿)
- Nakajima Army Type 97 850 hp Air-cooled Radial
- Nakajima Army Type 99 975 hp Air-cooled Radial (Sakae 栄)
- Nakajima Army Type 100 1,260 hp Air-cooled Radial
- Nakajima Army Type 2 1,450 hp Air-cooled Radial
- Nakajima Army Type 4 1,900 hp Air-cooled Radial (Homare 誉)
- Nakajima BA
- Nakajima NBA
- Nakajima NBD
- Nakajima NBH
- Nakajima NAH Ha-1 Kotobuki
- Nakajima NAK
- Nakajima NAL
- Nakajima / Mitsubishi NAL
- Nakajima NAM
- Nakajima NAN
- Nakajima NAP Hikari Ha-8
- Nakajima NAR
- Nakajima NAS Ha-20
- Nakajima NAZ Ha-10
- Nakajima NWE Ha-15
- Nakajima NK-11
- Nakajima NLH-11
- Nakajima NK-1 Sakae
- Nakajima NK-9 Homare
NAL
(National Aerospace Laboratories, Bangalore, India)
Napier
Sources: Piston engines, Lumsden,[3] gas turbine and rocket engines, Gunston.[15]
- Napier Cub
- Napier Culverin
- Napier Cutlass[19]
- Napier Dagger
- Napier E.237 – Submission to the NGTE specification TE 10/56
- Napier Eland
- Napier Gazelle
- Napier Javelin
- Napier Lion
- Napier Lioness
- Napier Naiad
- Napier Nomad
- Napier NSc.1 Scorpion
- Napier NScD.1 Double Scorpion
- Napier NScT.1 Triple Scorpion
- Napier Oryx
- Napier Rapier
- Napier RJTV (Ramjet test Vehicle)
- Napier Sabre
- Napier Sea Lion (marinised Lions)
- Napier N.R.E. 17[21]
- Napier N.R.E. 19[21]
- Napier N.R.J. 1[21]
Narkiewicz
( Wiktor N. Narkiewicz - production at C.Z.P.S.K. (National))
- Narkiewicz WN-1
- Narkiewicz WN-2
- Narkiewicz WN-3
- Narkiewicz WN-4
- Narkiewicz WN-6[21]
- Narkiewicz WN-6R[21]
- Narkiewicz WN-7[21]
- Narkiewicz WN-7R[21]
- Narkiewicz NP-1
- Narkiewicz 2-cyl.
Naskiewicz
(Stanislaw Naskiewicz)
- Naskiewicz gas turbine[144]
National Aerospace Laboratory of Japan
- MITI/NAL FJR710
National
- National 35
N.E.C.
(New Engine Co.)
- N.E.C. 1910 2-cyl 2-stroke
- N.E.C. 1910 60hp 6-cyl 2-stroke
- N.E.C. 40hp 4-cyl 2-stroke
- N.E.C. 50hp V-4 2-stroke 94 mm × 114 mm (3.7 in × 4.5 in)[2][4]
- N.E.C. 90hp 6-cyl 2-stroke 94 mm × 114 mm (3.7 in × 4.5 in)[2][4]
- N.E.C. 100hp 6-cyl 2-stroke(1912)
- N.E.C. 69.6hp 4-cyl 2-stroke 114 mm × 101 mm (4.5 in × 4.0 in)[2][19]
Nelson
(Nelson Aircraft Corporation)
- Nelson 60hp 4-stroke[36]
- Nelson 120hp 4-stroke[36]
- Nelson 150hp 4-stroke[36]
- Nelson H-44
- Nelson H-49
- Nelson H-59[11]
- Nelson H-63
- Nelson O-65
Nielsen & Winther
(A/S Nielsen & Winther)
- Nielsen & Winther M.A.J.[145]
Nieuport======Labor
Nihonnainenki
- Nihonnainenki Semi
Nord
(Nord-Aviation)
- Nord ST.600 Sirius I
- Nord ST.600 Sirius II
- Nord ST.600 Sirius III
- Nord Véga
Normalair-Garrett
(Normalair-Garrett Ltd. – NGL)
Northrop
Source:Gunston.[15]
Norton
(Kenneth Norton / Norton-Newby Motorcycle Co.)
- Norton 2-cyl opposed 4 in × 4.5 in (100 mm × 110 mm)[2]
Novus
NPO Saturn
NPT
(Noel Penny Turbines)
NST-Machinenbau
(Niedergoersdorf, Germany)
Nuffield
- Nuffield 100hp 4HO[6]
O
Oberursel
- Oberursel U.0
- Oberursel U.I
- Oberursel U.III
- Oberursel Ur.II
- Oberursel Ur.III
- Oberursel 200hp 18-cyl rotary 124 mm × 150 mm (4.9 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Oberursel 240hp V-8[2]
Oerlikon
Oldfield
- Oldfield 15A 124 mm × 150 mm (4.9 in × 5.9 in)[2]
Opel
(Adam Opel Motorenwerke)
- Opel Type III 180hp 6IL 145 mm × 160 mm (5.7 in × 6.3 in)[2]
Orenda
Source:Gunston.[15]
Orenda
(not related to Orenda Engines)
Orlo
Orlogsværftet
(Orlogsværftet Flyvemaskineværksted (Orlogsværftet Flying Machine Workshop).)
- Orlogsværftet O.V. 160
OKL
(Ośrodek Konstrukcji Lotniczych WSK Okęcie)
Otis-Pifre
Otto
(Gustav Otto)
OV
(Orlogsvaerftet, Denmark)
- OV 160hp[29]
P
Packard
- Packard 1A-258 1922 single
- Packard 1A-744 1919 V-8(60) 180hp 4.75 in × 5.25 in (121 mm × 133 mm)[2]
- Packard 1A-825 1921 V-8(60) 5 in × 5.25 in (127 mm × 133 mm)[2]
- Packard 1A-905 225hp V-12 4 in × 6 in (100 mm × 150 mm)[2]
- Packard 1A-1100 1917 V-8(45)
- Packard 1A-1116 1919 V-12(60) 282hp 4.75 in × 5.25 in (121 mm × 133 mm)[2]
- Packard 1A-1237 1920 V-12(60) 315hp 5 in × 5.25 in (127 mm × 133 mm)[2]
- Packard 2A-1237 1923 V-12(60)
- Packard 1A-1300 1923 V-12(60)
- Packard 1A-1464 1924 V-12(60) 1st redesign of 1A-1300
- Packard 1A-1500 1924 V-12(60)
- Packard 2A-1500 1925 V-12(60)
- Packard 3A-1500 1927 V-12(60)
- Packard 1M-1551 test engine
- Packard 1A-1551 1921 IL-6
- Packard 1A-1650 1919 Packard’s post war Liberty
- Packard 1A-2025 1920 V-12(60) 540hp 5.75 in × 6.5 in (146 mm × 165 mm)[2]
- Packard 1A-2200 1923 V-12(60) (made as 6 cyl.)
- Packard 1A-2500 1924 V-12(60)
- Packard 2A-2500 1925 V-12(60)
- Packard 3M-2500 – marine version
- Packard 3A-2500 1926 V-12(60)
- Packard 4M-2500 – marine version
- Packard 4A-2500 1927 V-12(S60)
- Packard 5M-2500 – marine version
- Packard 5A-2500 193? V-12(S60) experimental
- Packard 1A-2775 1928 X-24(S60) supercharged & un-supercharged (X-2775)
- Packard 2A-2775 1935 X-24(S60) exp. supercharged (X-2775)
- Packard 1A-3000 193? H-24 "H" exp.
- Packard 1A-5000 1939 X-24(60) exp.
- Packard 2A-5000 1939 H-24 exp.
- Packard 3A-5000 1939 X-24(90) exp. sleeve valve
- Packard 1D-2270 1952 V-16(TD60)
- Packard DR-980 1928 R-9(D) 1st diesel to fly
- Packard DR-1340 1932 R-9(D) 2-cycle
- Packard DR-1520 1932 R-9(D) 2-cycle
- Packard DR-1655 1932 R-9(D) exp. diesel
- Packard 299 1916 V-12(60) "299" racer engine
- Packard 452 1917 IL-6 aero exp.
- Packard 905-1 1916 V-12(40)
- Packard 905-2 1917 V-12(40)
- Packard 905-3 1917 V-12(40) (1A-905)
- Packard IL-6 (1A-1551)
- Packard L-8 (1A-1100)
- Packard L-12 1917 Liberty engines
- Packard L-12E 1918 U-12 Duplex – 2 crankshafts
- Packard V-1650 Rolls-Royce Merlin
- Packard Merlin Rolls-Royce Merlin
- Packard W-1 1921 W-18(40) Air Service-designed and Packard-built
- Packard W-1-A 1923 W-18(40) Air Service-designed and Packard-built
- Packard W-1-B 1923 W-18(40) Air Service-designed and Packard-built
- Packard W-2 1923 W-18(40) Air Service designed
- Packard XJ41 1946 Turbo-Jet Experimental turbojet. 7 were contracted
- Packard XJ49 1948 Turbo-Fan Experimental fan jet. Highest thrust—10,000 lbf (44 kN)—jet built up to that time
Palmer
- Palmer 80hp
Palons & Beuse
- Palons & Beuse 2-cyl opposed[2]
Panhard & Levassor
Source:[149] (Société Panhard & Levassor) (N.B. The Panhard & Levassor engines were used in motorcycles, cars, airships, and aircraft)
- Panhard & Levassor 1E 1901 80 mm × 120 mm (3.1 in × 4.7 in) - 0.6 l (36.6 cu in) - 2–3 hp (1.5–2.2 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4F 1901 100 mm × 130 mm (3.9 in × 5.1 in) - 4 l (244 cu in) - 16–18 hp (12–13 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4L 1901 130 mm × 130 mm (5.1 in × 5.1 in) - 6.9 l (421 cu in) - 30 hp (22 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4M 1901 140 mm × 140 mm (5.5 in × 5.5 in) - 8.62 l (526 cu in) - 60–65 hp (45–48 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 2E 1902 80 mm × 120 mm (3.1 in × 4.7 in) - 1.2 l (73 cu in) - 5 hp (3.7 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 2R 1902 90 mm × 130 mm (3.5 in × 5.1 in) - 1.65 l (101 cu in) - 7 hp (5.2 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4E 1902 80 mm × 120 mm (3.1 in × 4.7 in) - 2.4 l (146 cu in) - 10 hp (7.5 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4R 1902 90 mm × 130 mm (3.5 in × 5.1 in) - 3.3 l (201 cu in) - 15 hp (11 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4I 1902 110 mm × 140 mm (4.3 in × 5.5 in) - 5.31 l (324 cu in) - 20–24 hp (15–18 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4I 1903 130 mm × 140 mm (5.1 in × 5.5 in) - 7.45 l (455 cu in) - 35 hp (26 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4M 1903 160 mm × 170 mm (6.3 in × 6.7 in) - 13.675 l (834 cu in) - 70 hp (52 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 3E 1904 80 mm × 120 mm (3.1 in × 4.7 in) - 1.8 l (110 cu in) - 8 hp (6.0 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4L 1905 130 mm × 130 mm (5.1 in × 5.1 in) - 6.9 l (421 cu in) - 30 hp (22 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 6M 1905 170 mm × 170 mm (6.7 in × 6.7 in) - 23.15 l (1,413 cu in) - 130 hp (97 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4E 1906 80 mm × 120 mm (3.1 in × 4.7 in) - 2.4 l (146 cu in) - 10 hp (7.5 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 8M 1906 170 mm × 170 mm (6.7 in × 6.7 in) - 30.87 l (1,884 cu in) - 180 hp (130 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4R 1907 90 mm × 130 mm (3.5 in × 5.1 in) - 3.3 l (201 cu in) - 15 hp (11 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4F 1907 100 mm × 130 mm (3.9 in × 5.1 in) - 4 l (244 cu in) - 16–18 hp (12–13 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4I 1907 110 mm × 140 mm (4.3 in × 5.5 in) - 5.31 l (324 cu in) - 20–24 hp (15–18 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4M 1908 170 mm × 170 mm (6.7 in × 6.7 in) - 15.435 l (942 cu in) - 65 hp (48 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4M 1908 170 mm × 170 mm (6.7 in × 6.7 in) - 15.435 l (942 cu in) - 80–90 hp (60–67 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4V 1908 155 mm × 170 mm (6.1 in × 6.7 in) - 12.8 l (781 cu in) - 65 hp (48 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 6S 1908 135 mm × 140 mm (5.3 in × 5.5 in) - 12 l (732 cu in) - 65 hp (48 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 1I 1909 110 mm × 155 mm (4.3 in × 6.1 in) - 1.473 l (90 cu in) - 4–7 hp (3.0–5.2 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4M 1909 185 mm × 200 mm (7.3 in × 7.9 in) - 21.5 l (1,312 cu in) - 120 hp (89 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 16Y 1909 185 mm × 200 mm (7.3 in × 7.9 in) - 86 l (5,248 cu in) - 700 hp (520 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 2I 1910 110 mm × 140 mm (4.3 in × 5.5 in) - 2.66 l (162 cu in) - 12–15 hp (8.9–11.2 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4O 1910 145 mm × 160 mm (5.7 in × 6.3 in) - 10.56 l (644 cu in) - 50 hp (37 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4E 1911 80 mm × 120 mm (3.1 in × 4.7 in) - 2.4 l (146 cu in) - 10 hp (7.5 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4F 1911 100 mm × 130 mm (3.9 in × 5.1 in) - 4 l (244 cu in) - 18 hp (13 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4R 1912 90 mm × 130 mm (3.5 in × 5.1 in) - 3.3 l (201 cu in) - 15 hp (11 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4I 1912 110 mm × 140 mm (4.3 in × 5.5 in) - 5.31 l (324 cu in) - 25 hp (19 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 4L 1912 125 mm × 150 mm (4.9 in × 5.9 in) - 7.36 l (449 cu in) - 35 hp (26 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 12J 1916 140 mm × 170 mm (5.5 in × 6.7 in) - 31 l (1,892 cu in) - 220 hp (160 kW) @ 1,300 RPM
- Panhard & Levassor 12M 1920 160 mm × 170 mm (6.3 in × 6.7 in) - 43 l (2,624 cu in) - 350 hp (260 kW) @ 1,600 RPM
- Panhard & Levassor 16W 1920 165 mm × 170 mm (6.5 in × 6.7 in) - 58 l (3,539 cu in) - 650 hp (480 kW) @ 1,650 RPM (Double V)
- Panhard & Levassor 4I 1909 110 mm × 140 mm (4.3 in × 5.5 in) - 5.32 l (325 cu in) - 35–40 hp (26–30 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 6I 1910 110 mm × 140 mm (4.3 in × 5.5 in) - 7.98 l (487 cu in) - 55 hp (41 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 6J 1910 120 mm × 140 mm (4.7 in × 5.5 in) - 9.5 l (580 cu in) - 65 hp (48 kW)
- Panhard & Levassor 12L 1926 140 mm × 170 mm (5.5 in × 6.7 in) - 31 l (1,892 cu in) - 550 hp (410 kW) @ 1,500 RPM (sleeve valve)
- Panhard & Levassor VK12L 1926 140 mm × 170 mm (5.5 in × 6.7 in) - 31 l (1,892 cu in) - 485 hp (362 kW) @ 1,500 RPM (sleeve valve) a.k.a. K122
- Panhard & Levassor 12W 1926 165 mm × 170 mm (6.5 in × 6.7 in) - 25 l (1,526 cu in) - 525 hp (391 kW) @ 2,130 RPM (sleeve valve)
- Panhard & Levassor 12L 1930 140 mm × 170 mm (5.5 in × 6.7 in) - 31 l (1,892 cu in) - 450 hp (340 kW) @ 1,500 RPM (sleeve valve)
- Panhard & Levassor 12M 1930 165 mm × 170 mm (6.5 in × 6.7 in) - 43 l (2,624 cu in) - 500 hp (370 kW) @ 1,600 RPM (sleeve valve)
- Pahhard-Levassor 12Cb 340 hp (250 kW)
Parker
- Parker 1912 3 cyl
- Parker 1912 6 cyl
Parma Technik
(Luhačovice, Zlín Region, Moravia, Czech Republic)
Parodi
(Roland Parodi)
- Parodi HP 60Z[36]
PBS
(První Brnenská Strojírna Velká Bíteš, a.s.)
- PBS TJ-100[150]
- PBS Velka Bites ÒÅ 50Â[151]
Pegasus Aviation
Per Il Volo
Peterlot
- Peterlot 80hp 7-cyl radial
Peugeot
Pheasant Aircraft Company
- Pheasant Flight 4-cyl
Phillips
- Phillips 333 (Martin 333)
- Phillips 500
Piaggio
Data from:Italian Civil & Military Aircraft 1930–1945[18] & Jane's 1938[35] (note: the R is for Riduttori – reduction geared, and the C is for Compressore – supercharged)
Media related to Piaggio aircraft engines at Wikimedia Commons
- Piaggio P.II (Armstrong Siddely Lynx)
- Piaggio Stella P.VII
- Piaggio Stella P.VII C.16
- Piaggio Stella P.VII C.35
- Piaggio Stella P.VII C.45
- Piaggio Stella P.VII R.C.10
- Piaggio Stella P.VII R.C.35
- Piaggio Stella P.VII Z
- Piaggio Stella P.IX
- Piaggio Stella P.IX R.C.
- Piaggio Stella P.IX R.C.10
- Piaggio Stella P.IX R.C.40
- Piaggio P.X
- Piaggio P.X R.
- Piaggio P.X R.C.
- Piaggio P.X R.C.10
- Piaggio P.X R.C.35[35]
- Piaggio P.XI
- Piaggio P.XII
- Piaggio P.XV
- Piaggio P.XV R.C.45
- Piaggio P.XV R.C.60
- Piaggio P.XV R.C.60/2v
- Piaggio P.XVI
- Piaggio P.XVI R.C.35
- Piaggio P.XIX
- Piaggio P.XXII
- Piaggio-Jupiter VI
- Piaggio-Jupiter VII
- Piaggio Jupiter
- Piaggio Lycoming
Pierce
- Pierce B 35hp 3RA 4 in × 6 in (100 mm × 150 mm)[2]
Pieper
(Pieper Motorenbau GmbH)
Pipe
Data from:[19]
Pirna
(Industriewerke Ludwigsfelde / Vereinegung Volkseigener Betriebe Flugzeugbau, Pirna, DDR )
Platzer
(Ellenberg, Germany)
Pobjoy
Source: Lumsden.[3]
Poinsard
Porsche
- Porsche 678[14]
- Porsche 702
- Porsche PFM N00
- Porsche PFM N01
- Porsche PFM N03
- Porsche PFM T03
- Porsche PFM 3200
- Porsche 109-005
- Porsche YO-95-6
Potez
(Société des Avions et Moteurs Henri Potez)
- Potez A-4 50hp 4IL upright 100 mm × 120 mm (3.9 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- Potez 1C APU
- Potez 1D APU
- Potez 1D-3 APU
- Potez 2D APU
- Potez 2D-2 APU
- Potez 2D-5 APU
- Potez 2C APU
- Potez 3B[35]
- Potez 4D[11][14]
- Potez 4E[14]
- Potez 6A
- Potez 6Ac
- Potez 6B[35]
- Potez 6Ba[35]
- Potez 6D[11][14]
- Potez 6E[10]
- Potez 6E.30
- Potez 8D[11][14]
- Potez 9A[35]
- Potez 9B[35]
- Potez 9Ba
- Potez 9Bb
- Potez 9E[35]
- Potez 9Eo
- Potez 12As
- Potez 12D (a.k.a. D.12)[35][30]
- Potez 12D-03
Pouit
- Pouit S-4
PowerJet
Power Jets
(Power Jets Ltd.)
Poyer
Praga
Source:Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1938[35]
Pratt & Whitney
- Pratt & Whitney H-3730
- Pratt & Whitney H-2600
- Pratt & Whitney X-1800
- Pratt & Whitney X-3130
- Pratt & Whitney XH-3130 – cancelled
- Pratt & Whitney XH-3730 – cancelled
- Pratt & Whitney R-985 Wasp Junior
- Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp
- Pratt & Whitney R-1535 Twin Wasp Junior
- Pratt & Whitney R-1690 Hornet
- Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp
- Pratt & Whitney R-1860 Hornet B
- Pratt & Whitney R-2000 Twin Wasp
- Pratt & Whitney R-2060 Yellow Jacket
- Pratt & Whitney R-2180 Twin Hornet
- Pratt & Whitney R-2270
- Pratt & Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp
- Pratt & Whitney R-4360 Wasp Major
- Pratt & Whitney JT3
- Pratt & Whitney JT3C – company designation for J57
- Pratt & Whitney JT3D
- Pratt & Whitney JT4 – company designation for J75
- Pratt & Whitney JT4A
- Pratt & Whitney JT4D[21]
- Pratt & Whitney JT7
- Pratt & Whitney JT8
- Pratt & Whitney JT8D
- Pratt & Whitney JT9D
- Pratt & Whitney JT10D
- Pratt & Whitney JT11D
- Pratt & Whitney JT12A
- Pratt & Whitney JT18D
- Pratt & Whitney JTF10A
- Pratt & Whitney JTF16[45]
- Pratt & Whitney JTF17[45]
- Pratt & Whitney JTF22
- Pratt & Whitney JFTD12
- Pratt & Whitney JTN9
- Pratt & Whitney PT1
- Pratt & Whitney PT2
- Pratt & Whitney PT4
- Pratt & Whitney PT5
- Pratt & Whitney PW1000G
- Pratt & Whitney PW1120[36]
- Pratt & Whitney PW1130[36]
- Pratt & Whitney PW2000
- Pratt & Whitney PW3000[36]
- Pratt & Whitney PW3005[24]
- Pratt & Whitney PW4000
- Pratt & Whitney PW6000
- Pratt & Whitney RL-10
- Pratt & Whitney ST9
- Pratt & Whitney STF300
- Pratt & Whitney Hornet Junior
- Pratt & Whitney Hornet
- Pratt & Whitney Twin Hornet
- Pratt & Whitney Twin Wasp
- Pratt & Whitney Twin Wasp E1
- Pratt & Whitney Wasp
- Pratt & Whitney Wasp Jr
- Pratt & Whitney Double Wasp
- Pratt & Whitney Wasp Major
- Pratt & Whitney Yellow Jacket
- Pratt & Whitney LR115
- Pratt & Whitney F100
- Pratt & Whitney F105
- Pratt & Whitney F117 (PW2037)
- Pratt & Whitney F119 (PW5000)
- Pratt & Whitney F135
- Pratt & Whitney F401
- Pratt & Whitney J42 (licence built Rolls-Royce Nene)
- Pratt & Whitney J48 (licence built Rolls-Royce Tay)
- Pratt & Whitney J52
- Pratt & Whitney J57
- Pratt & Whitney J58
- Pratt & Whitney J60
- Pratt & Whitney J75
- Pratt & Whitney J91
- Pratt & Whitney RJ40 Ramjet
- Pratt & Whitney T32
- Pratt & Whitney T34
- Pratt & Whitney T45
- Pratt & Whitney T48
- Pratt & Whitney T52
- Pratt & Whitney T57
- Pratt & Whitney T73
- Pratt & Whitney T101 (Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6-45A)
- Pratt & Whitney T400 (Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6T)
- Pratt & Whitney TF30
- Pratt & Whitney TF33
- Pratt & Whitney / SNECMA TF104
- Pratt & Whitney / SNECMA TF106
- Pratt & Whitney / SNECMA TF306
Pratt & Whitney - Allison
- PW-Allison 578DX[24]
Pratt & Whitney Canada
- Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6
- Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6T
- Pratt & Whitney Canada JT15D
- Pratt & Whitney Canada PW100
- Pratt & Whitney Canada PW200
- Pratt & Whitney Canada PW300
- Pratt & Whitney Canada PW500
- Pratt & Whitney Canada PW600
- Pratt & Whitney Canada PW800
- Pratt & Whitney Canada T74
- Pratt & Whitney Canada T101
- Pratt & Whitney Canada T400
Preceptor
Price Induction
- DGEN
Primi-Berthand
- Primi-Berthand 4-cyl in-line 2-stroke 100 mm × 180 mm (3.9 in × 7.1 in)[2]
Pulch
(Otto Pulch)
Pulsar
- Pulsar Aeromaxx 100
PZI
(Państwowe Zakłady Inżynieryjne - National Engineering Works)
PZL
(Państwowe Zakłady Lotnicze)
PZL-Wytwórnia Silników
Q
Quick
(Quick Air Motors, Wichita KS.)
- Super Rhone Radial Engine 120-125hp[154]
- Quick 180hp
R
Radne Motor AB
Ranger
(Ranger Engineering, a division of the Fairchild Engine & Airplane Corporation)
- Ranger 6-370
- Ranger 6-375
- Ranger 6-390[35]
- Ranger 6-410
- Ranger 6-440
- Ranger L-440
- Ranger V-770
- Ranger V-880
- Ranger XV-920
- Ranger XH-1850 (not actually an H - a double 150° V - two separate crankshafts linked by a gearbox)[155]
Rapp
(Rapp Motorenwerke G.m.b.H.)[9]
Rasmussen
- Rasmussen 65hp
Rateau
(Société Rateau)
Rausenberger
- Rausenberger A-8 45hp V-8 3.5 in × 3.75 in (89 mm × 95 mm)[2]
- Rausenberger B-8 75hp V-8 4.125 in × 4.75 in (104.8 mm × 120.7 mm)[2]
- Rausenberger C-12 150hp V-12 4.125 in × 6 in (104.8 mm × 152.4 mm)[2]
- Rausenberger D-23 250hp V-12 5 in × 6.5 in (130 mm × 170 mm)[2]
- Rausenberger E-6 150hp 6IL 5 in × 6 in (130 mm × 150 mm)[2]
- Rausenberger 500hp
Raven Redrives
(El Prado, New Mexico, United States)
RBVZ
(RBVZ Russko-Baltiisky Vagon Zavod – Russo-Baltic wagon works)
Reaction Motors
- Reaction Motors LR2
- Reaction Motors LR6
- Reaction Motors LR8
- Reaction Motors LR10
- Reaction Motors LR11
- Reaction Motors LR22
- Reaction Motors LR26
- Reaction Motors LR30
- Reaction Motors LR32
- Reaction Motors LR33
- Reaction Motors LR34
- Reaction Motors LR35
- Reaction Motors LR39
- Reaction Motors LR40
- Reaction Motors LR44 Guardian[21]
- Reaction Motors LR48
- Reaction Motors LR99
- Reaction Motors 6000C4[11]
- Reaction Motors ROR[11]
- Reaction Motors Patriot[21]
- Reaction Motors TU205[21]
Rearwin
- Rearwin 1909 30-45hp
- Rearwin 1909 40-60hp
- Rearwin 1910 50-75hp
- Rearwin 1911 80-90hp
Rectimo
(Rectimo Aviation SA) / (Rectimo-Savoie Aviation)
RED
(RED Aircraft)
Redrup
- Redrup 1910 50hp 10-cyl contra-rotating rotary
- Redrup 1914 150hp 7-cyl radial
- Redrup 5-cyl barrel engine
- Redrup Fury (barrel engine built by Aero Syndicate Ltd.)
Reggiane
- Reggiane Re 101 R.C.50 I (sometimes designated Re L 101 R.C.50 I)[156]
- Reggiane Re 102 R.C.50 I (inverted W-18)[156]
- Reggiane Re 103 R.C.40 I (inverted W-18)[156]
- Reggiane Re 103 R.C.50 I (inverted W-18)[156]
- Reggiane Re 103 R.C.57 I (inverted W-18)[156]
- Reggiane Re 103 R.C.48 (inverted W-18)[156]
- Reggiane Re 104 R.C.38 (V-12 derived from the Isotta Fraschini Asso L.121 R.C.40)[156]
- Reggiane Re 105 R.C.100 I (inverted W-18)[156]
- Reggiane H-24[156]
Régnier
(Société anonyme des établissments Emile Regnier)[35]
- Régnier R1
- Régnier 2[17][30]
- Régnier 4B (derived from de Havilland Gipsy)
- Régnier 4D.2
- Régnier 4E.0
- Régnier 4F.0
- Régnier 4JO[157]
- Régnier 4KO
- Régnier 4LO
- Régnier 4L[30]
- Régnier 4R[30]
- Régnier 6B
- Régnier 6C
- Régnier 6GO
- Régnier 6R[30]
- Régnier 6RS[30]
- Régnier R161-01[158]
- Régnier Martinet[158]
- Régnier 12Hoo
Renard
(Société anonyme des avions et moteurs Renard, Belgium)[159]
- Renard Type 7 7RA
- Renard Type 100 5RA
- Renard Type 120 5RA
- Renard Type 200 9RA[29]
- Renard Type 400 18RA (twin-row type 200)[29]
Renard
(Charles Renard, France)
- Renard y Krebs
Renault
(Société des Moteurs Renault-Aviation)(Source:[160] and[19])
Note: some of the early Renaults seem to have oversquare cylinders and may be listed with bore and stroke transposed below.
- Renault 38.5hp 4-cyl in-line 110 mm × 160 mm (4.3 in × 6.3 in)[2]
- Renault 42.5hp 4-cyl in-line 116 mm × 150 mm (4.6 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Renault 25/30hp 4-cyl in-line 120 mm × 90 mm (4.7 in × 3.5 in)[2][27]
- Renault 35-40hp V-4
- Renault 35hp V-8 110 mm × 70 mm (4.3 in × 2.8 in)[27]
- Renault 35hp V-8 120 mm × 70 mm (4.7 in × 2.8 in)[2]
- Renault 45hp V-8
- Renault 50hp V-8 120 mm × 90 mm (4.7 in × 3.5 in)[2][27]
- Renault 50.5hp V-8 90 mm × 140 mm (3.5 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Renault 60hp V-8 100 mm × 120 mm (3.9 in × 4.7 in)[2][3]
- Renault 70hp Type WB 94 mm × 120 mm (3.7 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- Renault 70hp Type WC
- Renault 75hp V-8 100 mm × 120 mm (3.9 in × 4.7 in)[2]
- Renault 80hp Type WS 105 mm × 130 mm (4.1 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Renault 90hp V-8 140 mm × 96 mm (5.5 in × 3.8 in)[2][27]
- Renault 100hp V-8
- Renault 130hp V-8
- Renault 90hp V-12 12D
- Renault 100hp V-12 96 mm × 140 mm (3.8 in × 5.5 in)[2]
- Renault 120hp V-12
- Renault 138hp V-12 105 mm × 130 mm (4.1 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Renault 190hp V-12[9]
- Renault 200hp V-12
- Renault 220hp V-12 12E
- Renault 265hp V-12
- Renault 300hp V-12[9] 12F
- Renault 320hp V-12[9] 12Fe
- Renault 38.5hp 4-cyl in-line water-cooled[19]
- Renault 42.5hp 4-cyl in-line water-cooled airship engine[19]
- Renault 7A 100 hp (75 kW) 7 radial
- Renault 8A 50 hp (37 kW) V-8
- Renault 8Aa 60 hp (45 kW) V-8
- Renault 8Ab 70–75 hp (52–56 kW) V-8
- Renault 9A
- Renault 4B 25 hp V-4 1910
- Renault 8B 30 hp (22 kW) V-8
- Renault 8C 70 hp (52 kW) V-8
- Renault 8Ca 80 hp (60 kW) V8
- Renault 9C
- Renault 9Ca 350–435 hp (261–324 kW) 9 radial
- Renault 12D
- Renault 12Da 100 hp (75 kW)
- Renault 12Db 120 hp (89 kW) V12
- Renault 12Dc 130 hp (97 kW) V12
- Renault 12Drs 500–630 hp (370–470 kW) V12
- Renault 12E 200 hp (150 kW) V12
- Renault 12Eb 220 hp (160 kW)
- Renault 12Ec 235 hp (175 kW) V12
- Renault 9F
- Renault 9Fas 650–675 hp (485–503 kW) 9 radial[30]
- Renault 12F[9]
- Renault 12Fa 220 hp (160 kW) V12
- Renault 12Fb 250 hp (190 kW) V12
- Renault 12Fc 280 hp (210 kW) V12
- Renault 12Fe 300 hp (220 kW) V12
- Renault 12Fex 300 hp (220 kW) V-12
- Renault 14Fas 900–1,000 hp (670–750 kW) 14 radial[161]
- Renault 8G 140 hp (100 kW) to 200 hp (150 kW) V8
- Renault 12H[9]
- Renault 12Ha 450 hp (340 kW) V12
- Renault 12Hd 480 hp (360 kW) V12
- Renault 12He 500 hp (370 kW) V12
- Renault 12Hg 550 hp (410 kW) V12
- Renault 12J
- Renault 12Ja 450 hp (340 kW) V12
- Renault 12Jb 500 hp (370 kW) V12
- Renault 12Jc 550 hp (410 kW) V12
- Renault 18J
- Renault 18Jbr 700 hp (520 kW) W18
- Renault 12K (aka 450hp and 500hp)[29]
- Renault 12K1? [162]
- Renault 12Ka
- Renault 12Kb 450 hp (340 kW) V12
- Renault 12Kd
- Renault 12Ke 500 hp (370 kW) V12
- Renault 12Kg 550 hp (410 kW) V12
- Renault 12M 550–650 hp (410–480 kW) V12[29]
- Renault 12Ma[163]
- Renault 12N
- Renault 12Ncr 2,000 hp (1,500 kW)
- Renault 12O 390–450 hp (290–340 kW) air-cooled V-12 inverted[57]
- Renault 4P
- Renault 6P
- Renault 9P 9 radial (aka 250hp air-cooled engine)
- Renault 9Pa 250 hp (190 kW)
- Renault 6Q 200–300 hp (150–220 kW)
- Renault 12R 450 hp (340 kW) air-cooled V-12 inverted
- Renault 12Rb 470–480 hp (350–360 kW)
- Renault 12Rc 500 hp (370 kW)
- Renault 12R-00 500 hp (370 kW) LH rotation
- Renault 12R-01 500 hp (370 kW) RH rotation
- Renault 12R-03 500 hp (370 kW) RH rotation
- Renault 12R-09 500 hp (370 kW) RH rotation
- Renault 12Ro 500 hp (370 kW)
- Renault 12S 480 hp (360 kW) V-12 inverted
- Renault 14T[30]
- Renault 12T 600 hp (450 kW) V-12 inverted
- Renault Bengali 4
- Renault Bengali 6
- Renault Type WB
- Renault Type WC
- Renault Type WS
- Renault Moteur Coupe Deutsch 6 inline 7.95 l (485 cu in) (109.75x140), turbocharged[164]
- Renault 438 (Coupe Deutsch) 180hp 6 in-line
- Renault 446 450hp V-12?
- Renault 454 220hp 6 in-line
- Renault 456 300hp 6 in-line
- Renault 468 730hp inverted V-12
- Renault 626 800hp inverted V-8?
- Renault 8? 200hp 8 cyl in-line water-cooled
R.E.P.
(Robert Esnault-Pelterie)
- R.E.P. 20/24hp 5-cyl. 85 mm × 95 mm (3.35 in × 3.74 in)[2]
- R.E.P. 30/34hp 7-cyl. 85 mm × 95 mm (3.35 in × 3.74 in)[2]
- R.E.P. 95hp 7-cyl. 110 mm × 160 mm (4.33 in × 6.3 in)[2]
- R.E.P. 40/48hp 10-cyl. 85 mm × 95 mm (3.35 in × 3.74 in)[2]
- R.E.P. 60hp 14-cyl. 85 mm × 95 mm (3.35 in × 3.74 in)[2]
- R.E.P. 60hp 5-cyl fan 110 mm × 160 mm (4.3 in × 6.3 in)[27]
- R.E.P. 50hp 5-cyl fan 100 mm × 140 mm (3.9 in × 5.5 in)[27]
- R.E.P. 75hp 6-cyl
- R.E.P. 60hp 7-cyl
- R.E.P. 85hp 7-cyl radial 110 mm × 160 mm (4.3 in × 6.3 in)[27]
Revmaster
- Revmaster R-800 2cyl 27 hp (Citroën 2CV)[165]
- Revmaster R-1600D[165] VW
- Revmaster R-1600S[165]
- Revmaster R-1831D[165]
- Revmaster R-1831S[165]
- Revmaster R-2100D[165] 65 hp@3200rpm
- Revmaster R-2100D Turbo[165] 70 hp@3200rpm
- Revmaster R-2100S[165] 65 hp@3200rpm
- Revmaster R-2300[165]
- Revmaster R-3000D[165] 110 hp@3200rpm
Rex
(Flugmachine Rex GesellschaftG.m.b.H.)
- Rex rotary engine
RFB
(Rhein-Flugzeugbau GmbH)
Rheem
- Rheem S-10 axial
Rheinische
Rheinmetall-Borsig
(Rheinmetall-Borsig A.G.)
Rhenania
(Rhenania Motorenwerke)
- Rhenania rotary engine][2]
Ricardo
Richard & Hering
(Rex-Simplex Automobilwerke)
- Richard & Hering engines][2]
Richardson
(Archibald and Mervyn, Sydney Australia)
- Richardson rotary
Righter Manufacturing
- Righter O-15[166]
- Righter O-45
Roberts
(Robertd Motor Company / E.W. Roberts, Sandusky. Ohio)
- Roberts 50hp 4-cyl in-line 4.5 in × 5 in (110 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Roberts 75hp 6-cyl in-line 4.5 in × 5 in (110 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Roberts 4-X.
- Roberts 6-X 100hp 5 in × 5 in (130 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Roberts 6-XX 200hp 6.5 in × 6 in (170 mm × 150 mm)[2]
- Roberts 6-Z
- Roberts E-12 350hp 6 in × 6.5 in (150 mm × 170 mm)[2]
Robinson
(Grinnell Aeroplane Co. / William C. Robinson)
- Robinson 60hp
- Robinson 100hp
Roché
- Roché L-267
Rocket Propulsion Establishment
- RPE Gamma
Rocketdyne
- Rocketdyne 16NS-1,000[10]
- Rocketdyne AR1[21]
- Rocketdyne AR2-1[21]
- Rocketdyne AR2-2[21]
- Rocketdyne AR2-3[45]
- Rocketdyne LR42[21]
- Rocketdyne LR64
- Rocketdyne LR79[10]
- Rocketdyne LR89[10]
- Rocketdyne LR101[10]
- Rocketdyne LR105[10]
- Rocketdyne Aeolus[10]
- Rocketdyne A-7[21] Redstone
- Rocketdyne E-1
- Rocketdyne F-1 (RP-1/LOX) Saturn V.
- Rocketdyne H-1 (RP-1/LOX) Saturn I, Saturn Ib, Jupiter, and some Deltas
- Rocketdyne J-2 (LH2/LOX) Saturn V and Saturn IB.
- Rocketdyne M-34[10]
- Rocketdyne MA-2[10]
- Rocketdyne MA-3[10]
- Rocketdyne MB-3[10]
- Rocketdyne MB-93[10]
- Rocketdyne P-4[10]
- Rocketdyne RS-25 Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME) (LH2/LOX) The main engine for the Space Shuttle.
- Rocketdyne RS-27A (RP-1/LOX) Used by the Delta II/III and Atlas ICBM
- Rocketdyne RS-68 (LH2/LOX) Used by the Delta IV first stage
- Rocketdyne Kiwi Nuclear rocket engine[10]
- Rocketdyne Megaboom modular sled rocket[10]
- Rocketdyne Vernier engine[21] Atlas, some Thor with MA-2 & MB-3
Rocky Mountain
- Rocky Mountain Pegasus
Rollason
- Rollason Ardem RTW
- Rollason Ardem 4 CO2 FH mod
Rolls-Royce Limited
Sources: Piston engines, Lumsden,[3] gas turbine and rocket engines, Gunston.[15][45]
Note: For alternative 'RB' gas turbine designations please see the Rolls-Royce aero engine template.
- Rolls-Royce 190hp
- Rolls-Royce 250hp
- Rolls-Royce Avon
- Rolls-Royce Bristol Olympus
- Rolls-Royce Buzzard
- Rolls-Royce Clyde
- Rolls-Royce Condor
- Rolls-Royce Condor diesel[19]
- Rolls-Royce Conway
- Rolls-Royce Crecy
- Rolls-Royce Dart
- Rolls-Royce Derwent
- Rolls Royce Eagle (H-24)
- Rolls-Royce Eagle (V-12)
- Rolls-Royce Eagle (X-16)
- Rolls-Royce Exe
- Rolls-Royce Falcon
- Rolls-Royce Gem
- Rolls-Royce Gnome
- Rolls-Royce Goshawk
- Rolls-Royce Griffon
- Rolls-Royce Hawk
- Rolls-Royce Kestrel
- Rolls-Royce Merlin
- Rolls-Royce Nene
- Rolls-Royce Bristol Olympus
- Rolls-Royce Pegasus
- Rolls-Royce Pennine
- Rolls-Royce Peregrine
- Rolls-Royce R
- Rolls-Royce RB.44 Tay
- Rolls-Royce RB.50 Trent
- Rolls-Royce RB.106
- Rolls-Royce RB.108
- Rolls-Royce RB.145
- Rolls-Royce/MAN Turbo RB153[67]
- Rolls-Royce RB.162
- Rolls-Royce RB.175
- Rolls-Royce RB.181
- Rolls-Royce/MAN Turbo RB193[67]
- Rolls-Royce RB.203 Trent[67]
- Rolls-Royce RB.207[67]
- Rolls-Royce Soar
- Rolls-Royce Spey
- Rolls-Royce Tweed
- Rolls-Royce Tyne
- Rolls-Royce Viper
- Rolls-Royce Vulture
- Rolls-Royce Welland
- Rolls-Royce/Continental C90
- Rolls-Royce/Continental O-200-A
- Rolls-Royce/Continental O-300
- Rolls-Royce/Continental GIO-470-A
- Rolls-Royce/Continental IO-520
- Rolls-Royce RZ.2
- Rolls-Royce RZ.12
Rolls-Royce plc
Note: For alternative 'RB' gas turbine designations please see the Rolls-Royce aero engine template.
- Rolls-Royce Trent
- Rolls-Royce AE 1107C-Liberty
- Rolls-Royce AE 2100
- Rolls-Royce AE 3007
- Rolls-Royce AE 3010
- Rolls-Royce AE 3012
- Rolls-Royce BR700
- Rolls-Royce BR701
- Rolls-Royce BR710
- Rolls-Royce BR715
- Rolls-Royce RB.108
- Rolls-Royce RB.141
- Rolls-Royce RB.145
- Rolls-Royce RB.146
- Rolls-Royce RB.163
- Rolls-Royce RB.168
- Rolls-Royce RB.183 Tay
- Rolls-Royce RB.200
- Rolls-Royce RB.202
- Rolls-Royce RB.203 (2nd use of Trent)
- Rolls-Royce RB.207
- Rolls-Royce RB.211
- Rolls-Royce RB.213
- Rolls-Royce RB.401
- Rolls-Royce 250
- Rolls-Royce RR300
- Rolls-Royce RR500
- Rolls-Royce 501
- Rolls-Royce F113 (Spey Mk.511)
- Rolls-Royce F126 (Tay Mk.611 / 661)
- Rolls-Royce F137 (AE3007H)
- Rolls-Royce F402 (Pegasus)
- Rolls-Royce J99
- Rolls-Royce XV99-RA-1
- Rolls-Royce T56 (T501-D)
- Rolls-Royce T68
- Rolls-Royce T406
Rolls-Royce/Turbomeca
Source:Gunston.[15]
Rolls-Royce/SNECMA
Rossel-Peugeot
(Frédéric Rossel et les frères Peugeot)
Rotax
Rotec
Rotex Electric
(Prague, Czech Republic)
- Rotex Electric REB 20
- Rotex Electric REB 30
- Rotex Electric REB 50
- Rotex Electric REB 90
- Rotex Electric REG 20
- Rotex Electric REG 30
- Rotex Electric RET 30
- Rotex Electric RET 60
- Rotex Electric REX 30
- Rotex Electric REX 50
- Rotex Electric REX 90
RotorWay
Rotron
(Semley, Wiltshire, United Kingdom)
Rover
(Rover Company / Rover Gas Turbines Ltd.)
Royal Aircraft Establishment
Royal Aircraft Factory
Source: Lumsden.[3]
RRJAEL
(Rolls-Royce and Japanese Aero-engines Ltd.)
- RRJAEL RJ.500[36]
Rumpler
- Rumpler Aeolus
Ruston-Proctor
- Ruston-Proctor 200hp 6-stroke rotary(6-cyl 2-stroke?)[2]
Ryan-Siemens
Rybinsk Motor Factory
- DN-200[57]
S
SACMA
(Guy Negre)[168]
Safran Helicopter Engines
SAI Ambrosini
- Ambrosini P-25 – 2-cyl. horizontally opposed
Salmson
(Societe des Moteurs Salmson)
- Salmson 3 A Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 3 Ad Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 5 A Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 5 Ac Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 5 Ap Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 5 Aq Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 6 A
- Salmson 6 Ad
- Salmson 6 Af
- Salmson 6 TE[30]
- Salmson 6 TE.S[30]
- Salmson 7 A Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 7 AC Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 7 ACa Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 7 Aq Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 7 M Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 7 O Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 7 Om Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 8 As.00
- Salmson 8 As.04[11]
- Salmson 9 AB Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9ABa Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9ABc Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9 AC
- Salmson 9 AD Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9 ADb Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9 ADr Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9 AE Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9 AEr
- Salmson 9 AErs
- Salmson 9 NA Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9 NAs
- Salmson 9 NC
- Salmson 9 ND
- Salmson 9 NE
- Salmson 9 NH[11] Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 11 B Air cooled radial engine
- Salmson 12 C W-12?
- Salmson 12 V V-12
- Salmson 12 Vars V-12
- Salmson A water-cooled barrel engine
- Salmson B water-cooled barrel engine
- Salmson C water-cooled barrel engine
- Salmson E water-cooled barrel engine
- Salmson F water-cooled barrel engine
- Salmson G water-cooled barrel engine
- Salmson K water-cooled barrel engine
- Salmson A.7 water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson A.9 water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson 2A.9 water-cooled 2-row radial engine
- Salmson B.9 water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson C.9 water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson M.9 water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson P.9 water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson R.9 water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson M.7 water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson 2M.7 water-cooled 2-row radial engine[3]
- Salmson 9.Z water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson Z9 water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9.Za water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9.Zc water-cooled radial engine
- Salmson 9.Zm water-cooled radial engine
Salmsons 18 cylinder in-line radial engines
- Salmson 18 Z (1919) 9-bank water-cooled in-line radial 2 x 9Z on common 2-throw crankshaft
- Salmson 18 AB (1920s) 9-bank air-cooled in-line radial[29]
- Salmson 18 Cm (late 20s early 30s) 9-bank water-cooled (air-cooled heads) in-line radial
- Salmson-Szydlowski SH.18 – 18-cyl 2-stroke radial diesel engine (nine banks of two in-line)[19]
Saroléa
(Maison Saroléa S.A.)
S.A.N.A.
- S.A.N.A. 700hp[170]
Saunders-Roe
- Saunders-Roe 45 lbf pulse-jet
- Saunders-Roe 120 lbf pulse-jet
Sauer
(Sauer Flugmotorenbau GmbH)
- Sauer S 1800-1-ES1
- Sauer S 1800-1-ES1C
- Sauer S 1800-1-RS1
- Sauer S 1800 UL
- Sauer S 1900 UL
- Sauer S 2100-1-AS1
- Sauer S 2100-1-SS1
- Sauer S 2100 UL Same spec as the Sauer S 2100 (certified engine)
- Sauer S 2100 ULT
- Sauer S 2200 UL
- Sauer S 2400 UL
- Sauer S 2500-1-DS1
- Sauer S 2500-1-TS1
- Sauer S 2500-1-HS1
- Sauer S 2500-1-FS1
- Sauer S 2500 UL
- Sauer S 2500 T
- Sauer S 2500 ULT
- Sauer S 2700 UL
Saurer
(Adolph Saurer AG)
- Saurer GT-15[45]
- Saurer YS-2
- Saurer YS-3
Schmidding
Schroeter
- Schroeter 89hp 6-cyl in-line 124 mm × 160 mm (4.9 in × 6.3 in)[2]
Schwade
(Otto Schwade GmbH, Erfut, Germany)
- Schwade Stahlherz engine[2]
SCI Aviation
- R6-80
- R6-150
- B4-160
Scott
- Scott A2S Flying Squirrel[3]
- Scott 40hp 2-stroke
- Scott 1939 2-stroke
- Scott 1950 2-stroke V4
Security
(Security Aircraaft Corporation)
- Security S-5-120[35]
Sega
Seld
(Seld-Kompressorbau G.m.b.H.)
- Seld F2[31]
SEPR
(Société d'Etudes pour la Propulsion par Réaction)
- SEPR 9
- SEPR 16
- SEPR 24
- SEPR 25[10]
- SEPR 35
- SEPR 44
- SEPR 50
- SEPR 55
- SEPR 57
- SEPR 63
- SEPR 65
- SEPR 66
- SEPR 73
- SEPR 732
- SEPR 734
- SEPR 7341
- SEPR 737
- SEPR 738
- SEPR 739 (Stromboli)
- SEPR 78
- SEPR 81A
- SEPR 84
- SEPR 167
- SEPR 178
- SEPR 189
- SEPR 192
- SEPR 200 (Tramontane)
- SEPR 201
- SEPR 202
- SEPR 2020
- SEPR 251
- SEPR 481
- SEPR 504
- SEPR 505
- SEPR 5051
- SEPR 5052
- SEPR 50531
- SEPR 5054
- SEPR 631
- SEPR 683
- SEPR 684
- SEPR 685
- SEPR 6854
- SEPR 686
- SEPR 703
- SEPR 705
- SEPR 706
- SEPR 740
- SEPR 841[10][45]
- SEPR 844[10][45]
- SEPR Topaze
- SEPR Diamante
- SEPR C2
Sergant
SERMEL
- SERMEL TRS 12
- SERMEL TRS 18
- SERMEL TRS 25
SFFA
(Société Française de Fabrication Aéronautique, France)
SFECMAS
(Société Française d'Etude et de Construction de Matériel Aéronautiques Spéciaux)
Shenyang
(Shenyang Aircraft Corporation)
- Shenyang PF-1
- Shenyang Aircraft Development Office PF-1A
- Shenyang WP-5
- Shenyang WP-7
- Shenyang WS-5
- Shenyang WS-6
- Shenyang WS-8
- Shenyang WS-10
- Shenyang WS-15
- Shenyang WP-14 Kunlun
Shimadzu
Shvetsov
Data from:Russian Piston Aero Engines[57]
- Shvetsov M-11 A.D. Shvetsov - N.V. Okromeshko
- Shvetsov M-3
- Shvetsov M-25
- Shvetsov M-62
- Shvetsov M-63
- Shvetsov M-64
- Shvetsov M-65
- Shvetsov M-70
- Shvetsov M-71
- Shvetsov M-72
- Shvetsov M-80
- Shvetsov M-81
- Shvetsov M-82
- Shvetsov ASh-2
- Shvetsov ASh-3
- Shvetsov ASh-4
- Shvetsov ASh-21
- Shvetsov ASh-62
- Shvetsov ASh-73
- Shvetsov ASh-82
- Shvetsov ASh-83
- Shvetsov ASh-84
- Shvetsov ASh-93
S.H.K.
Siemens
(Siemens AG, Erlangen, Germany)
Siddeley-Deasy
- Siddeley Ounce[171]
- Siddeley Pacific[9]
- Siddeley Puma
- Siddeley Tiger
Siemens-Halske
(Siemens & Halske AG / Siemens-Bramo)
- Siemens-Halske 110hp 9-cyl rotary 114 mm × 130 mm (4.5 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Siemens VI
- Siemens-Halske Sh.I
- Siemens-Halske Sh.II
- Siemens-Halske Sh.III
- Siemens-Halske Sh 4
- Siemens-Halske Sh 5
- Siemens-Halske Sh 6
- Siemens-Halske Sh 7
- Siemens-Halske Sh 10
- Siemens-Halske Sh 11
- Siemens-Halske Sh 12
- Siemens-Halske Sh 13
- Siemens-Halske Sh 14 (RLM 9-314)[31]
- Siemens-Halske Sh 15
- Siemens-Bramo Sh 20
- Siemens-Bramo Sh 21
- Siemens-Bramo Sh 22[31]
- Siemens-Bramo Sh 25[31]
- Siemens-Bramo Sh 28[31]
- Siemens-Bramo Sh 29[31]
- Siemens Bramo SAM 22B[31]
- Siemens Bramo 314
- Siemens Bramo 322[31]
- Siemens Bramo 323 Fafnir[31]
Silnik
- Silnik M 11
- Silnik Sh 14
Simms
Simonini Racing
Skoda
Skymotors
- Skymotors 70
- Skymotors 70A
Smalley
- Smalley Aero
SMA Engines
SME Aircraft Engine
(Italy)
Smith
- Smith Static[3]
- Smith 300hp radial ??? any body have a reference?
SMPMC
(South Motive Power and Machinery Complex SMPMC prev Zhuzhou Aeroengine Factory)
- SMPMC HS-5
- SMPMC HS-6
- SMPMC WZ-8
- SMPMC WZ-9
- SMPMC WZ-16
SNCAN
(Société Nationale de Constructions Aéronautiques du Nord)
SNECMA
(Société Nationale d'Étude et de Construction de Moteurs d'Aviation)
- SNECMA 12S
- SNECMA 12T
- SNECMA 14NC Diesel 1945 1,015hp
- SNECMA 14R
- SNECMA 14U 1948 2,200hp
- SNECMA 14X[11] 1949 850hp
- SNECMA 14X Super Mars
- SNECMA 28T 1945 3,500hp
- SNECMA 32HL 1947 4,000hp
- SNECMA 36T 1948 4,150hp
- SNECMA 42T 1946 5,000hp
- SNECMA M26
- SNECMA M28
- SNECMA M45
- SNECMA M49 Larzac
- SNECMA M53
- SNECMA M88
- SNECMA Atar 101
- SNECMA Atar 8
- SNECMA Atar 9
- SNECMA Hercules
- Snecma Silvercrest
- SNECMA-BMW 132Z
- SNECMA-GR 14M
- SNECMA-GR 14N
- SNECMA / Pratt & Whitney TF104
- SNECMA / Pratt & Whitney TF106
- SNECMA / Pratt & Whitney TF306
- SNECMA-Regnier 4L[11]
- SNECMA-Régnier 4LO
- SNECMA 4LO-2
- SNECMA 4LO-8
- SNECMA-Renault 4P
- SNECMA-Renault 6Q
- SNECMA Hispano 12B 1950 2,200hp
- SNECMA Hispano 12Y 1947 900hp
- SNECMA Hispano 12Z
- SNECMA Escopette[172]
- SNECMA Super ATAR
- SNECMA Vulcain[11]
- SNECMA Vesta[11]
- SNECMA Escopette[11]
- SNECMA Tromblon[11]
- SNECMA Ecrevisse Type A[11]
- SNECMA Ecrevisse Type B[11]
- SNECMA S.402 A.3[21]
- SNECMA S.407 A.2[21]
- SNECMA TA-1000
- SNECMA TB-1000
SNCM
(Société Nationale de Constructions de Moteurs - Lorraine post 1936)
SOCEMA
(Société de Construction et d'Équipments Méchaniques pour l'Aviation)
- SOCEMA TGA 1[112]
- SOCEMA TGAR 1008
- SOCEMA TP.1
- SOCEMA TP.2
Sodemo
(Magny-Cours, France)
Solar
- Solar PJ32 pulse-jet
- Solar T45 (Mars 50 hp gas turbine)
- Solar T62 Titan
- Solar T66 free turbine Titan
- Solar T-150[10]
- Solar Centaur 40
- Solar Centaur 50
- Solar Jupiter (500 hp gas turbine)
- Solar Mars 90
- Solar Mars 100
- Solar Mercury 50
- Solar Saturn[10]
- Solar Saturn 10
- Solar Saturn 20
- Solar Taurus 60
- Solar Taurus 65
- Solar Taurus 70
- Solar Titan 130
Titan 250
Solo Kleinmotoren GmbH
- Solo 560, also known as the Hirth F-10, used in the Scheibe SF-24 Motorspatz
- Solo 2350, widely used in motor-gliders
- Solo 2625 01
- Solo 2625 02, used in the Glaser-Dirks DG-500, Schempp-Hirth Ventus-2, Sportinė Aviacija LAK-20 etc.
- Solo 2625 02i, a fuel-injected version used in the Schempp-Hirth Arcus and Schempp-Hirth Quintus self-launching gliders
Soloviev
Source:Gunston.[15]
- Soloviev D-15
- Soloviev D-20
- Soloviev D-25V (TB-2BM)
- Soloviev D-30
- Soloviev D-30K (completely revised)
- Soloviev D-90A
Soloy
(Soloy Conversions / Soloy Dual Pak Inc.)
Societa Piemontese Automobili (S.P.A.)
(Societa Piemontese Automobili)
- SPA 6A 200 hp 6 in-line
Soverini
(Soverini Freres et Cie)
Soviet union experimental engines
- AD-1 (diesel engine)[57]
- AD-3 (diesel engine)[57]
- AD-5 (diesel engine)[57]
- FED-8 (diesel engine)[57]
- MB-100 (A.M. Dobrotvorskiy)[57]
- MB-102 (A.M. Dobrotvorskiy)[57]
- MSK (diesel engine)[57]
- AN-1 (diesel engine)[57]
- AN-1A (diesel engine)[57]
- AN-1R (diesel engine) (geared)[57]
- AN-1RTK (diesel engine) (geared, turbo-supercharged)[57]
- AN-5 (diesel engine) (N - Neftyanoy - of crude oil type - 24-cyl rhombic opposed piston)[57]
- AN-20 (diesel engine) (24-cyl rhombic opposed piston)[57]
- BD-2A (diesel engine)[57]
- M-1 (aero-engine) (V-12 a.k.a. M-116 - S.D. Kolosov)[57]
- M-5-400
- M-9 (L.I. Starostin - swashplate engine)
- M-10 (diesel engine) (5-cyl radial)[57]
- M-16 (aero-engine) (4-cyl horizontally opposed - S.D. Kolosov)[57]
- M-20 (diesel engine) (48-cyl rhombic opposed piston)[57]
- M-30 (diesel engine)[57]
- M-31 (diesel engine)[57]
- M-35 (diesel engine)[57]
- M-40 (diesel engine)[57]
- M-50R (diesel engine) (marine rhombic opposed piston)[57]
- M-52 (diesel engine)[57]
- M-87D (diesel engine)[57]
- M-116 (aero-engine) (V-12 a.k.a. M-1 - S.D. Kolosov)[57]
- M-127 (X-24 conrod free)[57]
- M-127K (X-24 conrod free)[57]
- M-130 (H-24)[57]
- M-224 (diesel engine)[57]
- M-501 (diesel engine)[57]
- MB-4 (X-4 MB - O Motor Besshatunniy - con-rod free engine - S.S. Balandin)[57]
- MB-4b (X-4 MB - O Motor Besshatunniy - con-rod free engine - S.S. Balandin)[57]
- MB-8 (X-8 MB - O Motor Besshatunniy - con-rod free engine - S.S. Balandin)[57]
- MB-8b (X-8 MB - O Motor Besshatunniy - con-rod free engine - S.S. Balandin)[57]
- D-11 (diesel engine) (5-cyl radial based on the M-11)[57]
- N-1 (diesel engine) (N - Neftyanoy - of crude oil type)[57]
- N-2 (diesel engine) (N - Neftyanoy - of crude oil type)[57]
- N-3 (diesel engine) (N - Neftyanoy - of crude oil type)[57]
- N-4 (diesel engine) (N - Neftyanoy - of crude oil type)[57]
- N-5 (diesel engine) (N - Neftyanoy - of crude oil type)[57]
- N-6 (diesel engine) (N - Neftyanoy - of crude oil type)[57]
- N-9 (diesel engine) (N - Neftyanoy - of crude oil type)[57]
- OMB (OMB - O Motor Besshatunniy - con-rod free engine - S.S. Balandin)[57]
- OMB-127 (X-12 MB - O Motor Besshatunniy - con-rod free engine - S.S. Balandin)[57]
- OMB-127RN (X-12 MB - O Motor Besshatunniy - con-rod free engine - S.S. Balandin)[57]
SPA
(Societa Piedmontese Automobili, Italy)
Speer
- Speer S-2-C
Sperry
- Sperry WBB 2-stroke
Spijker
(Spijker, from 1915 the Nederlands Automobile and Aeroplane Co.)
- Spijker 135hp rotary
Sport Plane Power
(Sport Plane Power Inc.)
- Sport Plane Power K-100A[24]
STAL
(Svenska Turbinfabriks AB Ljungström)
- STAL Skuten
- STAL Dovern
Star
- Star 40hp[64]
Stark
(Stark Flugzeugbau KG)
- Stark Stamo 1400[10]
Statax
(Statax Engine Company Ltd. – prev. Statax-Motor of Zurich)
Stöwer
(Stöwer Automobile Works)
Stratus 2000, Inc
(Corvallis, Oregon, United States)
Straughan
- Straughan AL-1000
Studebaker
- H-9350 (24cyl 153.2 litres)
Studebaker-Waterman
- Studebaker-Waterman S-1
Sturtevant
(The B F Sturtevant Company, United States)
- Sturtevant 1913 40hp[2]
- Sturtevant 1913 60hp[2]
- Sturtevant 5 140hp V-8 4.5 hp × 5.5 hp (3.4 kW × 4.1 kW)[2]
- Sturtevant 5A 140hp V-8 4.5 hp × 5.5 hp (3.4 kW × 4.1 kW)[2]
- Sturtevant 5A-4
- Sturtevant 5A-4½ 210hp V-8 5 hp × 5.5 hp (3.7 kW × 4.1 kW)[2][9]
- Sturtevant 7 300hp V-12 5 hp × 5.5 hp (3.7 kW × 4.1 kW)[2][9]
- Sturtevant D-4 48hp 4IL 4.5 hp × 4.5 hp (3.4 kW × 3.4 kW)[2]
- Sturtevant D-6 86hp 6IL 4.5 hp × 4.5 hp (3.4 kW × 3.4 kW)[2]
- Sturtevant E-6 100hp 6IL 4.5 hp × 6 hp (3.4 kW × 4.5 kW)[2]
Subaru
Sunbeam
(The Sunbeam Motor Car Company, United Kingdom) Source: Lumsden.[3][64]
- Sunbeam 110 hp
- Sunbeam 150 hp
- Sunbeam 200 hp
- Sunbeam 225 hp
- Sunbeam Afridi
- Sunbeam Amazon
- Sunbeam Arab
- Sunbeam Bedouin
- Sunbeam Cossack
- Sunbeam Crusader
- Sunbeam Dyak
- Sunbeam Gurkha
- Sunbeam Kaffir
- Sunbeam Malay
- Sunbeam Maori
- Sunbeam Manitou
- Sunbeam Matabele
- Sunbeam Mohawk
- Sunbeam Nubian
- Sunbeam Pathan
- Sunbeam Saracen
- Sunbeam Sikh
- Sunbeam Semi-Sikh
- Sunbeam Sikh II a.k.a. Semi-Sikh
- Sunbeam Sikh III
- Sunbeam Spartan
- Sunbeam Tartar
- Sunbeam Viking
- Sunbeam Zulu
- Sunbeam 2,000 hp – engine for Kaye Don's Silver Bullet land speed record car
Superior
Survol-de Coucy
- Survol-de Coucy Pygmée 40 hp
Svenska
(Svenska Flygmotor)
- IA R-19-SR/1 Indio
- Svenska Flygmotor RM2 Ghost
- Svenska Flygmotor RM5 Avon
- Svenska Flygmotor RM6 Avon
- Svenska Flygmotor RR2[10][14]
- Svenska RM8
- Svenska F-451-A[6]
- Svenska Flygmotor VR-3[174][21]
Szekely
- Szekely SR-3 3-cyl (SR - "Sky Roamer")
- Szekely SR-5 5-cyl
- Szekely 100 7-cyl
- Szekely O-125
T
Take Off
(Take Off GmbH, Hamm, Germany)
- Take Off TBM 10
- Take Off TBM 11
- Take Off TBM 12
Tatra
- Tatra T100[30]
- Tatra T101
TBS
(Turbinenbau Schuberth Schwabhausen GmbH)
- TBS 400N-J40P[175]
TEC
see: Mosler
Technopower
(Technopower Inc.)
- Technopower Twin O-101
Teledyne CAE
- CAE 210 (XT51-1 - Turbomeca Artouste I) 280 shp
- CAE 217-5 (XT72 - Turbomeca Astazou) 600shp
- CAE 217-10 (XT65 - scaled down Astazou) 305 shp
- CAE 217A (XT67 - Turbomeca Astazou X)
- CAE 220-2 (XT51-3 - Turbomeca Artouste II)
- CAE 227
- CAE 300
- CAE 320 (Turbomeca Palas - 350 lbf thrust)
- CAE 325 (Continental TS325-1?)
- CAE 324
- CAE 382
- CAE T51 - (Turbomeca Artouste I) 280 shp
- CAE T72 - (Turbomeca Astazou) 600shp
- CAE T65 - (scaled down Astazou) 305 shp
- CAE T67 - (Turbomeca Astazou X)
- Teledyne CAE 352[36]
- Teledyne CAE 354
- Teledyne CAE 356[36]
- Teledyne CAE 365[36]
- Teledyne CAE 370[36]
- Teledyne CAE 372[36]
- Teledyne CAE 373[36]
- Teledyne CAE 382[176]
- Teledyne CAE 440[36]
- Teledyne CAE 455[36]
- Teledyne CAE 472 (F106)
- Teledyne CAE 490[36]
- Teledyne CAE 555[36]
- Teledyne CAE J69[36]
- Teledyne CAE LJ95[36]
- Teledyne CAE J402[36]
- Teledyne CAE F106
- Teledyne CAE F408[176]
- Teledyne CAE CJ69
Thaheld
- Thaheld O-290 diesel[6]
Thermo-Jet
(Thermo-Jet Standard Inc.)
[[Thames Ironworks and Ship[building Co.Ltd.|Thames]]
(Thames Ironworks and Ship[building Co.Ltd.)
- Thames 30hp 4OW[2]
Thielert
- Thielert Centurion 1.7 Diesel R4
- Thielert Centurion 4.0 Diesel V6
Thiokol
(Thiokol Chemical Corporation) Data from:Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1962-3[10]
- Thiokol LR44
- Thiokol LR58
- Thiokol LR62
- Thiokol LR99
- Thiokol M6 (TX-136)
- Thiokol M10 (TX-10)
- Thiokol M12 (TX-12)
- Thiokol M16 (TX-16)
- Thiokol M18 (TX-18)
- Thiokol M19
- Thiokol M20 (TX-20)
- Thiokol M30 (TX-30)
- Thiokol M33 (TX-33)
- Thiokol M46
- Thiokol M51 (TX-131-15)
- Thiokol M55
- Thiokol M58 (TX-58)
- Thiokol TU-122
- Thiokol TX-135
- Thiokol TD-174 Guardian
- Thiokol TE-29 Recruit
- Thiokol TD-214 Pioneer
- Thiokol TE-289 Yardbird
- Thiokol TE-307 Apache
Thomas
(Thomas Aeromotor Company, United States)
Thorotzkai
(Thorotzkai Péter alt, spelling Thoroczkay)[177]
- Thorotzkai 12hp
- Thorotzkai 22hp 3cyl. radial
- Thorotzkai 35hp opposed twin
- Thorotzkai typ.7 35hp
- Thorotzkai 120hp
- Thorotzkai Gamma-III (35 hp 3cyl. radial)
Thulin
(Enoch Thulin - AB Thulinverken)
- Thulin A (engine)
- Thulin D (engine) ( Le Rhône 18E ?)
- Thulin E (engine)
- Thulin G (engine) ( Le Rhône 11F ?)
Thunder
(Thunder Engines Inc.)
- Thunder TE495-TC700[36]
Tips
- Tips 480hp 250hp 4.5 in × 6 in (110 mm × 150 mm)[2](18 cyl., 1717.67 ci, air- and water-cooled rotary engine. At rated RPM the crankshaft rotated at 1800 rpm, propeller shaft at 1080 rpm and the engine body at 60 rpm. Cooling was by direct air flow and tubular radiators between the cylinders, with water circulating without hoses or pumps.)[2]
Tips & Smith
- Tips & Smith Super-Rhône
Tomonoo
(Tomon Naoji)
- Tomono 90hp 6-cyl in-line 4.5 in × 4.375 in (114.3 mm × 111.1 mm)[2]
Tone===]]
- Tone 2V9 180hp 4.5 in × 4.375 in (114.3 mm × 111.1 mm)[2]
TNCA
(Talleres Nacionales de Construcciones Aeronáuticas – national aviation workshops)
- TNCA Aztatl
- TNCA Trebol
Tokyo Gasu Denki
(Gasuden)
- Tokyo Gasu Denki Amakaze
- Tokyo Gasu Denki Hatakaze
- Tokyo Gasu Denki Jimpu 3
- Tokyo Gasu Denki Kamikaze[30]
- Tokyo Gasu Denki Tempu
- Gasuden Amakaze
- Gasuden Hatakaze
- Gasuden Jimpu 3
- Gasuden Kamikaze
- Gasuden Tempu
Torque Master
(Valley Engineering)
Tosi
(Franco Tosi Meccanica (FTM))
- Tosi 450hp V-12 130 mm × 190 mm (5.1 in × 7.5 in)[2]
Total Engine Concepts
Trace Engines
Train
(Établissements E. Train / Société des Constructions Guinard)
Trebert
Tumansky
- Tumansky M-87
- Tumansky M-88
- Tumansky R-11
- Tumansky R-13
- Tumansky R-15
- Tumansky RU-19
- Tumansky R-21
- Tumansky R-25
- Tumansky R-266
- Tumansky R-27
- Tumansky R-29
- Tumansky RD-9
Turbomeca
Source:Gunston[15] except where noted
- Turbomeca Arbizon
- Turbomeca Ardiden
- Turbomeca Arrius
- Turbomeca Arriel
- Turbomeca Artouste
- Turbomeca Aspin
- Turbomeca Astazou
- Turbomeca Astafan
- Turbomeca Aubisque
- Turbomeca Autan[11]
- Turbomeca Bastan
- Turbomeca Bi-Bastan[10]
- Turbomeca Gabizo
- Turbomeca Gourdon
- Turbomeca Makila
- Turbomeca Marboré
- Turbomeca Marcadau
- Turbomeca Orédon (1948) Turbomeca's first gas turbine ca 1948; name reused in 1965
- Turbomeca Orédon[67]
- Turbomeca Ossau
- Turbomeca Palas
- Turbomeca Palouste
- Turbomeca Piméné
- Turbomeca Soular
- Turbomeca Super Palas
- Turbomeca Tramontane[21]
- Turbomeca Turmo
- Turbomeca Turmastazou
- Turbomeca TM251
- Turbomeca TM319
- Turbomeca TM333
- Turbomeca Agusta TAA230[67]
- Turbomeca/SNECMA Larzac
- HAL/Turbomeca Shakti
- Rolls-Royce/Turbomeca RTM321
- Rolls-Royce/Turbomeca RTM322
- Rolls-Royce/Turbomeca Adour
- Rolls-Royce/Turbomeca Orédon
- MAN/Rolls-Royce/Turboméca MTR390
- MTU/Turbomeca MTM385
Turbo Research
- Turbo Research TR.1 – abandoned design study
- Turbo Research TR.2 – abandoned design study
- Turbo Research TR.3 – abandoned design study
- Turbo Research TR.4 Chinook
- Turbo Research TR.5 Orenda
Turboméca/HAL
Turbo-Union
Twombly
(Twombly Motor Company / Willard Irving Twombly)
- Twombly 50hp 7-cyl rotary 4 in × 4.5 in (100 mm × 110 mm)[2]
U
Ufimtsev
(A.G. Ufimtsev)
ULPower
Union
(Union Gas Engine Company, United States)
Ursinus
(Oskar Ursinus?)
UTC
- UTC P-1[10]
V
Valley
(Valley Engineering)
Van Blerck
(Van Blerck Motor Co., Monroe, Michigan)
Vaslin
(Henri Vaslin)
- Vaslin 15hp 1.13 l (69 cu in) flat-4
- Vaslin 24hp 1.3 l (80 cu in)
- Vaslin 55hp 2 l (120 cu in) 6 in-line water-cooled [183]
Vauxhall
(Vauxhall Motors Ltd.)
- Vauxhall 175hp V-12 90 mm × 120 mm (3.5 in × 4.7 in)[2]
Vaxell
(Vaxell sp zoo, Bydgoszcz, Poland)
Vedeneyev
Source:Gunston.[15]
Velie
Verdet
()
- Verdet 55hp 7-cyl rotary 112 mm × 140 mm (4.4 in × 5.5 in)[2]
Vereinegung Volkseigener Betriebe Flugzeugbau
See: Pirna
Verner Motor
Source:Verner Motor range of engines,[184] RMV[1]
- Verner Scarlett mini 3 – 3 cyl radial
- Verner Scarlett mini 5 – 5 cyl radial
- Verner Scarlett 7H – 7 cyl radial
- Verner Scarlett 36Hi
- Verner JCV 360
- Verner VM 125
- Verner VM 133
- Verner VM 144Hi
- Verner VM 1400
- Verner Scarlett 3V
- Verner Scarlett 5V
- Verner Scarlett 5Si
- Verner Scarlett 7U
- Verner Scarlett 9S
Viale
(Spirito Mario Viale)
- Viale 35 hp (1910 35-50hp 5-cyl. radial)
- Viale 30hp 3-cyl fan 105 mm × 130 mm (4.1 in × 5.1 in)[27]
- Viale 50hp 5-cyl radial 105 mm × 130 mm (4.1 in × 5.1 in)[27]
- Viale 70hp 7-cyl radial 105 mm × 130 mm (4.1 in × 5.1 in)[27]
- Viale 100hp 10-cyl radial 105 mm × 130 mm (4.1 in × 5.1 in)[27]
VIJA
(Toulouse, France)
Viking
(Viking Aircraft Engines)
- Viking 100
- Viking 110
Viking
- Viking 140hp X-16 3.25 in × 4 in (83 mm × 102 mm)[2]
Villiers-Hay
(Villiers-Hay Development Ltd.)
- Villiers-Hay 4-L-318 Maya I
- Villiers-Hay 4-L-319 Maya II[30]
Vittorazi
(Morrovalle, Italy)
- Vittorazi Easy 100 Plus
- Vittorazi Fly 100 Evo 2
- Vittorazi Moster 185
Vivinus
(Belgium) Data from:[19]
- Vivinus 32.5hp 4-cyl in-line 4.17 in × 4.73 in (106 mm × 120 mm)[2]
- Vivinus 37.5hp 4-cyl in-line 4.42 in × 5.12 in (112 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Vivinus 39.2hp 4-cyl in-line 4.53 in × 5.12 in (115 mm × 130 mm)[2]
- Vivinus 50hp 4-cyl in-line 4.17 in × 4.73 in (106 mm × 120 mm)[2]
- Vivinus 60hp 4-cyl in-line 4.42 in × 5.12 in (112 mm × 130 mm)
- Vivinus 70hp 4-cyl in-line
Volkswagen
- Volkswagen air-cooled engine
- 1/2 VW
- Volkswagen VW 1131 ( ~ 26hp) Beetle models from 1946 to 1953. See: Ardem, Druine (France).
- Volkswagen VW 1200 ( ~ 32hp) Beetle models from 1953 to 1965. See: Ardem, Druine (France); Rectimo (France); Rollason(UK).
- Volkswagen VW 1300 ( ~ 42hp) Beetle models from 1965 to 1967. See: Rollason(UK); Monnett (US).
- Volkswagen VW 1287 ( ~ 42hp) See: Pollmann, HEPU, KFM (Germany); Ital-American, IAME, KFM (Italy).
- Volkswagen VW 1500 ( ~ 50hp) Beetle models from 1967 to 1969. See: Clutton (UK); Rollason(UK).
- Volkswagen VW 1556 ( ~ 52hp) see 1/2 VW O-48.
- Volkswagen VW 1600 ( ~ 53hp) Beetle models from 1969. See: Westermayer (Austria); Aeroálcool(Brazil); Rectimo (France); Rollason(UK); Great Plains(US); HAPI (US); Mekker (US); Monnett (US); Preceptor (US); Revmaster (US).
- Volkswagen VW 1629 ( ~ 54hp). See: Ital-American, IAME, KFM (Italy).
- Volkswagen VW 1679 ( ~ 56hp). See: Limbach(Germany); Great Plains(US); HAPI (US); Monnett (US).
- Volkswagen VW 1756 ( ~ 59hp). See: Limbach(Germany); Sauer (Germany).
- Volkswagen VW 1775 ( ~ 59hp). See: Aeropower (Australia); VW Engine Centre (Australia).
- Volkswagen VW 1800 ( ~ 60hp). See: Limbach(Germany).
- Volkswagen VW 1832 ( ~ 61hp). See: Ital-American, IAME, KFM (Italy).
- Volkswagen VW 1835 ( ~ 62hp). See: Aeropower (Australia); Great Plains(US); HAPI (US); Hummel (US); Monnett (US); Preceptor (US); Revmaster (US); Torque Master (US).
- Volkswagen VW 1883 ( ~ 63hp). See: Limbach(Germany).
- Volkswagen VW 1915 ( ~ 64hp). See: Great Plains(US); HAPI (US); Torque Master (US); Valley Engineering (US).
- Volkswagen VW 1971 ( ~ 66hp). See: Limbach(Germany).
- Volkswagen VW 1995 ( ~ 66hp). See: Limbach(Germany).
- Volkswagen VW 2007 ( ~ 67hp). See: Monnett (US).
- Volkswagen VW 2008 ( ~ 67hp). See: Aeropower (Australia); VW Engine Centre (Australia).
- Volkswagen VW 2013 ( ~ 67hp). See: IMAER, Retimotor (Brazil).
- Volkswagen VW 2049 ( ~ 68hp). See: JPX (France).
- Volkswagen VW 2074 ( ~ 69hp). See: Aeropower (Australia); Great Plains(US); Hummel (US); Preceptor (US); Revmaster (US).
- Volkswagen VW 2138 ( ~ 71hp). See: Sauer (Germany).
- Volkswagen VW 2160 ( ~ 72hp). See: VW Engine Centre (Australia).
- Volkswagen VW 2165 ( ~ 72hp). See: HAPI (US).
- Volkswagen VW 2180 ( ~ 73hp). See: AeroVee (US); Great Plains(US); Monnett (US); Preceptor (US); Torque Master (US).
- Volkswagen VW 2183 ( ~ 73hp). See: AeroPrag (Czech Republic).
- Volkswagen VW 2276 ( ~ 76hp). See: Able (US); Great Plains(US); Valley Engineering (US).
- Volkswagen VW 2287 ( ~ 76hp). See: Hummel (US).
- Volkswagen VW 2325 ( ~ 78hp). See: JPX (France).
- Volkswagen VW 2342 ( ~ 78hp). See: VW Engine Centre (Australia).
- Volkswagen VW 2366 ( ~ 79hp). Converter: Limbach(Germany); Great Plains(US).
- Volkswagen VW 2424 ( ~ 81hp). See: Limbach(Germany).
- Volkswagen VW 2483 ( ~ 83hp). See: Sauer (Germany).
- Volkswagen VW 2498 ( ~ 83hp). See: Able (US).
- Volkswagen VW 2500 ( ~ 83hp). See: Mudry (France).
- Volkswagen VW 2616 ( ~ 87hp). See: Limbach(Germany).
- Volkswagen VW 2660 ( ~ 89hp). See: Sauer (Germany).
- Volkswagen VW 2962 ( ~ 99hp). See: Revmaster (US).
Volvo Aero
von Behren
- von Behren O-113 Air Horse
Voronezh
(Voronezh engine factory)
W
Wackett
(Lawrence J. Wackett)Source: RMV[1]
- Wackett 2-cylinder 20/25hp
- Wackett 2-cylinder 40hp
- Wackett Victa 1-cylinder 1924
Walter
(A.S. Walter) Source:Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1938 except where noted.[35]
- Walter A[6]
- Walter Atlas
- Walter Atom
- Walter Bora
- Walter Castor
- Walter Gemma
- Walter H80
- Walter Junior
- Walter Jupiter
- Walter 108H[96]
- Walter 110H[96]
- Walter M05
- Walter M06
- Walter M701
- Walter M202
- Walter M208
- Walter M332[14][96]
- Walter M337[14][96]
- Walter M462[96]
- Walter M601[36]
- Walter M602
- Walter M701[96]
- Walter Major 4-1
- Walter Major 6-1
- Walter Mars[15]
- Walter Merkur
- Walter Mikron
- Walter Minor 4
- Walter Minor 6
- Walter Minor 12 I-MR
- Walter NZ-40
- Walter NZ-60
- Walter NZ-85
- Walter NZ-120
- Walter Pegas
- Walter Polaris
- Walter Pollux
- Walter Regulus
- Walter Sagitta
- Walter Scolar
- Walter Super Castor
- Walter Vega
- Walter Venus
- Walter W.IV
Walter
(Hellmuth Walter Kommanditgesellschaft)
- Walter RI-201 "Cold" Take Off Pack
- Walter RI-203 "Hot" Take Off Pack[31]
- Walter RII.203[31]
- Walter RII.211
- Walter HWK 109-500[31]
- Walter HWK 109-501[31]
- Walter HWK 109-507[31]
- Walter HWK 109-509[31]
- Walter HWK 109-559[31]
- Walter HWK 109-719
- Walter HWK 109-729[31] (SV-stoff and R-stoff)
- Walter HWK 109-739
- Walter Heimatschützer I
- Walter Heimatschützer IV
- Walter Me.109 Climb Assister
Wankel
(Wankel AG Kirchberg, Saxony, Germany)
Warbirds-engines
(Cesky znalecky institut sro, Prague, Czech Republic)
Warner
WASAG
(Westphalisch-Anhaltische Springstoff A.G.)Source: RMV[1]
Watson
(Gary Watson of Newcastle, Texas)
- Watson 917cc 1/2 VW[185]
Watson
(Basil watson)
- Watson Biplane
Weir
(G & J Weir Ltd.)
Weiss
(Weiss Manfréd Repülögép- és Motorgyár Rt – Mannfred Weiss Aircraft company – engine works)
- Weiss WM Sh 10 – licence built Siemens-Halske Sh 10
- Weiss WM Sh 11 – licence built Siemens-Halske Sh 11
- Weiss WM Sh 12 – licence built Siemens-Halske Sh 12
- Weiss Sport I 100-130hp air-cooled 4-cylinder inline engines
- Weiss Sport II 100-130hp air-cooled 4-cylinder inline engines
- Weiss Sport III 100-130hp air-cooled 4-cylinder inline engines
- Weiss - Bristol Jupiter VI
- Weiss MW 9K Mistral (520hp Gnome-Rhône 9Krsd)
- Weiss WM-K-14A (870 hp Gnome-Rhône 14K Mistral Major)
- Weiss WM-K-14B (910 hp Gnome-Rhône 14K Mistral Major)
- Weiss-Daimler-Benz DB 605B (for Hungarian built Messerschmitt Me 210Ca-1/C-1s).
Welch
- Welch O-2 (O-135)
Wells & Adams
- Wells & Adams 50hp
- Wells & Adams 135hp V-8 4.5 in × 6 in (110 mm × 150 mm)[2]
Werner
- Werner 30hp 4-cyl in-line[2]
Werner & Pfleiderer
- Werner & Pfleiderer 90/95hp 4-cyl inline 130 mm × 150 mm (5.1 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Werner & Pfleiderer 95hp 4-cyl inverted inline 130 mm × 150 mm (5.1 in × 5.9 in)[2]
- Werner & Pfleiderer 140/150hp 6-cyl inline 130 mm × 160 mm (5.1 in × 6.3 in)[2]
- Werner & Pfleiderer 220hp 8-cyl 130 mm × 150 mm (5.1 in × 5.9 in)[2]
Wessex
- Wessex 130hp 6-cyl in-line 105 mm × 150 mm (4.1 in × 5.9 in)[2]
West Engineering
Westermayer
(Oskar Westermayer)
- Westermayer W-5-33[53]
Western
- Western L-7
Westinghouse Electric Corporation
- Westinghouse J30
- Westinghouse J32
- Westinghouse J34
- Westinghouse J40
- Westinghouse J43
- Westinghouse J45
- Westinghouse J46
- Westinghouse J50
- Westinghouse J54
- Westinghouse J74 (none built?)
- Westinghouse J81 (Rolls-Royce Soar)
- Westinghouse T30
- Westinghouse T70
- Westinghouse 19XB
- Westinghouse 24C
- Westinghouse 40E
- Westinghouse 9.5A/B
Wherry
- Wherry 4-cyl rotary barrel engine[2]
White & Poppe
Source: RMV[1] White & Poppe 23hp 6-cyl in-line White & Poppe 130hp V-8 120 mm × 160 mm (4.7 in × 6.3 in)[2]
Whitehead
Source: RMV[1]
- Whitehead 1910 40hp
- Whitehead 1910 75hp
Wickner
- Wickner Wicko F[3]
Wiley Post
- Wiley Post AL-1000
Wilksch
(Wilksch Airmotive ltd.)Source: RMV[1]
- Wilksch WAM100
- Wilksch WAM120
- Wilksch WAM160
Williams
- Williams 125hp V-8[2]
Williams
(Williams International)Source: RMV[1]
- Williams F107 (WR19)
- Williams F112
- Williams F121
- Williams F122
- Williams F124
- Williams F129 (FJ44)
- Williams F415
- Williams EJ22
- Williams FJ22
- Williams FJ33
- Williams FJ44
- Williams FJX-1[186]
- Williams FJX-2[186]
- Williams J400 (WR24)
- Williams WJ38-5
- Williams WJ119
- Williams WR2
- Williams WR9
- Williams WR19[36]
- Williams WRC19
- Williams WR24[36]
- Williams WR27-1
- Williams WR34[36]
- Williams WR44[36][187]
- Williams WST117
- Williams WTS34
- Williams FJX-2[186]
Wills
(C. Howard Wills)
- Wills W.B.B V-4 2-stroke[2]
Winterthur
(The Swiss Locomotive and machine Works)
Wisconsin
(Wisconsin Motor Manufacturing Company, United States)
Woelfe Aixro
Wojcicli
(S.Wojcicli)
Wolseley
Source: Lumsden.[3]
- Wolseley 30hp 4-cylinder
- Wolseley 50hp V-8 air-cooled
- Wolseley 54hp V-8 water-cooled 3.75 in × 5 in (95 mm × 127 mm)[2]
- Wolseley 60hp V-8 water-cooled 3.75 in × 5 in (95 mm × 127 mm)[2]
- Wolseley 75hp V-8 air-cooled 3.75 in × 5.5 in (95 mm × 140 mm)[2]
- Wolseley 90hp V-8 air-cooled 4 in × 5.5 in (100 mm × 140 mm)[2]
- Wolseley 90hp V-8 water-cooled 3.75 in × 5.5 in (95 mm × 140 mm)[2]
- Wolseley 120/150hp V-8 water-cooled 5 in × 7 in (130 mm × 180 mm)[2]
- Wolseley 1911 Type A V-8
- Wolseley 1911 Type B 80hp V-8
- Wolseley 1911 Type C 60hp V-8
- Wolseley 1911 Type D V-8
- Wolseley 1912 160hp V-8
- Wolseley A.R.7 Aquarius I
- Wolseley A.R.9 Aries III
- Wolseley W.4A Python 4.72 in × 5.51 in (120 mm × 140 mm)[2]
- Wolseley W.4A Viper[2]
- Wolseley W.4B Adder [2]
- Wolseley Leo
- Wolseley Libra
- Wolseley Scorpio
Wopen
(Wopen - Chinese designation for Turbojet)
- Wopen WP-5
- Wopen WP-6
- Wopen WP-8
- Wopen WP-9
- Wopen WP-10
- Wopen WP-12
WoShan
(Woshan - Chinese designation for Turbofan)
- WoShan WS-6
- WoShan WS-10
- WoShan WS-11
- WoShan WS-12 Taishan
- WoShan WS-13 Taishan
- WoShan WS-15
- WoShan WS-18
WoZhou
(WoZhou - turboshaft engine)
- WoZhou WZ-8
- WoZhou WZ-9
- WoZhou WZ-16
Wright Aeronautical
- Wright Model 4
- Wright 1903 12hp
- Wright 32.5hp 4-cylinder in-line 4.25" x 4.33"[19]
- Wright 30/35hp 4-cyl in-line 4.375 in × 4 in (111.1 mm × 101.6 mm)[2]
- Wright 50hp 6-cyl in-line 4.375 in × 4 in (111.1 mm × 101.6 mm)[2]
- Wright 60hp V-8 4.375 in × 4 in (111.1 mm × 101.6 mm)[2]
- Wright 1910 50-60hp
- Wright 6-60 60hp 6IL 4.375 in × 4.5 in (111.1 mm × 114.3 mm)[2]
- Wright R-460
- Wright R-540 J-6 Whirlwind 5
- Wright R-760 J-6 Whirlwind 7
- Wright R-790 J-5 Whirlwind 9
- Wright R-975 J-6 Whirlwind 9
- Wright R-1200 "Simoon"
- Wright R-1300 Cyclone 7
- Wright R-1454 (R-1)
- Wright R-1510 Whirlwind 14
- Wright R-1670
- Wright R-1750 Cyclone 9
- Wright R-1820 Cyclone 9
- Wright R-2160 Tornado 42
- Wright R-2600 Cyclone 14
- Wright R-3350 Cyclone 18
- Wright R-4090 Cyclone 22
- Wright Gale (from Lawrance L-4)
- Wright V-720
- Wright IV-1460
- Wright IV-1560
- Wright V-1950 Tornado
- Wright H-2120 12 cylinder liquid cooled radial
- Wright XH-4240
- Wright D-1
- Wright F-50 Cyclone
- Wright F-60 Cyclone
- Wright G Cyclone
- Wright G-100
- Wright G-200
- Wright GTC-1
- Wright J-1
- Wright J-3 Whirlwind
- Wright J-4 Whirlwind
- Wright J-5 Whirlwind
- Wright J-6 Whirlwind 5
- Wright J-6 Whirlwind 7
- Wright J-6 Whirlwind 9
- Wright K-2
- Wright P-1
- Wright P-2
- Wright R-1 (R-1454) 5.625 in × 6.5 in (142.9 mm × 165.1 mm)[2]
- Wright T
- Wright T-1
- Wright T-2
- Wright T-3
- Wright T-3A Tornado (V-1950)
- Wright T-4
- Wright TJ-6
- Wright TJ-7
- Wright TJA-1
- Wright TP51A2
- Wright J51
- Wright J59
- Wright J61
- Wright J65 (Armstrong-Siddeley Sapphire)
- Wright J67 (Bristol Olympus)
- Wright T35 (from Lockheed J37)
- Wright T43
- Wright T47 (Olympus turboprop ~10,500shp)[188]
- Wright T49 (Sapphire turboprop ~6,500–10,380ehp)[188]
Wright Company
Wright-Gypsy
Wright-Hisso
(Wright-Martin / Wright-Hisso)
- Wright-Hisso A[2]
- Wright-Hisso B 4-cyl in-line water-cooled 56 kW (75 hp) 120 mm × 130 mm (4.7 in × 5.1 in)[2]
- Wright-Hisso C 150 kW (200 hp) geared A[2]
- Wright-Hisso D 150 kW (200 hp) geared A with cannon[2]
- Wright-Hisso E 130 kW (180 hp) (HC 'I')[2]
- Wright-Hisso E-2 (HC 'E')[2]
- Wright-Hisso E-3
- Wright-Hisso E-4
- Wright-Hisso F ('D' without cannon)[2]
- Wright-Hisso H 220 kW (300 hp)[2]
- Wright-Hisso H-2 improved 'H'[2]
- Wright-Hisso H-3
- Wright-Hisso I[2]
- Wright-Hisso K H with 37mm Baldwin cannon[2]
- Wright-Hisso K-2[2]
- Wright-Hisso M experimental 300hp[2]
- Wright-Hisso T
- Wright-Hisso 180hp V-8 direct drive
- Wright-Hisso 220hp V-8 geared drive
- Wright-Hisso 300hp V-8 geared drive
Wright-Morehouse
- Wright-Morehouse 2-cyl horizontally opposed 26hp (Lincoln Rocket)
Wright-Siemens
Wright-Tuttle
- Wright-Tuttle WT-5
Wynne
(The Corvair Authority)
- Wynne O-164B 100 HP
- Wynne O-164-BE 110 HP
- Wynne TSIO-164-BE 145 HP
X
XCOR Aerospace
- XCOR XR-4A3
- XCOR XR-4K14
Xian
Y
Yamaha Motor Corporation
York
- York 4-cyl in-line
Yuneec International
(Jinxi Town, Kunshan, Jiangsu, China)
Z
Zanzottera
Z.B.
(Ceskoslovenska Zbrojovka A.S. Brno / Zbrojovka Brno)
- Z.B. ZOD-260[35]
Zeitlin
(Joseph Zeitlin)
- Zeitlin 220hp 7-cyl rotary 135 mm (5.3 in) bore, variable stroke[2]
Zenoah
- Zenoah G-25
- Zenoah G-50
- Zenoah G-72[36]
Zhuzhou
(Zhuzhou Aeroengine Factory -ZEF now South Motive Power and Machinery Complex (SMPMC))
Zlin
(Zlinska Letecka Inc.)[189]
Zoche
(Michael Zoche)
- Zoche Z 01
- Zoche Z 02
- Zoche Z 03
- Zoche Z 04[82]
Zündapp
(Zündapp-Werke G.m.b.H.)
- Zündapp Z 9-090
- Zündapp Z 9-092[31]
References
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 Vidal, Miguel Ricardo (2012). El Motor de Aviación de la A a la Z (in Spanish). Aeroteca. ISBN 978-84-612-7902-9.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 Angle, Glenn D. (1921). Airplane Engine Encyclopedia. Dayton, Ohio: THE OTTERBEIN PRESS.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 Lumsden, Alec (2003). British Piston Engines and their Aircraft. Marlborough, Wiltshire: Airlife Publishing. ISBN 1-85310-294-6.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Jane, Fred T. (1969). Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1913 (Facsimile ed.). Newton Abbott: David & Charles (Publishers). ISBN 0-7153-4388-2.
- ↑ "THE NEW HOME OF THE A.B.C.'S— A ND OTHER THINGS". Flight. 3 April 1919. pp. 452–453. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 Bridgman, Leonard, ed. (1947). Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1947. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co.
- ↑ Erickson, Jack. "Able Experimental Aircraft Engine Co., Altimizer, Hoverhawk (US)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Eckland, K.O. "Powerplants — Reciprocating Engines". Aerofiles. Retrieved 29 October 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 Grey, C.G. (1969). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1919 (Facsimile ed.). David & Charles (Publishing) Limited. pp. 1b to 145b. ISBN 07153 4647 4.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 Taylor, John W.R. FRHistS. ARAeS (1962). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1962-63. London: Sampson, Low, Marston & Co Ltd.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 Bridgman, Leonard (1955). Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1955-56. London: Jane's all the World's Aircraft Publishing Co. Ltd.
- ↑ "Agilis takes the covers off higher-thrust engine". Flight International. 19 June 2001.
- ↑ LOMBARDO, DAVID A. "Tougher, longer-lived engines are emerging" (PDF). Aviation International News. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 December 2013. Retrieved 26 December 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Wilkinson, Paul H. (1959). Aircraft engines of the World 1959 (15th ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons Ltd.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 Gunston, Bill (1989). World Encyclopaedia of Aero Engines (2nd ed.). Cambridge, England: Patrick Stephens Limited. ISBN 1-85260-163-9.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Bridgman, Leonard (1936). Grey, C.G., ed. Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1936. London: Sampson Low, Marston & company, ltd.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Power at the Salon ; Detailed Review of the British and Continental Engines at the Show : A Remarkable Variety of Types". Flight. 26 November 1936. p. 577. Retrieved 14 March 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Thompson, Jonathan (1963). Italian Civil & Military Aircraft 1930–1945. New York: Aero Publishers Inc. ISBN 0-8168-6500-0. LCCN 63-17621.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 "Engine Data Sheets". www.oldengine.org. 15 June 2011. Archived from the original on 7 February 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Development of the Diesel Aircraft Engine" (PDF). www.enginehistory.org. USA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 February 2012. Retrieved 24 January 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 Bridgman, Leonard, ed. (1959). Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1959–60. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co. Ltd.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Wilkinson, Paul H. (1965). Aircraft Engines of the World 1964/65. Washington DC: Paul H. Wilkinson.
- 1 2 3 Erickson, Jack. "Alvaston". www.enginehistory.org. AEHS. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 John W.R. Taylor, ed. (1988). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1988-89. London: Jane's Information Group. ISBN 0 7106 0867 5.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Grey, C.G., ed. (1924). Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1924. London: Sampson Low, Marston & company, ltd.
- ↑ Hartmann, Gérard. "Les moteurs Anzani" (PDF) (in French). hydroretro.net. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 "Aero-motors Exhibited at the Third Paris Salon" (pdf). Flight: 1113. 23 December 1911. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
- ↑ "Paris Aero Show 1919". Flight. 29 January 1920. p. 121. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Grey, C.G., ed. (1928). Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1928. London: Sampson Low, Marston & company, ltd.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1937. London: Sampson, Low & Martin company Limited. 1937.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 Nowarra, Heinz J. (1993). Die Deutsche Luftruestung 1933–1945 Vol.4 – Flugzeugtypen MIAG-Zeppelin (in German). Koblenz: Bernard & Graefe Verlag. ISBN 3-7637-5468-7.
- ↑ "Military Factory: 'Sikorsky Il'ya Muromets". militaryfactory.com. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ "Argus As.II 120cv engine". Trimble 3D Warehouse. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ "Argus (Germany)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1938. London: Sampson, Low & Martin company Limited. 1938.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 Taylor, John W. R. (1983). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1982-83. London: Jane's Publishing Company. ISBN 0-7106-0748-2.
- ↑ "AMT-450" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=6. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ "AMT Olympus" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=5. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ "AMT Titan" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=288. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ "TNCA H + AZTATL". Retrieved 26 March 2018.
- 1 2 3 Wilkinson, Paul H. (1946). Aircraft engines of the World 1946 (3rd ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons Ltd.
- ↑ "MB 800". Dassault. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
- ↑ "BMW MTU 6011" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=56. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ Pelletier, Alain (2010). Boeing: The Complete Story (Reprint ed.). London: J H Haynes & Co Ltd. ISBN 978-1844257034.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 Wilkinson, Paul H. (1966). Aircraft engines of the World 1966/67 (21st ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons Ltd.
- ↑ Walker, P.; Early Aviation at Farnborough, Vol I (Macdonald 1971) p 131, Vol II (Macdonald 1974) pp 192,200.
- 1 2 Zara, Emanuel; Martins Archimio, Andre (March 2006). Manual de uso de la Turbina de Gas Budworth (PDF) (in Spanish). Universidad de Buenos Aires :Facultad de Ingeniería. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
- ↑ Weaving, J. H. B.Sc. (Eng.), Ph.D., Wh.Sch. (Member). "SMALL GAS TURBINES". Retrieved 28 January 2017.
- ↑ "MA Engine Manufacturers# Burgess-White". www.massaerohistory.org. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
- 1 2 3 4 Hartmann, Gérard. Les moteurs d’aviation BURLAT (PDF). Retrieved 27 March 2018.
- ↑ Hartmann, Gérard. "Les moteurs et compresseurs Farman" (PDF). hydroretro.net (in French). Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ "Cal-Aero XLC-1" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=283. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Lambert, Mark; Munson, Kenneth; Taylor, Michael J.H., eds. (1991). Jane's all the world's aircraft, 1991-92 (82nd ed.). Coulson, Surrey, UK: Jane's Information Group. ISBN 978-0710609656.
- ↑ Ord-Hume, Arthur W.J.G. (2000). British Light Aeroplanes. Peterborough: GMS Enterprises. ISBN 978-1870384766.
- ↑ "BNC: main debtors". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
- ↑ "Le moteur Chaise 4-B 4 cylindres inversés" (PDF). Les Ailes (in French). Paris (596bis): 5. 20 November 1932. Retrieved 29 July 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 Kotelnikov, Vladimir (2005). Russian Piston Aero Engines. Marlborough: The Crowood Press Ltd. ISBN 1-86126-702-9.
- 1 2 "Air cooled Chevrolair to Corvair ?". corvaircenter.com. Retrieved 14 October 2012.
- ↑ "Travelair Mystery Ship". www.airracinghistory. Retrieved 14 October 2012.
- ↑ "The Church V-8-248 aero engine" (PDF). The Vintage Airplane. 1 (12A): 7–9. December 1973. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Hartmann, Gérard. Les moteurs Clerget.pdf (in French). France.
- 1 2 Hartmann, Gérard. Mazout d’’enfer, le moteur de tous les records.pdf (in French). France.
- 1 2 "Charqacteristiques et Description du Moteur Type Lille 6Brs de 600CV" (in French). Retrieved 6 November 2017.
- 1 2 3 Brew, Alec (1998). Sunbeam Aero-Engines. Shrewsbury: Airlife Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-84037-023-8.
- ↑ "The Curtiss Model CD-12 400 H.P. Aero Engine". Flight. 5 January 1922. pp. 7–9. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Fahey, James C. (1946). US Army Aircraft. New York: Ships & Aircraft Ltd.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Wilkinson, Paul H. (1966). Aircraft engines of the World 1966/77 (21st ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons Ltd.
- ↑ Parmentier, Bruno. "SPAD S-32". France: Aviafrance. Retrieved 2 August 2012.
- ↑ Parmentier, Bruno. "Kellner-Béchereau 28VD". www.aviafrance.com (in French). Retrieved 14 March 2015.
- ↑ Léglise, Pierre (October 1933). "Airplanes Participation in the Contest". Technical Memorandums; No.724; The 1933 Contest for the Deutsch de La Meurthe Trophy (PDF). Washington D.C.: National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. Retrieved 14 March 2015.
- ↑ "DGEN 380" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=272. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ Schneider, Helmut (1936). Flugzeug-Typenbuch 1936 (in German) (1936 ed.). Leipzig: Herm. Beyer Verlag. p. 83.
- ↑ "The Dorman Aeroplane Engine". Flight. 1 June 1912. pp. 492–493. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Erickson, Jack. "Douglas, Aero Engines, Weir (UK)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- ↑ "Dreher TJD-76 Baby Mamba" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=12. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Pearce, William (2012). Duesenberg Aircraft Engines: A technical description (1 ed.). Los Osos CA: Old Machine Press. ISBN 9-780-9850-3530-3.
- ↑ "Gluhareff EMG G8-2-130" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=132. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Tagg, A.E. (1990). Power for the pioneers : the Green & E.N.V. aero engines. Newport, I.O.W.: Crossprint. pp. 59–60. ISBN 1-872981-01-1.
- 1 2 "Fairchild Carminez Activities". Flight. 22 November 1928. p. 1007.
- ↑ Liron, J.L. (1984). Les avions Farman. Paris: Éditions Larivère.
- ↑ Hartmann, Gérard. "Les moteurs et compresseurs Farman" (PDF) (in French). hydroretro.net. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Gunston, Bill (2006). World Encyclopedia of Aero Engines (5th ed.). Stroud: Sutton Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7509-4479-3.
- 1 2 3 4 Pearce, William (25 March 2016). "FKFS Gruppen-Flugmotor A, C, and D". Old Machine Press. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
- 1 2 3 Green, William; Cross, Roy (1955). The Jet Aircraft of the World. London: McDonald.
- ↑ "Foreign Aero Engines at Olympia". Flight. 25 July 1929. p. 774. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- ↑ "Garrett JFS 100-13A" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=280. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ "An Inverted Vee-four Engine: Air-cooled Side-valve 90 h.p. Unit for Light Aircraft". Flight. 13 December 1934. pp. 1324–1325. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
- ↑ "Grade-Monoplane, 1909". Deutsches Museum. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
- ↑ "The Gregoire-Gyp Monoplane". Flight. 23 April 1910. p. 308. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
- ↑ "Foreign Aviation News". Flight. 7 October 1911. p. 877. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
- 1 2 3 "The Gyro Motor Company". www.curatorofshit. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
- ↑ "Hall-Scott A-1". Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. Retrieved 9 June 2011.
- ↑ Grosz, Peter M.; Haddow, George; Scheiner, Peter (2002) [1993]. Austro-Hungarian Army Aircraft of World War One. Boulder: Flying Machine Press. ISBN 1 891268 05 8.
- 1 2 3 Treadwell, Terry C. (2010). German & Austro-Hungarian Aircraft Manufacturers 1908 – 1918. Stroud: Amberley Publishing. pp. 236–244, 268–271. ISBN 978 1 4456 0102 1.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Mikesh, Robert C.; Shorzoe Abe (1990). Japanese Aircraft 1910–1941 (1st ed.). London: Putnam. ISBN 0-85177-840-2.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Taylor, John W.R. FRHistS. ARAeS (1966). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1966–67. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co. Ltd.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Cliche, Andre (2001). Ultralight Aircraft Shopper's Guide. Cybair Limited Publishing. ISBN 0-9680628-1-4.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Hartmann, Gérard. Hispano-Suiza, Les moteurs de tous les Records.pdf (in French).
- ↑ "POWER at the SALON; Detailed Review of the British and Continental Engines at the Show : A Remarkable Variety of Types". Flight. 29 November 1936. p. 575. Retrieved 14 March 2015.
- 1 2 "Honda Worldwide | World News | News Release | September 19, 1997". world.honda.com. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
- ↑ "El Gaucho" (in Spanish). clubiame.com. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ "R-19 CR/1 C El Indio" (in Spanish). clubiame.com. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 "Ishikawajima Tsu-11" (in French). France: www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=ne20. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 "Engines 1969". Retrieved 3 March 2013.
- ↑ Pearce, William (5 June 2017). "Isotta Fraschini Zeta X-24 Aircraft Engine". Old Machine Press. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
- ↑ "Jameson Aero Engine", Flight, pp. 511–514, 23 May 1946
- ↑ "J.E.T.Cobra" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=276. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ "Jetcat P160" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=61. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ "Jetcat P200" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=7. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ "Strahlturbinen". www.jetcat.de/. Archived from the original on 2016-11-30. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
- ↑ Kay, Antony (2004). Junkers Aircraft & engines 1913–1945. London: Putnam Aeronautical Books. ISBN 0-85177-985-9.
- 1 2 Kay, Anthony L. (2007). Turbojet: History and Development 1930–1960: Volume 2: USSR, USA, Japan, France, Canada, Sweden, Switzerland, Italy, Czechoslovakia and Hungary. Marlborough, Wiltshire: Crowood Press. ISBN 978-1-86126-939-3.
- 1 2 "Klöckner-Humboldt-Deutz (KHD) Dz 700, Dz 710, and Dz 720". oldmachinepress. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
- ↑ Schneider, Helmut (1936). Flugzeug-Typenbuch 1936 (in German) (1936 ed.). Leipzig: Herm. Beyer Verlag. p. 93.
- 1 2 "Lancia V-12 Aircraft Engine". Retrieved 24 Apr 2018.
- ↑ Hartmann, Gérard. "Moteurs de légende: Le Rhône" (PDF) (in French). Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ "Liberty X-24 on a dynamometer". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
- ↑ Hartmann, Gérard. "Le moteur Lorraine 12 Eb de 450 ch" (PDF) (in French). hydroretro.net. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ Hartmann, Gérard. "Les moteurs d'Lorraine" (PDF) (in French). hydroretro.net. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ Hartmann, Gérard (2002). Liore et Olivier. Boulogne-Billancourt: E-T-A-I. p. 46. ISBN 2 7268 8607 8.
- 1 2 "Rover/Lucas TJ125 (CT3201)Mini-Jet". gasturbine.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Archived from the original on 16 November 2004. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
- ↑ "Lyulka TS-31M" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=71. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ "M&D Flugzeugbau TJ-42" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=76. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 "Stahlwerk Mark Flugzeugbau" (in German). Retrieved 21 January 2017.
- ↑ "Stahlwerk Mark ME II" (in German). Retrieved 21 January 2017.
- ↑ "Aero Engines". Retrieved 14 October 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Erickson, Jack. "Mathis (France)". enginehistory.org. Archived from the original on 2017-12-09. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Wilkinson, Paul H. (1946). Aircraft engines of the World (3rd revised ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons Ltd. pp. 236–245.
- 1 2 Chillon, Jacques; Dubois, Jean-Pierre; Wegg, John (1980). French Postwar Transport Aircraft. Tonbridge: Air-Britain. ISBN 0-8513-0078-2.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Wilhelm Treue; Stefan Zima; Gustav Burr (1992). Hochleistungsmotoren : Karl Maybach und sein Werk (in German). Düsseldorf: VDI Verlag. p. 290. ISBN 978-3-18-400905-2.
- 1 2 Kyrill von Gersdorff; Kurt Grasmann (1985). Flugmotoren und Strahltriebwerke: Entwicklungsgeschichte der deutschen Luftfahrtantriebe von den Anfängen bis zu den internationalen Gemeinschaftsentwicklungen [Aircraft engines and jet engines. Development history of the German aviation engines from the beginnings to the European community developments]. Die deutsche Luftfahrt [German aviation] (in German). 2. Koblenz: Bernard & Graefe. p. 26. ISBN 3-7637-5283-8.
- ↑ Schneider, Helmut (1936). Flugzeug-Typenbuch 1936 (in German) (1936 ed.). Leipzig: Herm. Beyer Verlag. p. 94.
- ↑ Erickson, Jack. "Mekker (US)". enginehistory.org. Aircraft Engine Historical Society. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- 1 2 3 Bridgman, Leonard (1941). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1941. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co.
- ↑ Gunston, Bill (1995). The Osprey Encyclopedia of Russian Aircraft 1875–1995. London: Osprey. ISBN 1-85532-405-9.
- ↑ ParmentierbRUNO. "Caudron C.273 'Luciole'". Retrieved 13 September 2013.
- ↑ "The Michel A.M. 14 Mark II: A French 4-Cylinder Aero Engine". Flight. 11 April 1933. pp. 413–412. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
- ↑ "Microturbo TRS 18" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=28. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Microturbo Eclair" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=81. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ "Minié (France)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- ↑ "AeroConversions, AeroVee (US)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- 1 2 Erickson, Jack. "Mosler, TEC (US)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Motorav Aircraft Engines". Brazil: motorav.com. Retrieved 12 August 2012.
- ↑ Cynk, Jerzy B. (1971). Polish Aircraft 1893–1939. London: Putnam. ISBN 978-0-370-00085-5.
- ↑ Nikolajsen, Ole. "A/S Nielsen & Winther" (PDF). ole-nikolajsen.com. Copenhagen. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- 1 2 "Noel Penny 100 Series Gas Turbine Engine". gasturbine.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
- ↑ "NPT301 LTD" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=29. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ Neal, Robert J. "STATISTICS OF ALL THE AERO ENGINES OF PACKARD" (pdf). AEHS. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
- ↑ Hartmann, Gérard. "Les moteurs d'aviation Panhard & Levassor" (PDF) (in French). Retrieved 2018-05-14.
- ↑ "PBS- TJ100" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=58. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ↑ "UNIS-NA Design NA-40 "Bongo"". Retrieved 17 May 2013.
- ↑ Eaglesfield, Barry. Bugatti - The Designer the Inventions, Ideas, Thoughts & Follies of Ettore Bugatti. USA: Brooklands Books. pp. 124–125. ISBN 9781783180042. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Erickson, Jack. "Preceptor (US)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- ↑ "Super Rhone Engine - France". The Aviation History Online Museum. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ "Fairchild (Ranger)". www.enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Reggiane Re 101 to Re 105 Aircraft Engines". Retrieved 13 November 2016.
- ↑ Parmentier, Bruno (2002-03-11). "Alliet-larivière AL-06". aviafrance.com (in French). Paris. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
- 1 2 Pozzoli, Serge (February 1974). "unknown". Fana de l'Aviation.
- ↑ Hauet, André (1984). Les Avions Renard. Editions AELR.
- ↑ Hartmann, Gérard. "Les Moteurs D'avaiation Renault" (PDF). hydroretro.net. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ Renault 1907–1934:27 Ans d'Aviation (PDF) (in French). Billancourt: Usines Renault. 1934. pp. 51–52. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 October 2014. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
- ↑ Parmentier, Bruno. "Breguet Bre 17". aviafrance.com (in French). Paris. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
- ↑ Parmentier, Bruno (2001-12-06). "Levasseur PL2" (in French). France: Aviafrance.com. Retrieved 22 October 2011.
- ↑ Renault 1907–1934:27 Ans d'Aviation (PDF) (in French). Billancourt: Usines Renault. 1934. p. 37. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 October 2014. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Erickson, Jack. "Revmaster (US)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- ↑ "Radioplane OQ-14/TDD". Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ "The Paris Aero Salon". Flight. 9 November 1912. pp. 1022–1028. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
- ↑ "The story of Guy Nègre and MDI". Archived from the original on 2015-05-08. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
- 1 2 3 "Sarolea (Belgium)". enginehistory.org. Archived from the original on 17 February 2017. Retrieved 17 February 2017.
- ↑ Davilla, Dr. James J.; Soltan, Arthur M. French aircraft of the First World War. Flying Machines Press. pp. 37–46. ISBN 1891268090.
- 1 2 "Paris Aero Salon 1919". Flight. 12 February 1920. p. 180. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
- ↑ "SNECMA Escopette" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=ne134. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- 1 2 3 Société Nationale de Constructions de Moteurs: Argentuil (in French). Argentuil: SNCM. November 1938. Archived from the original on 16 October 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
- ↑ Wilkinson, Paul H. (1959). Aircraft engines of the World 1959/60 (15th ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons Ltd.
- ↑ "TBS 400N-J40P" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=171. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- 1 2 "Teledyne CAE 382" (in French). France: minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=235&L=0. Retrieved 24 October 2015.
- ↑ "MŰEGYETEMI SPORTREPÜLŐ EGYESÜLET" [COLLECTIVE SPORTS COMPETITION] (in Hungarian). harmashatarhegy.hupont.hu. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- 1 2 3 Erickson, Jack. "Torque Master (US)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- 1 2 "L'Aviation Legere". Les Ailes (in French) (386): 11. 15 November 1928. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
- 1 2 Erickson, Jack. "Valley Engineering (US)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- ↑ "Some American Aero Engines: The Van Blerck Twelve". Flight: 330–331. 20 April 1916. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
- ↑ "Some American Aero Engines: The Van Blerck". Flight: 199. 9 March 1916. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
- ↑ "Paris Aero show 1924". Flight. 18 December 1924. p. 788. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
- ↑ "Engines". Archived from the original on 5 June 2013. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ Erickson, Jack. "Watson (US)". enginehistory.org. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- 1 2 3 "Williams FJX-1" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=228. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Williams WR44" (in French). France: /www.minijets.org. pp. http://www.minijets.org/index.php?id=85. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- 1 2 "Aero Engines 1956". Flight. 11 May 1956. pp. 567–597. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ "Zlin History". Zlin. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
- ↑ "Zlin Persy II". Retrieved 30 June 2012.