Fiat AS.5

1920s Italian piston aircraft engine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Fiat AS.5 was an Italian 12-cylinder, liquid-cooled V engine designed and built in the late-1920s by Fiat especially for the 1929 Schneider Trophy air race.[1]

First runc.1929
Major applicationsFiat C.29
Quick facts AS.5, Type ...
AS.5
TypePiston V-12 aero engine
ManufacturerFiat
First runc.1929
Major applicationsFiat C.29
Developed intoFiat AS.6
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Design and development

For the 1929 Schneider Trophy contest Fiat planned a new seaplane to counter the British challengers from Gloster and Supermarine. To minimise frontal area they chose a compact V-12 engine design that set new size standards for a 1,000-horsepower (750 kW) class engine. This unsupercharged engine had a high power-to-weight ratio due to the use of a high compression ratio and a special fuel blend containing a 50/50 mix of petrol and benzole.[2]

A problem encountered with the AS.5 was that it developed maximum power at high crankshaft speeds (3,000 rpm) but lacked output gearing, so that great care had to be taken with the choice of propellers. The production version did feature a reduction gear.[3] The AS.5 was developed into the AS.6, essentially a tandem-coupled combination of two AS.5 units.

Applications

Specifications (AS.5)

Data from Gunston[1]

General characteristics

Components

  • Valvetrain: Two intake and two exhaust valves per cylinder
  • Fuel system: Carburettor
  • Cooling system: Liquid-cooled

Performance

See also

References

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