Continental O-170 Explained
The Continental O-170 engine is the collective military designation for a family of small aircraft engines, known under the company designation of A50, A65, A75 and A80. The line was designed and built by Continental Motors commencing in the 1940s. It was employed as the powerplant for civil and military light aircraft.[1]
The horizontally opposed, four-cylinder engines in this family are all identical in appearance, bore, stroke, dry weight, and piston displacement. All feature a bottom-mounted updraft carburetor fuel delivery system. The higher power variants differ only in compression ratio and maximum allowable rpm, plus minor modifications. The lower power versions are fully convertible to the higher rated versions.
Design and development
In all models of this family of engines the cylinder heads are of aluminum alloy, screwed and shrunk onto steel barrels. Spark plug inserts and intake valve seats are made from aluminum-bronze alloy, while the exhaust valve seats are steel. The engines all employ hydraulic tappets which operate in aluminum guides that are machined into the crankcase. The tappets are built from four parts, a cam follower body, cup, cylinder, and piston and operate with clearances of 0.030NaN0 to 0.110NaN0. The pushrods are steel and feature pressed-in ball ends.
Lubricating oil is delivered under pressure from the 42NaN2 oil sump to the drive bearings and the crankpins through the crankshaft. The cylinder walls and pistons are spray lubricated. Normal operating oil pressure is 35 psi, with minimum idle oil pressure 10 psi.
Variants
- A50
500NaN0, Compression ratio 5.4:1, max rpm 1,900, fuel consumption at cruise 3.8 US gph
- A50-1:
A50-2:
A50-3:
A50-4:
A50-5:
A50-6:
A50-7:
A65
650NaN0, Compression ratio 6.3:1, max rpm 2,300, fuel consumption at cruise 4.4 US gph. The exhaust valves have stellite faces. The pistons have three rings, although some early production A65s had four piston rings.[2]
- A65-1:
A65-2:
A65-3:
A65-4:
A65-5:
A65-6:
A65-7:
A65-8:
A65-8F:
A65-9:
- A65-12:
A75
750NaN0, Compression ratio 6.3:1, max rpm 2,600, fuel consumption at cruise 4.8 US gph. The exhaust valves have stellite faces and the connecting rods have a 0.1250NaN0 hole drilled in the rod cap to improve lubrication. The pistons have three rings and smaller piston pins.
- A75-1:
A75-2:
A75-3:
A75-4:
A75-5:
A75-6:
A75-14:
A80
800NaN0, Compression ratio 7.55:1, max rpm 2,700, fuel consumption at cruise 5.2 US gph. The connecting rods have a 0.1250NaN0 hole drilled in the rod cap to improve lubrication. The pistons have five rings and smaller piston pins.
- A80-1:
A80-2:
A80-3:
A80-4:
A80-5:
A80-6:
A80-8:
O-170
Military designation for the A50, A65, A75, A80 family of engines.
- O-170-1:
O-170-3:
O-170-5:
O-170-7:
Applications
- A50
- A65
- A75
- A80
References
- Christy, Joe: Engines for Homebuilt Aircraft & Ultralights, pages 43–52. TAB Books, 1983.
- Book: Donald, David. American Warplanes of World War II. New York . Barnes & Noble Books. 1995. 0-7607-2274-9.
- Book: Jackson, A.J.. British Civil Aircraft since 1919 Volume 3. 1974. Putnam. London. 0-370-10014-X .
- Book: Instruction Manual Continental Models A50, A65, A75 and A80 Aircraft Engines. 1944. Continental Motors Corporation. Muskegon, Michigan.
Notes and References
- Christy (1983)
- Teledyne Continental Motors: Continental Aircraft Engine Operator's Manual, pages 4-5. Teledyne Continental Motors, FAA Approved December 1980. Continental Form No. X30012
- Web site: Fahlin Propellers . 2008-12-13 . Wooden props . 2008 . bot: unknown . https://web.archive.org/web/20131228205513/http://www.modernwoodenpropellers.com/fahlin.htm . 2013-12-28 .
- Jackson (1974)
- Plane & Pilot: 1978 Aircraft Directory, page 153. Werner & Werner, 1978.