Bristol Titan Explained

The Bristol Titan was a British five-cylinder air-cooled radial engine, designed and built by the Bristol Aeroplane Company in the late 1920s. It had the same size cylinders as the earlier Bristol Mercury engine, (displacing), and produced between . Later versions of the Bristol Titan also used a Farman-style reduction gear produced by Gnome-Rhône.

Design and development

The engine was designed as a five-cylinder radial, to use as many parts of the Bristol Jupiter as possible. Cylinders, pistons, articulated connecting rods, crankshaft and other minor parts were interchangeable with the Jupiter.[1]

The major significance of the Titan was that it was licensed to Gnome-Rhône and became the pattern for the Gnome-Rhône 5B and 5K. In 1927 Gnome-Rhône was looking for ways out of its licence agreement with Bristol for the Jupiter engine of 1920 and began to produce the Gnome-Rhône 5B and 5K without royalties.

Gnome-Rhône was not satisfied with simply producing Bristol designs under licence, and started a major design effort based around the mechanics of the Titan engine. The results were introduced in 1927 as the K-series, spanning the Gnome-Rhône 5K Titan, the seven-cylinder Gnome-Rhône 7K Titan Major, and the nine-cylinder Gnome-Rhône 9K Mistral. With the introduction of the K-series, Gnome-Rhône finally ended royalty payments to Bristol, the Gnome-Rhône 5K being built in much greater numbers than the original Bristol Titan. By 1930 they had delivered 6,000 Jupiters, Mistrals and Titans, making them the largest engine company in France.

Variants

Titan I:(1928) -
  • Titan IIF :Modified valve gear.
  • Titan II (Special):
  • Titan IV:(1928) -, 0.5:1 reduction gear from Bristol Jupiter.
  • Gnome et Rhône 5B:
  • Gnome et Rhône 5Ba:
  • Gnome et Rhône 5Bc:
  • Gnome et Rhône 5K Titan:licence-built Titan II,
  • Gnome et Rhône 7K Titan Major:enlarged seven-cylinder Titan with many detail improvements, produced by Gnome-Rhône without licence.
  • Applications

    References

    Bibliography

    Notes and References

    1. http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1928/1928%20-%200630.html Flight International 5 July 1928