Bill Greenwood wrote:
I would be pretty skeptical about someone pushing the Allison as superior to the Merlin, although I have not read that book. That idea is not borne out by facts in actual use, either in wartime or postwar. If the Allison was so superior in fuel consumption, why did the postwar airliners use Merlins, the "transport engine". If the last Allisons were superior in power, why did the Mustang not switch back to them for the H, and why doesn't this super Allison dominate at RENO post war. In unlimited hydroplane racing where was this super Allison? Recently a P-51A was raced, went pretty fast, looked cool, but was still 50 mph slower than a Merlin 51D. Please read my post under the recent P-63 forum on Allison testing. I suspect the use of Allison in 38 s is probably due to GM being able to produce a lot of them. However there is probably a nationalists or competive factor also since GM could have made Merlins instead.
Hi Bill,
I can’t help your skepticism but maybe I can address some of your other questions or comments. I’ve worked on Merlin’s and like it….don’t love it but I like it. I know you’re a Merlin fanatic and I’m not trying to pee in your Cheerios but in my opinion it is not the best mouse trap out there.
If the Allison was so superior in fuel consumption, why did the postwar airliners use Merlins, the "transport engine"?
That I am aware of, none of the hot water 12’s, including the Merlin, enjoyed a long post war civil career since they were not well suited to the job. There big down fall was ease of maintenance (Or lack of it) a cooling system which added complexity and shorter TBO’s than round motors (Airlines are in business to make money, not hemorrhage it like governments can afford to with their military fleets).
If the last Allison’s were superior in power, why did the Mustang not switch back to them for the H, and why doesn't this super Allison dominate at RENO post war. In unlimited hydroplane racing where was this super Allison?
Simple: Size does, after all, matter! The later Allison’s that were able to put out the high horsepower figures had the auxiliary blower I mentioned earlier and it was a larger and more ungainly package than the Merlin. It would not have fit in the Mustang airframe without significant modification that would likely have destroyed the airframes superior characteristics for a long range escort fighter. The P-82 offered that additional space and had the aux blower set up installed in it. As far as Reno racing and unlimited hydro’s are concerned, same thing goes size, space and weight are paramount considerations. The larger Allison package are not be suitable.
Recently a P-51A was raced, went pretty fast, looked cool, but was still 50 mph slower than a Merlin 51D.
Before you dismiss that lil’ Allison powered “A” model, how hard was it being pushed? How modified was it compared to the Merlin’s and oil slingers it was competing against. Let’s be fair. Let’s compare apples to apples.
Please read my post under the recent P-63 forum on Allison testing. I suspect the use of Allison in 38 s is probably due to GM being able to produce a lot of them.
Without question GM was capable of a lot of production capacity and if need be, it is possible it could have increased output of the Allison. Keep in mind they were already producing other engines and airframes. I suspect the Allison was used in the P-38 because Packard could not produce enough 1650-7’s and later -9’s to keep up with airframe and spare requirements. With the additional space in the P-38 and the new GE turbo’s that were available the 1710 was very capable of getting the job done. It’s record proves that point. Why a better integral blower was not designed for the Allison is a mystery to me. Perhaps it was in the works and never made it into production. Historians on the type please chime in.
However there is probably a nationalists or competive factor also since GM could have made Merlins instead.
History buffs willing to dig deep into Roll Royce history might find out some interesting facts surrounding this. What I’ve read and been told is that Rolls was not crazy about sharing the Merlin design with outside sources and in fact was downright reluctant to do so. In the end they were forced to out of their own inability to manufacture enough of the engines to sustain the need. Packard was building them under LICENSCE from Rolls Royce and outside of them, there may have been agreements prohibiting other companies from building the Merlin. Many companies contributed to Merlin production in the US, including Buick and Maytag to name a couple.
The ultimate Allied V-12 would have been to join the Merlin’s blower and intake system to the Allison’s power section.
John