The Sunbeam Crusader, originally known as the Sunbeam 150hp, Sunbeam 110hp or Sunbeam 100hp (variations on the engine may also have been referred to as Sunbeam 120hp or Sunbeam 135hp), was an early British, side-valve, water-cooled, V-8 aero engine first marketed in 1913.[1]
A Sunbeam Gurkha in the remains of a Short Type 184 at the Fleet Air Arm Museum. While Frederick Rutland's aeroplane survived the First World War intact, it was damaged by bombing during the Second World War.
The first aero-engine from Louis Coatalen was the 110hp, a water-cooled V-8 with side-valve cylinders of 80mm (3.15in) bore and 150mm (5.9in) stroke. The later versions of the engine, which had 90mm (3.5in) bore cylinders, were known as the 150hp until the Sunbeam naming system labelled it the Crusader in 1917. The 80mm bore versions were produced in limited numbers, mostly for civil use, but later 90mm bore engines had limited success in civil applications, with more than 226 built for military aircraft.[1]
Production examples were rated at 150hp (112kW) at 2,000 rpm, had a bore of 90mm (3.5in), stroke of 150mm (5.9in), two valves per cylinder, and weighed 480lb (220kg) dry. The engine was used in a wide variety of British military aircraft during the first years of World War I, most notably the Short 827 seaplane for which six of the original versions were ordered followed by 107 of the more powerful type.
Further development of the Crusader resulted in the Sunbeam Zulu and V-12 Sunbeam Mohawk and Sunbeam Gurkha.[1] The Gurkha engine preserved at the Fleet Air Arm Museum, Yeovilton, Somerset, England, is the only surviving Sunbeam side-valve engine in the world. It is installed in the Short 184, aircraft number 8359, that played a minor role in the Battle of Jutland at the end of May 1916. The pilot on that occasion was Flight Lieutenant Frederick Rutland (who was ever after known as "Rutland of Jutland"),
Variants
110hp
Early versions of the V-8 side-valve engine with 80mm (3.15in) bore, variations were rated at 100hp (75kW), 110hp (82kW) and 120hp (89kW).[1]
150hp
Introduced late in 1914, the 90mm (3.5in) bore versions were referred to as the 150hp and could be rated at 135hp (101kW) or 150hp (112kW).[1]
160hp
Original designation for the 100mm (3.94in) bore Sunbeam Zulu, derivative of the Crusader.[1]
200hp
Initial version of the V-12 Mohawk built with 80mm (3.15in) bore, developing 200hp (149kW). The Admiralty required more powerful engines than the Crusader, so Coatalen designed the Sunbeam 225hp (168kW) as a 60 degree V-12 using blocks of three cylinders instead of the twin-cylinder blocks of the Crusader.[1]
225hp
Production versions built with 90mm (3.5in) bore, rated at 225hp (168kW). Short seaplanes using this engine were often called "225s". During 1917 this engine was re-named as the Sunbeam Mohawk.[1]
Crusader
The name Crusader was applied to the engine in 1917 after production had ceased, and officially referred only to the later '150hp' version.[1]
Zulu
Outwardly identical to the Crusader, the Zulu was developed during 1915, the bore was increased from 90 mm to 100 mm and the reduction gear ratio was changed to 1.86:1, allowing the engine to develop 160hp (119kW) at 2000 rpm. 75 Zulus were built.[1]
The Gurkha was developed as a replacement for the Mohawk with a bore of 100 mm (3.94in) and the gear ratio was reduced to 1.86:1, giving 240hp (179kW) at 2000 rpm. Production ended in October 1916, after 74 units had been supplied to power the Short 184 seaplanes of the Royal Naval Air Service.[1]
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