The Delage 12 CEDirs was a French racing aero-engine designed and built especially to power the Kellner-Béchereau 28VD for racing in the 1933 Coupe Deutsch de la Meurthe air races.

12 CEDirs
Type Inverted 60° V-12 water-cooled supercharged piston engine
National origin France
Manufacturer Delage
First run ~ 1933
Major applications Kellner-Béchereau 28VD

Design and development edit

The 12 CEDirs was an inverted 60° V-12 water-cooled engine with reduction gearing and two Roots blower superchargers.

Operational history edit

The 12 CEDirs was flown for the first time, in the 28VD, on 12 May 1933. Problems with propeller speed dogged the initial flights and are blamed for the crash of the 28VD on 14 May 1933. The propeller was over-speeding to a high degree, causing a cooling system rupture. With steam obscuring his view the pilot force-landed the 28 VD with nil visibility, destroying the aircraft but not causing serious injury to the pilot.

Applications edit

Specifications (12 CEDirs) edit

Data from [1]

General characteristics

Components

  • Valvetrain: pushrod operated via rockers, with valve return by springs operating on reduction levers rather than on the valves directly (Delage Patent)
  • Supercharger: dual Roots blowers, one for each bank of cylinders
  • Fuel system: carburettor
  • Reduction gear: 0.487:1 through two super-posed reduction gears

Performance

  • Power output: achieved:280 kW (370 hp) at 3,900 rpm
expected:310 kW (420 hp)

References edit

  1. ^ Léglise, Pierre (October 1933). TECHNICAL MEMORANDUMS NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICS; No.724; THE 1933 CONTEST FOR THE DEUTSCH DE LA MEURTHE TROPHY; AIRPLANES PARTICIPATING IN THE CONTEST (PDF). Washington D.C.: NACA. pp. 31–33. Retrieved 14 March 2015.