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The Art of Developing Aero-Engines

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2016

A. C. Lovesey*
Affiliation:
Aero Division, Rolls-Royce Limited

Extract

The first ten years following the end of the First World War saw a steady “run down” in the armed forces and during this period what still existed in the field of aero-engine development was inspired, mainly, by participation in long range pioneering flights, distance records and international speed events—such as the Schneider Trophy Contest.

Research and development were limited by the funds available and it was not until about 1935, when the Government decided on an “all out” policy to re-equip the Royal Air Force with equipment to match the growing aerial strength of Germany, that aero-engine development received the support it needed. It was somewhere in this period that marked the “renaissance” of the development of aero-engines.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1959

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References

1.Drew, . The Measurement of Turbine Stresses in Aircraft Engines in the Laboratory, on the Test Bed and in Flight. Presented to the Society for Experimental Stress Analysis, November 1951.Google Scholar
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4.Lovesey, A. C. (1950). Modern Methods of Testing Aero- Engines and Power Plants. Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society, June 1950.CrossRefGoogle Scholar