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Interesting, it says Avro chose the Vulture, is that how it worked?
In the initial stages at least they can only choose by what they are told from manufacturers and government.Not sure they did. Maybe they chose from a few options that the Air Ministry had given them.
The Air Ministry did not specify the Vulture for P.13/36, but it gave those tendering few options. At a meeting at the Air Ministry on 29 July 1936, at which various cases were examined, Verney is recorded in the minutes as saying that while the Ministry would not specify the Vulture, in order to achieve the required performance the manufacturers would be 'driven' to use it.Interesting, it says Avro chose the Vulture, is that how it worked?
Thanks, it just seemed a bit strange, since the engines didnt really exist at the time, the Vulture hadnt been run in 1936.The Air Ministry did not specify the Vulture for P.13/36, but it gave those tendering few options. At a meeting at the Air Ministry on 29 July 1936, at which various cases were examined, Verney is recorded in the minutes as saying that while the Ministry would not specify the Vulture, in order to achieve the required performance the manufacturers would be 'driven' to use it.
Chadwick persevered with the Vulture for Avro's Type 679 Manchester. It is only in this sense that Avro 'chose' the Vulture. The company did look at the possibility of using the Napier Sabre, which it believed would be a 2,000 h.p. engine, but we all know what happened to that.
Handley Page realised that the aircraft they were designing, also around the Vulture (HP.56), was going to be similar to that they were working on to B1./35 and asked to stop work on that and integrate it into the new design to P.13/36 (HP.57/Halifax). Eventually the Air Ministry asked that this be powered by four Merlins, but not until after representations from Handley Page and George Volkert.
DoneGTX , please source these pics above.
True enough, design began in September 1935 and testing started in May 1937, which is itself remarkable, but Rolls-Royce were optimistic about the engine, at least to the Air Ministry.Thanks, it just seemed a bit strange, since the engines didnt really exist at the time, the Vulture hadnt been run in 1936.
I think the feasibility study you mentioned was about the time that the Halifax switched to being a 4 engine design. In my opinion it wouldnt have mattered if the Vulture produced 2,500 HP with bullet proof reliability, the Manchester with those engines would have been loaded up fuel bombs and other stuff to the point that losing one engine made it a flying brick.True enough, design began in September 1935 and testing started in May 1937, which is itself remarkable, but Rolls-Royce were optimistic about the engine, at least to the Air Ministry.
It had potential. The Vulture II was type tested at 1,800 h.p. in August 1939. Even after the reduction in maximum rpm from 3,200 to 3,000, the take off rating was raised to 2,010 h.p. (9lb boost, 100-grade fuel) in March 1941.
If Rolls-Royce had had the time and inclination to really work to sort out the well known issues it could have been a very good engine. Unfortunately they had better things to do, just 508 production Vultures were delivered, making it little more than a footnote in WW2 British aero-engine production.
n my opinion it wouldnt have mattered if the Vulture produced 2,500 HP with bullet proof reliability, the Manchester with those engines would have been loaded up fuel bombs and other stuff to the point that losing one engine made it a flying brick.