Shortround6
Major General
The 2800hp R-2800 engine installation was far from trouble free in service at the 2800hp rating. Apparently the pressure inside the ducts (both exhaust and intake) was more than the duct work could really handle and the ducts needed constant attention (almost every time WEP was used?) to keep "air tight".
Little mention is made of the need to actually work on the engine and the basic power section was rated at 2400hp with water injection (56in MAP) using a single stage supercharger in commercial service by 1946.
Even more than the BMW 801 the "C" series R-2800 was ALL NEW, with no parts shared with the older engines.
Nobody else really got an air-cooled aircraft engine up to 1 hp per cubic in in the 1940s. A few may have made claims/advertised in the 1950s but I am not sure they actually panned out. For instance "Aircraft Engines of the World 1956" lists a Hercules 811 engine at 2250hp at 3,000ft wet but Lumsden doesn't list any 800 series engines. Likewise a Centaurus 373 is listed at 3220hp (3270 cu in) but Lumsden doesn't list any 300 series Centaurus engines.
Little mention is made of the need to actually work on the engine and the basic power section was rated at 2400hp with water injection (56in MAP) using a single stage supercharger in commercial service by 1946.
Even more than the BMW 801 the "C" series R-2800 was ALL NEW, with no parts shared with the older engines.
Nobody else really got an air-cooled aircraft engine up to 1 hp per cubic in in the 1940s. A few may have made claims/advertised in the 1950s but I am not sure they actually panned out. For instance "Aircraft Engines of the World 1956" lists a Hercules 811 engine at 2250hp at 3,000ft wet but Lumsden doesn't list any 800 series engines. Likewise a Centaurus 373 is listed at 3220hp (3270 cu in) but Lumsden doesn't list any 300 series Centaurus engines.