Shortround6
Major General
They were rare.I'd say that the Merlin X in 1938, as well as the 1940-vintage M-105 and M-88 with 2-speed S/C were very, very rare engine types.
But the Merlin X was listed, with some details, in the 1938 Jane's and in the British aviation magazines.
I have no idea who knew what about the Soviet engines
Now the information in Jane's is certainly not enough to design anything but it shows the potential benefits and it shows them using 87 octane fuel.
Maybe the Japanese were too busy just getting the 14 cylinder radials to work with single speed superchargers?
But taking 3-4 years just to get a 2 speed drive on a supercharger is slow progress.
The Japanese had entered negotiations for the DB 601 in 1937 and signed the deal in 1938, but the engines and drawings and such don't show up until 1940.
The entire DB601 may have been a step too far in manufacturing capability or possible not enough effort, I don't know. But a 2 speed supercharger on a radial seems like not a whole lot of R&D needed. Picking up either 2000 meters of FTH or increasing T-O power substantially seems a worth while goal for not a lot of investment.