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Thanks for your answer I do now that us was the main user of turbos during second world war and superchargers being the mainstay and they were used with turbochargers. As far ad I know Turbosuperchargers used In day fighters like p-47s but mainly used on bombers.First you should be aware that when writing in WW2 what they called "two stage supercharging" often was in reality what we should properly call "two speed supercharging."
As far as three speed supercharging, when I did my research over 23 years ago for an article on WW2 aircraft supercharging, I found only one example of three speed supercharging, and that was on the Mitsubishi Jack fighter, late in the war, when the B-29's over Japan pointed out the inadequate nature of Japan's fighters at high altitude. I understand that there were some other examples of three speed but I do not know anything about them.
The B-29 actually had three superchargers on each engine, two GE turbosuperchargers and the mechanically driven supercharger internal to the engine. But this was not three stage supercharging and merely reflected the need to accomodate the big cubes of the R-3350.
The Jumo 213e/f had a two stage supercharger with three speeds. I believe theer was also a late model RR Griffon that was similar in this respect.First you should be aware that when writing in WW2 what they called "two stage supercharging" often was in reality what we should properly call "two speed supercharging."
As far as three speed supercharging, when I did my research over 23 years ago for an article on WW2 aircraft supercharging, I found only one example of three speed supercharging, and that was on the Mitsubishi Jack fighter, late in the war, when the B-29's over Japan pointed out the inadequate nature of Japan's fighters at high altitude. I understand that there were some other examples of three speed but I do not know anything about them.
The B-29 actually had three superchargers on each engine, two GE turbosuperchargers and the mechanically driven supercharger internal to the engine. But this was not three stage supercharging and merely reflected the need to accomodate the big cubes of the R-3350.
3. The first thing I would like to mention about the Mars 26A is that the turbocharger(sic) of the Mars 26A is a 1-stage, 2-speed type. There are occasional misinformation that it is a 1-gear, 3-speed type (especially in Europe and the United States?), but I would like to say that it is clearly wrong.
The utility of a two speed turbo over a single speed one is unquestionable. Just look at the performance graphs of a P-40E versus a P-40F; you have two "top speeds" instead of ony one. Or, better yet, get in a manual transmission automobile and try to use only one speed.
I had recently been reading some Japanese documents of the J2M5 Raiden, they say it is a western misconception that it had a 3 speed supercharger. I have since found several Japanese sources that say it was a 2 speed like other Kasei engines, they even give the gear speeds, both are raised over the normal Kasei2x series.
greetings. Defensemedia.com says "By 1945, three-speed and three-stage supercharging was in development and/or limited use, constrained by fuel ratings. " any info and examples on this ? Thanks.
YES! Very much so. A two stage mechanical supercharger was nothing new in 1942. The XP-41 and the F4F had got there years before. But the liquid cooled aftercooler used by the Merlin 60 series was a true innovation and THAT is what made that engine a war-winner. The fact that solution was not used in the production P-63 and F-82 merely emphasizes Hooker's brilliance. By the way, Stanley Hooker was a theoretical aerodynamicist rather than an engineer with expertise in thermodynamics.but shouldn't inter cooling also be a factor in determining the efficiency as well as any advantages?
P-40 was not outfitted with a turbo.
I'd agree with the notion that there was no Kasei outfitted with a 2-speed S/c drive, not even these for any J2M version.
Got a link?
Thank youThe Aircraft Engines of World War II | Defense Media Network
A review of the development of aircraft engines among the major combatants before and during World War II, including radial, inline, and jet engines.www.defensemedianetwork.com
greetings. Defensemedia.com says "By 1945, three-speed and three-stage supercharging was in development and/or limited use, constrained by fuel ratings. " any info and examples on this ? Thanks.
3 speed supercharger is nothing uncommon.
3 stage supercharger is a complete different story, I can only think on J2M4.
And nvm it seems J2M4 used a turbo setup.
It seems it had a two stage supercharger + a turbo gear after supercharger crit alt, at least from what I can find.
Because in first speed you just bypass the 2nd stage superchager.
yesIs this what USN called neutral blower?
Hey, it's great to hear that, because I came to the same conclusions, based on my few sources. However, mine don't state directly that it had 2 speed, and not 3 speed supercharger. Could you send sources you mentioned, that say, J2M5 had a 2 speed, and not a 3 speed supercharger? Also sources with J2M5 performance data would be great, cause I'm making a War Thunder bug report for fixing J2M5 engine performance. I would greatly appeciate that, because many sources have varied perfomance values.I had recently been reading some Japanese documents of the J2M5 Raiden, they say it is a western misconception that it had a 3 speed supercharger. I have since found several Japanese sources that say it was a 2 speed like other Kasei engines, they even give the gear speeds, both are raised over the normal Kasei2x series.
The other logic proof is there is specs of supercharger heights of Kasei 26a of 2800/6800/7200m who would go to design trouble of an extra gear for 400m?
There is horrible mixing up of turbo- and super-charger terms on aircraft, even by my (google translated) source!