Unlike, say, USA or Japan, there was only one German radial engine in-service that is worth talking about - BMW 801 - with two 9 cyl radials whose genealogy can be traced to 1920s. BMW 800 project never materialized, while really big radials also meant nothing at the end of the day.
Premise of the thread is that engine companies are pushed earlier towards the own development, so there is more to choose from, so to say. Small radials (9 or even 7 cyl) can be a made instead of the air-cooled V12s, while being lighter, cheaper and making a bit better power. Small to medium sized 14 cyl can be alternative engine for bombers and even fighters (German fighters were small and light, to help out wrt. performance even if the engine power is not over the top). 18 cyl engines can be alternative to the complicated and troublesome 24 cyl liquid engines like the Jumo 222, DB 606/610 etc.
For the needs of this thread, Jumo and DB remain in the liquid cooled engines' business. Merge the other companies as you see fit, and probably as early as possible, and kill of designs you see fit. No licence deals with foreign companies.
Premise of the thread is that engine companies are pushed earlier towards the own development, so there is more to choose from, so to say. Small radials (9 or even 7 cyl) can be a made instead of the air-cooled V12s, while being lighter, cheaper and making a bit better power. Small to medium sized 14 cyl can be alternative engine for bombers and even fighters (German fighters were small and light, to help out wrt. performance even if the engine power is not over the top). 18 cyl engines can be alternative to the complicated and troublesome 24 cyl liquid engines like the Jumo 222, DB 606/610 etc.
For the needs of this thread, Jumo and DB remain in the liquid cooled engines' business. Merge the other companies as you see fit, and probably as early as possible, and kill of designs you see fit. No licence deals with foreign companies.