Shortround6
Major General
There have been some tremendous advances in what is possible with the engines in the last 70 years but one thing often left out of these car vs airplane comparisons is weight. The other thing is durability.
A modern engine is much better than an old airplane engine in many ways but without factoring in both of those things it makes the modern car engine look somewhat better than is really the case.
AS for power per liter the British managed 155.9 hp per liter in 1936/37 with the Austin 7 race race engine. A 750cc 4 cylinder that could make 116hp at 7600rpm running on a rather exotic blend of fuel at an intake pressure of 2.66Atm. It also weighed 260lbs or 2.24lbs per HP. not so good for an airplane engine. The Germans managed 162.1h per liter in 1939 with the Mercedes Benz Formula I engine. 2,962CCs managed 480hp at 7500rpm at 2.31Atm. Also a rather exotic fuel blend and the engine weighed 603lbs for a power to weight ratio of 1.26lbs per hp.
Modern engines use much better metals to allow higher rpm which allows for higher airflow per minute. The better metals also allow for lighter weight and greater durability. However if you blow up your VW engine because you were running it flat out for a few hours on end on the autoban you get to pull over and wait for the tow truck. There wasn't a sky tow service in business during WW II Pulling up to a near by cloud and waiting 20 minutes for the tow plane wasn't an option.
A modern engine is much better than an old airplane engine in many ways but without factoring in both of those things it makes the modern car engine look somewhat better than is really the case.
AS for power per liter the British managed 155.9 hp per liter in 1936/37 with the Austin 7 race race engine. A 750cc 4 cylinder that could make 116hp at 7600rpm running on a rather exotic blend of fuel at an intake pressure of 2.66Atm. It also weighed 260lbs or 2.24lbs per HP. not so good for an airplane engine. The Germans managed 162.1h per liter in 1939 with the Mercedes Benz Formula I engine. 2,962CCs managed 480hp at 7500rpm at 2.31Atm. Also a rather exotic fuel blend and the engine weighed 603lbs for a power to weight ratio of 1.26lbs per hp.
Modern engines use much better metals to allow higher rpm which allows for higher airflow per minute. The better metals also allow for lighter weight and greater durability. However if you blow up your VW engine because you were running it flat out for a few hours on end on the autoban you get to pull over and wait for the tow truck. There wasn't a sky tow service in business during WW II Pulling up to a near by cloud and waiting 20 minutes for the tow plane wasn't an option.