Germany:
Germany conducted the most in depth research on almost every single engine system.
I can state that I believe their supercharging work is stunningly good (see attached pic SC), and were the only ones
towards the end who started developing engines which were on the truly modern path philosophically,
of radically increasing crankshaft speeds, and having flexible valve timing controls; which with the
possibilities of direct injection are really knocking on the door of all modern engines, in terms
of control possibilities.
However they utterly failed in the task of taking all this research and putting it into one, or two
engines which would actually be able to be mass manufactured in time to have any useful
war impact.
The Jumo 213J and DB603N, were in several respects light years ahead of their time, due to
design features like hydraulic VVT, swirl throttling and mean piston speeds over 66fps well over 4000rpm, bu due to pitiful organization and planning - were militarily, non-events. If you see the list of engines DB developed you will never believe it, its like an engines menagerie.
Germany gets a gold-star too in my book for having carried out all this research and work
under horrific conditions, which really makes it a wonder they did anything useful at all.
Their greatest failure was not getting a two-stage supercharged engine with charge-cooling
into service. Which was really criminal, as their drawing offices and test stands were littered
with them.
Britain:
Generally made very "simple" engines (ignoring Napier...) and the only country I think which
understood not only what it needed to do, but understood its own strengths and weaknesses.
Unlike the Germans, Rolls-Royce brutally culled engine projects before they dragged on draining resources
from the critical work (eg Vulture being cancelled, dramatically increased the resources available for Merlin development according to Geoffrey Wilde).
Understanding the limited time and people they had, Britain more or less conducted its entire war
effort on one engine series, and would have (sorry to Bristol and Napier fans) been entirely able to
have finished in the same circumstances with only Merlins. Which I dont think you can really
say about any other nation. The "stick with what you`ve got and develop it" pragmatic approach
probably won the war for Britain in the air.
I think the Merlin 60 series, two-stage with charge-cooling was really the ubiquitous liquid
cooled V12 of the war (in terms of mass produced operationally significant engines, that
were fitted across several aircraft platforms). The significance of the introduction of the Merlin 61
is very apparent from reading German technical intelligence reports, and internal DBenz reports,
no other Allied engine is really mentioned much, but the 61 and V1650 had them quite panicked;
although they did meticulously take apart and test every other engine the Allies made too, as did we.
I think Britain's great failure was an embarrassing reliance on carburetors, which in view
of the problems it caused, and the open possibilities to change it early on - was really very very bad,
and I`m sure cost many pilots their lives until the pressure carburettors were put on by Packard.
USA:
The Americans clearly got their act together with Turbocharging and fuels research in a way
that nobody else did (although plenty of behind the scenes stuff credit on fuels has to go to
Brits like F.R.Banks). However turbo setups in the 1940`s were horribly heavy and gigantic in
size, which did mean that without a really good two-stage mechanically blown engine, their
smaller fighters were a bit limited, which is really why the P51 was a little hamstrung for a while.
I think the big Wasp radials with turbo`s were amazing engines. I think their greatest failure was
not developing a really good supercharger for the V1710, which was in many respects a
better basic engine than the Merlin. The combustion chamber shape of the Allison is much
better than that of the Merlin, and is very similar to a modern engine, inclined 4 valve narrow-valve angle
pent roof, and splitting the crankcase down the crank centre-line, then using the whole sump as a
main bearing ladder-frame is very modern in concept, it makes for an extremely strong and stuff
crankcase structure and bearing alignment.
Russia:
I am not knowledgeable on Russian engines yet, but I do know that we can credit them for the very clever
introduction of the supercharger swirl-throttleon the AM35 engine. Which was quickly copied by Werner Von Der Null at the DVL
and eventually pressed into service on the Jumo 213 and DB603L & N.
Overall
Its very open to interpretation, but your question was "which country DESIGNED the best engines", I`m going to
vote Germany. The fact they never really managed to actually put many of them into a plane is a second thread !
The best DESIGNS, were I think the DB603N (which went to wet-liners, and conventional bolted head joints) and
the Jumo213J, which was really the only engine of the war to move seriously towards very high speed crank speeds.
According to internal german comparisons, which compared all the major engines, Sabre, Cyclone, AM35, AM38, Merlin, Griffon, DB`s, Jumo`s, BMW`s - the Jumo 213 scores first place in just about all categories, only loosing
out to engines like the P240 which was never used (developed by the Mercedes Silver Arrows automotive
racing dept !).
Kg/PS Kilograms engine weight per PS (basically a horsepower) (see pics 1,2,3,4 - sorry they are so blurry!)
PS/m^2 Engine frontal area
PS/m^3 Engine package volume
MEP Mean Effective Pressure
MPS Mean piston speed
Of course you can invent other categories in which it scores very little, such as was it introduced
early enough and in sufficient numbers to actually matter.....probably not really. I`ve attached a couple of snippets on the Jumo213EB, which even ended up in a real aircraft, amazingly...haha, the amazingly
flat power vs altitude curves can easily be mistaken for a turbocharged engine, but are in fact due to
the Swirl Throttle (copied from the Russian AM35). Which dramatically lowers pumping losses below rated heights.
I`d also say that the DB624 turbo-twin-supercharged engine would have been superb, and Benz had completed
their 100hour tests on turbocharged DB`s in 1941. So while USA deserves tremendous credit for getting not only
the science right, but ALSO the scheduling, and production - German turbo research has laid it all on the plate
for their country too. They just never got their act together to make proper use of much of it (we can all thank
Ernst Udet & Göring for that).
In terms of things that were actually made in enough volume to be war-influential, then I think I can only pick the Merlin, because if you waved a magic wand and said "ok its 1939 and you only get to have ONE engine for the
rest of the war for ALL your planes" I think its the only one that really could have done that well, and for
Britain more or less actually did...but I dont think its necessarily a particularly advanced engine, it was just
developed very well to do one thing, using a simple proven layout. Therefore it really stops being an aircraft engine
and starts being just, a useful mass produced, reliable war-machine - and I think Germany spent rather too much
time trying to build clever engines, and forgot about the fact they needed war-machines.
But all this was very strongly tied in with fuels, and strategies, Germany never really managed to figure out what it was
supposed to be doing with their engines, and the fuels situation was also catastrophically poorly planned, and run. So
I think its really very very difficult to compare like for like, every country had their own constraints and targets, although it was the same war, very few in Germany were really trying to do what the Allied designers were trying to do, and visa-versa, its not as if each side had to just make an engine that could reach 30,000 feet first, or use least fuel
and so on. Its really hard to say what "best" is without knowing the background to each.
I am also "cheating" with this post, because its the topic for a book I`m writing which should be finished in the next few months. So I get unfair advantage of having piles of stuff right at my desk. I would post alot more info, but its all copyrighted and I cant upset the people and places who gave me this stuff, by just posting it all verbatim.
("Umfangsgeschwindigkeit" means "supercharger impeller tip speed" in the pic SC and the last pic means "German Aeronautical Research Institude - Berlin Aldershof, Institute for Turbomachinery report by Dietrich, Report on the Analysis of the two-stage, two speed supercharger system from the high altitude engine Merlin 61 with after-cooling & housing cooling").