Curtiss O

{{Infobox Aircraft Begin

| name = Curtiss Model "O" Aero Engine

| image = File:Curtiss Type O.jpg

| caption = Replica of a Curtiss Model "O" engine

}}

{{Infobox Aircraft Engine

|type= V-8 piston engine

|national origin = United States

|manufacturer= Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company

|first run= 1912

|major applications=

|number built =

|program cost =

|unit cost =

|developed from = Curtiss L

|developed into = Curtiss OX

|variants with their own articles =

}}

{{Short description|Curtiss engine}}

The Curtiss O was a {{cvt|75|hp}} water-cooled V-8 aero-engine, which was the basis of the commercially successful Curtiss OX series of engines.{{cite book |last1=Angle |first1=Glenn D. |title=Airplane Engine Encyclopedia |url=https://archive.org/details/airplaneenginee00anglgoog |date=1921|publisher=The Otterbein Press|location=Dayton, Ohio|pages=142-143}}{{cite journal |last1=Rinek |first1=Larry |date=1994 |title=Glenn H. Curtiss: An Early American Innovator in Aviation and Motorcycle Engines. |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/44632844 |journal=SAE Transactions |volume=103 |pages=927–945 |access-date=31 Dec 2022}}

Design and development

In 1909 Glenn Curtiss won the inaugural Gordon Bennett Trophy flying a Curtiss racing biplane powered by a V8 engine featuring a cross-flow OHV configuration (two overhead valves, one rocker, one push-pull rod per cylinder). At that time most of Curtiss’s competitors were using less-efficient suction intake valves.

Curtiss continued the development of their V8 OHV engines with demand for higher power outputs being driven by the US Navy’s requirement for seaplanes. By 1912 Curtiss V8’s were developing 75 hp at 1,100 rpm and were known as the Model O.

The Model O was further developed to achieve 90 hp at 1,200 rpm at which time it was designated as the Curtiss Model OX. Curtiss OX production started in 1913 and it became the first mass produced American aero engine series. The most successful engine in the series was the Curtiss OX-5 which powered many early American aircraft including the Curtiss Jenny, the standard trainer used by American and Canadian forces during World War One.

Applications

Source:{{Cite book| title=Curiss Aircraft 1907-1947|last=Bowers |first=Peter M|date=1979|publisher=Putnam|chapter=Curtiss Companies and Accomplishments, 1909-14|language=en|isbn=0370100298}}

Specifications

{{pistonspecs|

|type=8-cylinder water-cooled Vee piston engine

|ref=Angle

|bore= {{cvt|4|in|mm|0}}

|stroke={{cvt|5|in|mm|0}}

|displacement=503 in³ (8.2 L)

|length=

|diameter=

|width=

|height=

|weight=

|valvetrain=One intake and one exhaust valve per cylinder, pushrod-actuated

|supercharger=

|turbocharger=

|ignition=

|fuelsystem=

|fueltype=

|oilsystem=

|coolingsystem=Water-cooled

|power={{cvt|75|hp|kW|0}} at 1,100 rpm

|specpower=

|compression=

|fuelcon=

|specfuelcon=

|oilcon=

|power/weight=

}}

References

{{reflist}}

{{Curtiss aeroengines}}

O

Category:1910s aircraft piston engines