Kawasaki Ha40#Ha201

{{Short description|12-cylinder, inverted-V aircraft engine}}

{{Infobox Aircraft Begin

|name= Ha40

|image= Daimler-Benz-DB 601A.jpg

|caption= Preserved Daimler-Benz DB 601.

}}

{{Infobox Aircraft Engine

|type= Piston V12 aircraft engine

|national origin = Japan

|manufacturer= Kawasaki

|first run= 1930s

|major applications= Kawasaki Ki-61

|number built =

|program cost =

|unit cost =

|developed from = Daimler-Benz DB 601

|developed into =

|variants with their own articles =

}}

File:Daimler-Benz-DB 601A Schnitt.jpg

File:Kawasaki Ha40 aircraft engine.jpg

File:Kawasaki Ha40 aircraft engine - detail.jpg

File:Aichi Atsuta 31 2.jpg

The Kawasaki Ha40, also known as the Army Type 2 1,100 hp Liquid Cooled In-line and Ha-60, was a license-built Daimler-Benz DB 601Aa 12-cylinder liquid-cooled inverted-vee aircraft engine. The Imperial Japanese Army Air Service (IJAAS) selected the engine to power its Kawasaki Ki-61 fighter.

Design and development

The Daimler-Benz DB 601Aa was a development of the earlier DB 600, with direct fuel injection replacing the carburetor. Like all DB 601s, it had a 33.9-litre displacement. The first prototype with the direct fuel injection was test run in 1935, and an order for 150 engines was placed in February 1937.

A manufacturing license was granted to Aichi for the production of this engine for the Imperial Japanese Navy as the Atsuta and to Kawasaki for production of this engine for the IJAAS as the Ha40. Under the 1944 Unified System, this engine was re-designated as the Kawasaki Ha-60.

The Kawasaki Ha40 and the Aichi Atsuta were based on the engine that powered Germany's Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter.Francillon, p.119

=Ha201=

A new high-horsepower narrow-profile engine was required for the Kawasaki Ki-64 experimental fighter. The aircraft design called for a narrow-profile fuselage, and the solution that Kawasaki developed was the Ha-201 engine. Although similar to the Aichi Ha-70, where two Aichi Atsuta engines, mounted side-by-side behind the cockpit driving a single large propeller — an arrangement already used by the Daimler-Benz DB 606 that powered the Heinkel He 119 reconnaissance monoplane prototypes, and later inspired Japan's own Yokosuka R2Y reconnaissance aircraft from the seventh and eighth He 119 prototypes being sold to Japan in May 1940 — for the Japanese Ki-64, its own powerplant installation design called for the two Kawasaki Ha-40 engines to be separately mounted, one in the aircraft's nose, the other behind the cockpit.

The engines were connected to a common gearbox that was mounted in the nose. The rear engine was connected to the nose-mounted gearbox by a long drive shaft similar to the American Bell P-39 Airacobra. The gearbox did not combine the power output of the two engines. Instead, the rear engine drove the forward controllable-pitch propeller, while the front engine independently drove the rearward fixed-pitch propeller.Francillon, p.121

Variants

;Ha40

:Up to {{cvt|1175|PS|kW hp|0}} at sea level with 2,500 rpm, up to {{cvt|1100|PS|kW hp|0}} at 2,400 rpm and {{cvt|3700|m|ft}} altitude. Used in the Kawasaki Ki-61.

;Ha-60: Unified designation for the Ha40

;Ha140:An up-rated 1,500 PS development of the Ha40 for the high-altitude Kawasaki Ki-61-II KAI interceptor aircraft.

;Ha201

:Two Ha40 coupled together with a common gearbox, driving a twin three-blade contra-rotating propeller. Used in the Kawasaki Ki-64. The combination was rated at {{cvt|2350|PS|kW hp|0}} at sea level and 2,500 rpm, up to {{cvt|2200|PS|kW hp|0}} at 2,400 rpm and 3,700 m altitude.

;Ha-72: Unified designation of the Ha201, coupled Ha40

Applications

Specifications (Ha40)

{{pistonspecs

|

|ref=Francillon, p.119

|type=Twelve-cylinder liquid-cooled supercharged 60° inverted Vee aircraft piston engine

|bore=150 mm (5.91 in)

|stroke=160 mm (6.30 in)

|displacement=33.93 L (2,070.5 in³)

|length=1,722 mm (68 in)

|diameter=

|width=

|height=

|weight=590 kg (1,320 lb)

|valvetrain=Two intake and two sodium-cooled exhaust valves per cylinder actuated via a single overhead camshaft per cylinder block.

|supercharger=Gear-driven single-speed centrifugal type supercharger{{cite journal|last=Wilkinson|first=Stephan|title=With the Noise of a Stone Crusher|journal=Popular Science|date=Jan 2003|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WAAAAAAAMBAJ&dq=supercharger%20Daimler&pg=PA28}})

|turbocharger=

|fuelsystem=Direct fuel injection

|fueltype=

|oilsystem=Dry sump with one pressure and two scavenge pumps

|coolingsystem=Liquid-cooled

|power=

  • 865 kW (1,175 PS or 1,159 hp) at 2,500 rpm for takeoff
  • 787 kW (1,070 PS or 1,050 hp) at 2,400 rpm at 3,700 m (12,140 ft)

|specpower=25.52 kW/L (0.56 hp/in³)

|compression=6.9:1

|fuelcon=

|specfuelcon=270 g/(kW·h) (0.44 lb/(hp·h))

|oilcon=

|power/weight=1.47 kW/kg (0.89 hp/lb)

}}

See also

References

=Notes=

{{reflist}}

=Bibliography=

  • Monogram Closeup 13. {{ISBN|0-914144-13-8}}.
  • Francillon, R. J., Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War, Putnam, London, 1970 SBN 370 00033 1
  • {{cite book |last1=Goodwin |first1=Mike |last2=Starkings |first2=Peter |title=Japanese Aero-Engines 1910-1945 |date=2017 |publisher=MMPBooks |location=Sandomierz, Poland|name-list-style=amp |isbn=978-83-65281-32-6}}