The Bristol Engine Company manufactured aeroengines.
General
The company was originally a separate entity called Cosmos Engineering which had been formed from the pre-First World War automobile company, Brazil, Straker and Co.
In 1917 Cosmos was asked to investigate air-cooled radial engines, producing what would become the Bristol Mercury, a 14 cylinder two-row (helical) radial, which they launched in 1918. This engine saw little use, but a smaller and simpler 9 cylinder version known as the Bristol Jupiter was clearly a winning design.
With the post-war rapid contraction of military orders Cosmos Engineering went bankrupt, and the Air Ministry let it be known that it would be a good idea if the Bristol Aeroplane Co purchased them.
The Jupiter competed with the Armstrong Siddeley Jaguar through the 1920s, but Bristol put more effort into their design, and by 1929, the Jupiter was clearly superior.
In the 1930s they developed a new line of radials based on the sleeve valve principle, which would develop into some of the most powerful piston engines in the world, and could continue to be sold into the 1960s.
In 1956 the division was renamed Bristol Aero Engines
1958 It then merged with Armstrong Siddeley Motors to form Bristol Siddeley as a counterpart of the airframe-producing company mergers that formed BAC.
In 1966 Bristol Siddeley was purchased by Rolls-Royce, leaving the latter as the only major aero-engine company in Britain.
Rolls-Royce continues to produce aircraft engines as Rolls-Royce plc. A number of Bristol Siddeley engines of Bristol heritage continued to be developed by Rolls-Royce; notably the Olympus turbojet and the Pegasus. The classical names favoured by Bristol indicated their heritage in a Rolls-Royce lineup named after British Rivers
List of Models
- Aquila (1934-)
- Centaurus (1942)
- Cherub
- Draco
- Hercules (1939-)
- Hydra
- Jupiter (1918-30)
- Lucifer (1920s)
- Mercury (1930-40s)
- Pegasus (1930-40s)
- Perseus (1932)
- Phoenix (1928-32)
- Taurus (1936-
- Titan (1927)
See Also
Sources of Information
- [1] Wikipedia