Beardmore Halford Pullinger

Beardmore-Halford-Pullinger (BHP) were aircraft engines used in production between 1916 and 1918.[1] The engines were used on many notable First World War aircraft, such as the Airco DH.4, DH.9, DH.10, de Havilland DH.15 and Avro 529 aircraft.

The engines were used as the basis for later designs such as the Siddeley Puma and A.D.C Nimbus (1926).[2]

Formation

The name is derived from the three elements[3] of:

Engines

The 230 hp was a six cylinder petrol aero engine. A new company, the Galloway Engineering Co. Ltd. was started in Dumfries to continue development and production of the 230 hp engine. Endurance tests began in June 1916 in a DH.4 modified by Geoffrey de Havilland and tested by the Central Flying School.

Production was ordered and the contract given to Siddeley-Deasy for units to be built at their Parkside works. John Siddeley himself worked on the engine and would later, after additions to the watercooling system, release an improved 240 hp version as the Siddeley Puma. Motor Co. Ltd. Coventry, Siddeley-Deasy and the Arrol Johnston factory were eventually called upon to assist production as Galloway Engineering could not produce enough units per week, after which they were left with just making the steel engine blocks.

See also


Related lists

References

  1. "The De Havilland D.H.9", Flight, Iliffe and Sons Ltd, p. 386b, 6 April 1956, retrieved 8 March 2011
  2. Spooner, Stanley, ed. (4 March 1926). "The A.D.C "Nimbus" Engine" (PDF). Flight: 122. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  3. "The B.H.P. Aero Engine", Flight, p. 88, 3 February 1921, retrieved 8 March 2011
  4. 1 2 3 page 120, The Aeroplane, 2 February 1921

External links

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