Shvetsov ASh-82

ASh-82
Preserved Shvetsov ASh-82 at the Prague Aviation Museum, Kbely
Type Radial engine
National origin Soviet Union
Manufacturer Shvetsov & Evich, OKB-19 in Perm'
First run 1940
Major applications Lavochkin La-5
Mil Mi-4
Petlyakov Pe-8
Polikarpov I-185
Sukhoi Su-2
Number built 70,000 (57,898 of Ash-82, 82F & 82FN in wartime)
Developed from Shvetsov M-62
Developed into Shvetsov ASh-21

The Shvetsov ASh-82 (M-82) is a Soviet 14-cylinder, two-row, air-cooled radial aircraft engine developed from the Shvetsov M-62. The M-62 was the result of development of the M-25, which was a licensed version of the Wright R-1820 Cyclone.

Design and development

Arkadiy Shvetsov re-engineered the Wright Cyclone design for Russian aviation engine manufacturing practices and metric dimensions and fasteners, reducing the stroke, dimensions and weight. This allowed the engine to be used in light aircraft, where a Twin Cyclone could not be installed.[1] It entered production in 1940 and saw service in a number of Soviet aircraft. It powered the Tupolev Tu-2 and Pe-8 bombers and the inline engine-powered LaGG-3 was adapted for the ASh-82 producing the famous Lavochkin La-5 fighter and its development, Lavochkin La-7, additionally the Lavochkin La-9 with its Lavochkin La-11 escort variant and Ilyushin Il-14 airliner were created around the engine. Over 70,000 ASh-82s were built. They were built in fifties to sixties under licence also in Czechoslovakia (as the M-82) by the Walter (Motorlet) factory in Prague-Jinonice and in the German Democratic Republic by the VEB Industriewerke Karl-Marx-Stadt.

Variants

ASh-82T aircraft engine. The black metal plates mid-engine are baffles that re-direct airflow from the front of the engine (on the left in this image) over the heads of the cylinders.

Applications

Family tree of Shvetsov engines

Specifications (ASh-82)

Data from [5] [8]

General characteristics

Components

Performance

See also


Comparable engines
Related lists

References

Notes

  1. Witold Liss (1967). The Lavochkin La 5 & 7, number 149. Profile publications Ltd., P.O. Box, 1a North Street, Leatherhead, Surrey, UK. pp. p. 3
  2. 1 2 Gordon, Yefim; Khazanov, Dmitri (1998). Soviet Combat Aircraft of the Second World War Vol. 1. Midland Publishing limited. p. 44. ISBN 1857800834.
  3. Very few engines were able to operate at take-off power without time restrictions.
  4. Samolot transportowy Il-14, Benedykt Kempski. Wydawnictwo Ministerstwo Obrony Narodowej
  5. 1 2 ORDER. Chief of Civil Air Fleet. The Council of Ministers of the USSR. Number 508. August 5, 1963, Moscow. On enactment of the "Guide to Flight operation and piloting of the IL-14 with two engines AL-82T "
  6. http://www.avid.ru/eng/pr/news/514/
  7. Yefim Gordon, Vladimir Rigmant (2002). Tupolev Tu-4, Soviet Superfortress (Red Star, Vol.7). Midland Publishing ISBN 1-85780-142-3. pp. 54–59.
  8. Liss, Witold (1967). The Lavochkin La 5 & 7, number 149. Profile publications Ltd., P.O. Box, 1a North Street, Leatherhead, Surrey, UK. pp. 3, 5–6, 8–9.
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