ADC Cirrus
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The ADC Cirrus is a series of British aero engines manufactured using surplus
Renault Groupe Renault ( , , , also known as the Renault Group in English; legally Renault S.A.) is a French multinational automobile manufacturer established in 1899. The company produces a range of cars and vans, and in the past has manufactured ...
parts by the
Aircraft Disposal Company The Aircraft Disposal Company (ADC) or Airdisco, was a British firm established in March 1920 to take advantage of the large number of World War I-surplus military aircraft on the market.Gunston 2005, p.7. The company changed name in 1925 to AD ...
(ADC) in the 1920s. The engines were air-cooled, four-cylinder inline types. They were widely used for private and light aircraft.


Design and development

The Cirrus engine originated in Geoffrey de Havilland's 1924 quest for a powerplant suited to a light two-seat sports biplane which would become the
de Havilland Moth The de Havilland Moths were a series of light aircraft, sports planes, and military trainers designed by Geoffrey de Havilland. In the late 1920s and 1930s, they were the most common civilian aircraft flying in Britain, and during that time eve ...
. No suitable engine existed at the time, with both an appropriate level of power and light weight. The
Aircraft Disposal Company The Aircraft Disposal Company (ADC) or Airdisco, was a British firm established in March 1920 to take advantage of the large number of World War I-surplus military aircraft on the market.Gunston 2005, p.7. The company changed name in 1925 to AD ...
, also known as Airdisco and ADC, were producing the low-cost
Airdisco The Aircraft Disposal Company (ADC) or Airdisco, was a British firm established in March 1920 to take advantage of the large number of World War I-surplus military aircraft on the market.Gunston 2005, p.7. The company changed name in 1925 to AD ...
V8 which had been developed by
Frank Halford Major Frank Bernard Halford CBE FRAeS (7 March 1894 – 16 April 1955) was an English aircraft engine designer. He is best known for the series of de Havilland Gipsy engines, widely used by light aircraft in the 1920s and 30s. Career Educate ...
from their large stocks of war surplus
Renault Groupe Renault ( , , , also known as the Renault Group in English; legally Renault S.A.) is a French multinational automobile manufacturer established in 1899. The company produces a range of cars and vans, and in the past has manufactured ...
V8 aero engines. De Havilland realised that half of this engine would make an air-cooled four-cylinder inline engine of just the right size and at low cost. He persuaded Halford to undertake its design and development. The cylinders, pistons, con-rods and gearing were taken from the Renault, with the valve gear based on the Airdisco, and a new five-bearing crankshaft and cast crankcase were designed. It became the first Cirrus engine, and the first air-cooled four-cylinder inline aero engine to go into quantity production. The original ADC Cirrus engines were all designed by Halford and built by ADC. The Cirrus I, passed its 50-hour type rating in 1925. De Havilland launched his product as the Cirrus Moth and it proved a winning formula. The engine was soon adopted for other aircraft. Later versions named the Cirrus II, and Cirrus III were produced, each with slightly greater displacement and power (Cirrus II - 85 hp, Cirrus III - 90 hp).Gunston 1989 ADC ceased manufacture when it ran out of surplus Renault engines around 1928.


Subsequent manufacture

When ADC ran out of parts, manufacture of the Cirrus III was taken up by Cirrus Aero Engines, also based at
Croydon Croydon is a large town in south London, England, south of Charing Cross. Part of the London Borough of Croydon, a local government district of Greater London. It is one of the largest commercial districts in Greater London, with an exten ...
. The Cirrus III was also adapted and improved by American Cirrus Engines, who manufactured it under license.


Variants

;Cirrus I :(1925) ;Cirrus II :(1926) ;Cirrus III :(1929)


Applications

''List from Lumsden'' except where noted. The list includes trial installations where a different engine was principally adopted.


Cirrus


Cirrus I

*
Avro Avian The Avro Avian was a series of British light aircraft designed and built by Avro in the 1920s and 1930s. While the various versions of the Avian were sound aircraft, they were comprehensively outsold by the de Havilland Moth and its descendant ...
*
Avro Baby The Avro 534 Baby (originally named the "Popular") was a British single-seat light sporting biplane built shortly after the First World War. Development The Avro Baby was a single-bay biplane of conventional configuration with a wire-braced wo ...
* de Havilland DH.60 Moth *
Short Mussel The Short S.7 Mussel was a single-engined two-seat monoplane built by Short Brothers to test the performance of their duralumin monocoque floats. Two were built. Development Having demonstrated the watertightness and corrosion resistance of du ...
* Westland Widgeon


Cirrus II

*
Avro Avian The Avro Avian was a series of British light aircraft designed and built by Avro in the 1920s and 1930s. While the various versions of the Avian were sound aircraft, they were comprehensively outsold by the de Havilland Moth and its descendant ...
* de Havilland DH.60 Moth * de Havilland DH.71 Tiger Moth * Piaggio P.9 *
Short Mussel The Short S.7 Mussel was a single-engined two-seat monoplane built by Short Brothers to test the performance of their duralumin monocoque floats. Two were built. Development Having demonstrated the watertightness and corrosion resistance of du ...
* Westland Widgeon * Bloudek XV Lojze


Cirrus III

*
Avro Avian The Avro Avian was a series of British light aircraft designed and built by Avro in the 1920s and 1930s. While the various versions of the Avian were sound aircraft, they were comprehensively outsold by the de Havilland Moth and its descendant ...
*
Blackburn Bluebird The Blackburn L.1 Bluebird was a British single-engine biplane light trainer/tourer with side-by-side seating, built in small numbers by Blackburn Aircraft in the 1920s. Design and development The Bluebird L.1 was initially designed as a co ...
*
Cierva C.17 The Cierva C.17 was a British experimental autogyro built by Cierva Autogiro Company in England in 1928, in association with Avro (which designated it their Type 612). It was an attempt to build upon the successful Cierva C.8 design using the ...
* de Havilland DH.60 Moth * de Havilland DH.71 Tiger Moth * Dudley Watt D.W.2 *
Emsco B-4 Cirrus The Emsco B-4 Cirrus was a mid-wing, two-seat trainer built in the US in the late 1920s. Six were built and three variants with more powerful engines flown. Design The two-seat B-4 trainer was a mid-wing monoplane with wings of rectangular p ...
* Koolhoven FK.41Jackson p.190 1973 * Klemm L.26 * Klemm L.27 *
Short Mussel The Short S.7 Mussel was a single-engined two-seat monoplane built by Short Brothers to test the performance of their duralumin monocoque floats. Two were built. Development Having demonstrated the watertightness and corrosion resistance of du ...
*
Simmonds Spartan The Simmonds Spartan is a 1920s British two-seat biplane trainer/tourer aircraft built by Simmonds Aircraft Limited. History Not happy with the high cost of manufacturing light aircraft, O.E. Simmonds designed and built a wooden two-seat bip ...
*
Spartan Arrow The Spartan Arrow is a British two-seat biplane aircraft of the early 1930s, built by Spartan Aircraft Limited. History Built as a successor to the company's first design the Simmonds Spartan, the Arrow was a two-seat biplane with a spruce ...
*
Westland Wessex The Westland Wessex is a British-built turbine-powered development of the Sikorsky H-34 (in US service known as Choctaw). It was developed and produced under licence by Westland Aircraft (later Westland Helicopters). One of the main chang ...
* Westland Widgeon


Engines on display

*A preserved ADC Cirrus II is on display at the
Science Museum (London) The Science Museum is a major museum on Exhibition Road in South Kensington, London. It was founded in 1857 and is one of the city's major tourist attractions, attracting 3.3 million visitors annually in 2019. Like other publicly funded ...
.


Specifications (Cirrus I)


See also


References


Notes


Bibliography

* The Aviation Ancestry Database of British Aviation Advertisements 1909–1990
Cirrus advertisements
(retrieved 23 April 2020). * Gunston, Bill. ''World Encyclopaedia of Aero Engines''. Cambridge, England. Patrick Stephens Limited, 1989. * * * Lumsden, Alec. ''British Piston Engines and their Aircraft''. Marlborough, Wiltshire: Airlife Publishing, 2003. . * Taylor, Douglas R. ''Boxkite to Jet: The Remarkable Career of Frank B. Halford''. Rolls-Royce Heritage Trust. 1999. . * {{Cirrus aeroengines 1920s aircraft piston engines
Cirrus Cirrus may refer to: Science *Cirrus (biology), any of various thin, thread-like structures on the body of an animal *Cirrus (botany), a tendril * Infrared cirrus, in astronomy, filamentary structures seen in infrared light *Cirrus cloud, a typ ...