Comet 7-E
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The Comet 7-cylinder radials were a family of air-cooled radial engines, designed and built by the
Comet Engine Corporation A comet is an icy, small Solar System body that, when passing close to the Sun, warms and begins to release gases, a process that is called outgassing. This produces a visible atmosphere or coma, and sometimes also a tail. These phenomena are ...
at Madison, Wisconsin from around 1927.


Design and development

Comet designed the 7-cylinder radial series to take advantage of the boom in private aviation in the late 1920s; intending to replace the large number of relatively unreliable wartime surplus engines that flooded the market in the early 1920s. First produced by the Aircraft Engine Corporation of Oakland, California, new interests acquired the California company and the Comet Engine Corporation was formed under the sponsorship of Air Investors Inc., the Crocker First Company of San Francisco and the Gisholt Machine Company. Production transferred to workshops adjacent to the Gisholt Machine Company in Madison, which acted as production supervisor. The Comet radial was fairly standard with steel finned cylinders, cast light alloy cylinder heads and two valves per head. The valves are operated by a single rocker arms and push-rods, to the rear of the cylinder, which are in turn operated positively by inner and outer cam tracks operating rollers on the pushrod. Oil pumps and magnetos are driven by the camshaft drives as well as the Heywood air starter and tachometer. The two-piece crankshaft, with counter-weights, is carefully forged from heat-treated chrome-vanadium alloy steel and drilled for lightness and lubricating oil flow. Master and slave connecting rods are forged and machined from the same material as the crank-shaft. The rear of the crankshaft carries an induction rotor to ensure even mixture distribution to the cylinders from the Stromberg carburettor. The two-piece crankcase is split in the plane of the cylinder centres, with the forward half supporting the fwd crank /prop-shaft bearing and the rear half housing the rear bearing, induction rotor, cam drives and accessories.


Variants

''Data from: ;7-RA: From 1928 with Approved Type Certificate No.9, rated initially at at 1,800 rpm. ;7-D: After improvements rated at at 1,800 rpm (maximum continuous) from . ;7-E:From 1929 with Approved Type Certificate No.47, delivering from the same .


Applications

''Data from:'' Aerofiles : Aircraft of North America 1903-2003 *
Adcox Student Prince The Adcox Student Prince was a two-seat open- cockpit biplane designed by Basil Smith and built by the students of the US Adcox Aviation Trade School in 1929. It was based on the one-off Adcox Special, and the first example flew on 17 September. ...
* Alexander Eaglerock Bullet C-4 (7-E option not installed) * Alexander Eaglerock A-12 7-RA and some re-engined with 7-E *
Bach 3-CT-5 Johann Sebastian Bach (28 July 1750) was a German composer and musician of the late Baroque period. He is known for his orchestral music such as the '' Brandenburg Concertos''; instrumental compositions such as the Cello Suites; keyboard w ...
(2x 7-RA) *
Bach 3-CT-6 The Bach Air Yacht was a trimotor airliner produced in the United States in the 1920s. Typical of its day, it was a high-wing braced monoplane, with fixed tailwheel undercarriage. Unusual for airliners of the late 1920s (due to legislation that f ...
(2x 7-RA) * Bird Wing Imperial (option) * Briggs Briggster * Cessna AC * Curtiss Robin J-1 (7-D) * Fairchild KR-34B (aka KR-34B-1) 7-RA * Fairchild KR-34C (7-E) * General Aristocrat 102-D proposed 7-RA * Kreider-Reisner C-4 7-RA * Kreider-Reisner C-4B 7-D * Marine Water Sprite Marine Aircraft Co, Sausalito CA. - 7-E * Maximum Safety M-2 7-RA *
Maximum Safety M-3 In mathematical analysis, the maxima and minima (the respective plurals of maximum and minimum) of a function, known collectively as extrema (the plural of extremum), are the largest and smallest value of the function, either within a given ran ...
7-D * Neilson Golden Bear *
Parks P-2 The Parks P-2, powered by a 150 hp Axelson-Floco B engine, was a biplane designed and built at the Parks Air College in the United States circa 1929. A change in engine type to the Wright J-6 The Wright Whirlwind was a family of air-cool ...
(option) * Schroeder-Wentworth 1929 monoplane 7-RA *
Sierra BLW-1 Sierra (Spanish for "mountain range" and "saw", from Latin '' serra'') may refer to the following: Places Mountains and mountain ranges * Sierra de Juárez, a mountain range in Baja California, Mexico * Sierra de las Nieves, a mountain range i ...
7-RA *
Sierra BLW-2 Sierra (Spanish for "mountain range" and "saw", from Latin '' serra'') may refer to the following: Places Mountains and mountain ranges * Sierra de Juárez, a mountain range in Baja California, Mexico * Sierra de las Nieves, a mountain range i ...
7-RA *
Spartan C3-166 The Spartan C3 is an American three-seat open-cockpit utility biplane from the late 1920s. Design The C3s fuselage and wing struts were built up from welded chromium-molybdenum alloy steel tubes, faired with wood battens. It had two open c ...
7-E * Stearman C3L 7-RA * Thaden T-2 7-D *
Timm C-165 Collegiate The Timm Collegiate was a series of American-built two-seat light aircraft of the late 1920s. Design and development Otto Timm founded the O.W. Timm Aircraft Corp in 1922 with its base at Glendale, California. The firm changed its name to the Tim ...
7-E *
Timm K-100 Collegiate The Timm Collegiate was a series of American-built two-seat light aircraft of the late 1920s. Design and development Otto Timm founded the O.W. Timm Aircraft Corp in 1922 with its base at Glendale, California. The firm changed its name to the Ti ...
7-RA *
Towle TA-1 The Towle WC, aka Towle TA-1, was a custom built aircraft for a 1929 round-the world flight. Design and development Thomas Towle was an engineer who had been involved with many early aircraft designs. Having just co-designed the Eastman-E2 Sea ...
7-D *
Towle WC Amphibion The Towle WC, aka Towle TA-1, was a custom built aircraft for a 1929 round-the world flight. Design and development Thomas Towle was an engineer who had been involved with many early aircraft designs. Having just co-designed the Eastman-E2 Sea ...
7-D *
Travel Air 4-U The Travel Air 2000/3000/4000 (originally, the Model A, Model B and Model BH were open-cockpit biplane aircraft produced in the United States in the late 1920s by the Travel Air Manufacturing Company. During the period from 1924–1929, Tra ...
conversion to 7-RA, 7-D and 7-E by O W Timm Aircraft Co. *
Triton Water Sprite Triton commonly refers to: * Triton (mythology), a Greek god * Triton (moon), a satellite of Neptune Triton may also refer to: Biology * Triton cockatoo, a parrot * Triton (gastropod), a group of sea snails * ''Triton'', a synonym of ''Triturus'' ...
, Triton Aircraft Co, Sausalito CA. 7-E * Warren CP-1 7-D


Specifications (variant)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Comet 7 radial 1920s aircraft piston engines Aircraft air-cooled radial piston engines