Bristol Aquila
by Brian Perkins

 

An extensive development program involving the use of Burt-McCollum single-sleeve valves was undertaken by Bristol in 1926. With this sleeve valve concept, the usual poppet valve gear (cam, cam followers, push rods, rocker arms, valves, springs, etc.) was replaced by a train of spur gears that drive small sleeve-valve operating cranks at one-half crankshaft speed. Their crankpins protrude inside the crankcase where each engages a spherical sliding coupling on its associated valve sleeve. The sleeve receives a combined reciprocating and rotating motion that causes any point on the sleeve to describe an elliptical path wrapped around the circumference of the sleeve, with a closed circuit being completed every two revolutions of the crankshaft. Four specially-shaped ports around the circumference near the top of each sleeve pass similar ports cut in the cylinder wall. This action opens and closes passages to the intake and exhaust manifolds. During the compression and power stroke, the sleeve is at the top of its travel and its ports rise above the level of internal sealing rings in the cylinder head, which in the case of sleeve valves, are called “junk heads.” Two spark plugs near the center of the junk head provide ignition.

 

Bristol Perseus Junk Head, Cylinder, Spherical Coupling and Sleeve Think the multitude of gears in the Bristol sleeve drive looks complicated? Compare parts count of a sleeve valve cylinder (left) with that of a poppet valve cylinder (right).

 

 The first Bristol V-2 test engine was completed in 1927. By 1931, the concept had matured sufficiently for Bristol to construct its first complete engine, the Perseus, which appeared in 1932. The Perseus, a nine-cylinder air-cooled radial with a bore of 5.75” and a stroke of 6.5” (1,520 cu in) was rated at 515 hp. 

The Aquila, Bristol’s second sleeve-valve engine design, was patterned closely after the Perseus, but with smaller dimensions (5.00” bore, 5.375” stroke, displacement of 950 cu in). Aquila development began in 1933 with the first complete engine appearing in 1934, producing a rated power of 420 hp at 2,475 rpm.

Brian Perkins' quarter-scale model of the Aquila combines history, art and craftsmanship into a spectacular end product.

Bristol Aquila(s)

Father and Son

Bristol Aquila

Quarter-scale Model

Assembled Case

Visible are pistons, sleeve drive gears and speed reducer.

Assembled Case

Another View

Assembled Case

Sleeve Drive Gears

Crankcase Front

Sleeve cranks. View looking forward.

Crankcase Front

Sleeve Drive Gears. View looking aft.

Speed Reducer

Crankcase

Crankcase

Drilling operation on one of the myriad holes.

Crank and Rods

Connecting Rods

Pistons and Rods

Piston Blanks

Cut from the crown of a Cummins 10 l Diesel piston.

Piston Blanks

 

Cylinder Parts

Cylinder, Junk Head and Sleeve

Cylinder Parts

Cylinder, Junk Head, Piston and Sleeve

Cylinder Production

Machining operation on the cylinder base.

Cylinder Production

Cutting the cylinder ports.

Cylinder Production

Fins were cut with ganged slitting saws.

Head Production

Cutting junk head cooling fins.

Completed Heads

Note the intricate finning.

Sleeve Production

Cutting the sleeve ports.

Sleeve Drive

Shafts, gears, cranks and ball housings.

 

Supercharger

Impeller, drive gear, rear crankcase, magnetos.

Supercharger

Diffuser

Supercharger

Cutting diffuser vanes.

Supercharger

Assembled on rear crankcase

Supercharger

Drive assembly details.

Manifold

Blanks

Manifold

Production - first stage.

Manifold

Production - third stage.

Manifold

Production - cutting fins.

Magnetos

Assembled to rear of crankcase.

Magneto

Components.

Carburetor

Carburetor

Oil Pumps

Scavenge Pump

 

 

Drawings

General Arangement

Port Layout

Cylinder Port

Cylinder Head

Magneto

 


 

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