| |||||||||
The Pegasus was a 9 cylinder one-row radial aircraft engine designed as the follow-on to the Bristol Aeroplane Company's very successful Bristol Jupiter, following lessons learned in the Mercury effort. Confusingly, Bristol chose to reuse the name many years later for the engine used in the Hawker Harrier; that engine later became known as the Rolls-Royce Pegasus.
The Pegasus was the same size, displacement and general steel/aluminium construction as the Jupiter, but other improvements allowed the rpm to be increased from 1950 to 2600 for take-off power. This improved performance considerably from the Jupiter's 580 hp (430 kW), to the first Pegasus II's with 635 hp (474 kW), to 690 hp (515 kW) in the first production model III's, and eventually to the late-model XXII's 1010 hp (750 kW) with improved superchargers (max take-off in all cases).
The most famous use of the Pegasus was on the Fairey Swordfish, and it was also used on the Bristol Bombay. Like the Jupiter before it, the Pegasus was also licensed, but this time only by the PZL company in Poland. They used it on their PZL P.23 and PZL P.37 designs.
For Pegasus X:
|
List of Aircraft | Aircraft Manufacturers | Aircraft Engines | Aircraft Engine Manufacturers Airlines | Air Forces | Aircraft Weapons | Missiles | Timeline of aviation |
Bristol Pegasus is also a motor-racing club in Bristol, England.