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  2. Westland Wyvern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westland_Wyvern

    The Westland Wyvern is a British single-seat carrier-based multi-role strike aircraft built by Westland Aircraft that served in the 1950s, seeing service in the 1956 Suez Crisis. Production Wyverns were powered by a turboprop engine driving large and distinctive contra-rotating propellers, and could carry aerial torpedoes.

  3. Armstrong Siddeley Python - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armstrong_Siddeley_Python

    The Armstrong Siddeley Python is an early British turboprop engine that was designed and built by the Armstrong Siddeley company in the mid-1940s. Its main use was in the Westland Wyvern, a carrier-based heavy fighter. The prototypes had used the Rolls-Royce Eagle piston engine, but Pythons were

  4. Rolls-Royce Clyde - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolls-Royce_Clyde

    The engine was selected as the main engine of the Westland Wyvern TF Mk.2 strike aircraft. [2] However, despite the promising performance of the test engines Ernest Hives felt that pure-jets such as the Avon were the future and the Clyde programme was terminated, forcing Westland to use the less than satisfactory Armstrong Siddeley Python on ...

  5. Rolls-Royce Eagle (1944) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolls-Royce_Eagle_(1944)

    An Eagle 22 with some of the cowling panels removed to display the engine can be seen fitted to Westland Wyvern TF1, VR137, at the Fleet Air Arm Museum, RNAS Yeovilton. This pre-production aircraft never flew. [5]

  6. Timeline of jet power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_jet_power

    A carrier-based naval strike aircraft, the Westland Wyvern, having already changed from its original Rolls-Royce Eagle piston engine, uses the alternative turboprop, the Armstrong Siddeley Python. The Avia S-92 , a version of the Me 262, is built in Czechoslovakia .

  7. List of fictional aircraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_aircraft

    The aircraft in this list are generally intended to operate in an atmosphere, though a few have been stated as being capable of exoatmospheric or sub-orbital flight as well. These aircraft appear in notable works of fiction, including novels, stories, films, TV series, animation, video games, comics, and other works. They are either the subject ...

  8. List of aircraft engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_aircraft_engines

    ADC (from "Aircraft Disposal Company") [3] bought 35,000 war-surplus engines in 1920. Initially produced engines from Renault 70 hp spares. ADC Cirrus. ADC Airdisco; ADC Cirrus; ADC Nimbus, development of Siddeley Puma; ADC Airsix, air-cooled version of Nimbus. Not put into use; ADC BR2 [1] ADC Viper [1] ADC Airdisco-Renault [1]

  9. Honeywell TPE331 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeywell_TPE331

    The Honeywell TPE331 (military designation: T76) is a turboprop engine. It was designed in the 1950s by Garrett AiResearch, and produced since 1999 by successor Honeywell Aerospace. The engine's power output ranges from 575 to 1,650 shaft horsepower (429 to 1,230 kW). [2] [3] [4]