BMW 803
The BMW 803 was a German aircraft engine, an attempt by BMW to build a high-output aircraft engine by coupling two BMW 801 engines back-to-back, driving contra-rotating propellers. The result was a 28-cylinder, four-row radial engine, each comprising a multiple-bank in-line engine with two cylinders in each bank, which, due to cooling concerns, were liquid cooled.
Design and development
One problem with scaling up any piston engine design is that eventually a point is reached where the crankshaft becomes a major engineering challenge. This was a problem that affected almost all engines of the class, including BMW's own 18-cylinder BMW 802 project. For the 803 the engineers decided to avoid this problem by simply not using a common crankshaft, and driving a set of independent contra-rotating propellers. The front engine drove the front propeller directly, while the rear engine drove five smaller auxiliary shafts that passed between the cylinders of the front engine before being geared back together to drive the rear propeller. This layout resulted in a large gearbox on the front of the engine, and the front engine needing an extended shaft to clear the gearbox.Two additional auxiliary shafts transmitted the power from the front engine to the rear in order to drive the supercharger and accessories of the front engine. This meant that both engines could be operated independently of one another.
The 803 had two valves per cylinder and overhead camshafts. Displacing 83.6 litres, and using the same 156 mm bore and identical stroke measurements as each cylinder of the 801 used, the four-row 803 engine weighed 2,950 kg dry, and 4,130 kg fully loaded.
For all this weight it delivered 3,900 PS. Although this made it the most powerful German engine design, its power-to-weight ratio was only about 0.98 kW/kg, comparing rather poorly with other large designs like the Junkers Jumo 222 at 1.7 kW/kg, the primary powerplant design for the advanced Bomber B design competition, which was designed to use only two engines of over 1,500 kW output. Specific power of the complex BMW 803 was likewise poor, at about 34.4 kW/L, compared to the 222's 40 kW/L, as was specific fuel consumption, at 380 g/kWh, comparable to late generation turboprops.
As with most coupled engines, like the earlier Daimler-Benz DB 606 and DB 610, the 803 was not a success on the test-bed, and did not enter production. About twelve prototypes were built.