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From the Rolls-Royce experimental archive: a quarter of a million communications from Rolls-Royce, 1906 to 1960's. Documents from the Sir Henry Royce Memorial Foundation (SHRMF).
Performance of a new semi-expanding carburettor compared to previous models.

Identifier  ExFiles\Box 13\3\  03-page428
Date  1st June 1932
  
X7080

HS.{Lord Ernest Hives - Chair} } FROM R.{Sir Henry Royce}        R2/M15. 6.32.
E.{Mr Elliott - Chief Engineer} }

C. to SG.{Arthur F. Sidgreaves - MD} WOR.{Arthur Wormald - General Works Manager} BY.{R.W. Bailey - Chief Engineer}        SEMI EXPANDING CARBURETTER.
                -----------------------

The specimen shewn me on 19-EX. seems to do its duty extremely well, and better than anything we know of in the World, because it seems rather superior to our old carburetter in slow running, in snap acceleration, and vastly superior in maximum power.

It still leaves one with a feeling of having a RR. engine. It has upheld the advantages (foretold by me) over the SU. There are some half dozen points which need not be repeated here, but which we think in a high class job justifies the extra cost. For instance, we should not think of fitting a carburetter to our engine which had not throttle edge carburation, or where the slow speed conditions were so variable as in the case of the SU. This end of the scale is in our case quite constant and fixed by the adjustments.

There is some small amount of modification yet to be made, which is not at all serious, and we can on RR. car engines dismiss from our minds for a time all other schemes of carburation that we have tried during the past year or two. It might however be worth remembering that the two separate and single carburetters with fixed jets have done remarkably well, especially for moderate speed torque. These have proved to be the only way in which fixed carburetters can be made to function passably. This earlier scheme, which we had produced in accordance with the experiments made with separate combinations, might have made it difficult to choose between the two systems, but we think the double carburetter is the more complicated, and the more noisy, and perhaps fails to give us maximum power at high speed.

R.{Sir Henry Royce}
  
  


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