This is https://jim-quinn5.blogspot.com/ BSEL
See also https://jim-quinn.blogspot.com/ important world stories
and https://jim-quinn3.blogspot.com UK Constitution
and https://jim-quinn6.blogspot.com/ Money
https://jim-quinn0.blogspot.com/ Education
https://jim-quinn8.blogspot.com/ AI and Software
https://jim-quinn41.blogspot.com/ JQ Charity work
Sorry about the font size changes - this Google blog software is lousy - no matter I correct to Medium size, I find a little later some of it has changed to enormous!!
1963 History here, before RR Ltd bought us in 1966 (why? PM Harold Wilson MP 1940grandeur push? Not Facts ? see several centimetres below):
Sir Stanley Hooker's book "Not much of an Engineer" has one page (p124) which I find very concerning about the Politicians in UK - page 124 here, shows an Execution without Trial and FakeNews Evidence, and "Something" Caused Verdon-Smith to Accept It!!
The details deep below come from this 1960 booklet that I was given as a Student Apprentice there, from 1960 to 1965:
This is an old letterhead, so not pristrine, sorry:
On Tornado engines, we used Telex a lot.
The KDF9 "Allowed" OUR Technology Explosion in the 1960's.......
........., but RR Derby never did see..... and bought time "occasionally" on a very small and very simple mini civil service computer at RAE, even in the later 1960's. I think Derby were unable to correctly calculate Off Design Performance then (like: at lower rpms, neither at sea level nor at altitude).
And Bristol's Pegasus Engine "Performance Deck PS.250" for the Harrier, was made available in Fortran IV in December 1969, before RB199 Performance went Fortran, after Our TS1800 RB199-34R Submission to NAMMA in September 1969 (ITP October 1969). Both Harrier and Tornado engine people were able to fully calculate Off Design Performance ANYWHERE in the Flight Envelope and at any speed (thus both BS143 and RB199 for MRCA-Tornado from June 1967, with my comprehensive calculation software, after the AFVG was cancelled).
See Andrew Dow's book "Pegasus the Heart of the Harrier" page 307 for the PS.250 deck info.
To The Legal Deposit Office
The British Library
Boston Spa, Wetherby
West Yorkshire LS23 7BY
Dear Sir/Madam, 14th January 2023
Please find enclosed my new book ““The Tornado Engine +” ISBN 978-1-64803-887-7 published in 2022.
Dear Sir/Madam, 6th September 2024
Please find enclosed my new book “Tornado New Horizons” ISBN 979-8-32824-379-7 published in 2024 recently.
Yours sincerely Jim Quinn BSc CEng FIMechE CPD
My heritage, in date order: I was 5 year Apprenticed from 1960 to BSEL
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Aeroplane_Company
includes Bristol Aero Engines,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armstrong_Siddeley
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Siddeley
BSEL had 715 patent applications
including BRISTOL SIDDELEY ENGINES Ltd. Sept 11, 1962 [Sept. 14, 1961], No. 33011/61 - for the Pegasus config (uration)
......US Patent 3140841, found much more easily than system in UK patent office - for the Pegasus config - what's up UK? Too many lawyers, not enough software engineers?
As is usual, the Design Office claim Patents, for they do the drawings, but surely they should include reference to those (Aerodynamicists like Gordon Lewis) who had the idea in the first place?
https://image-ppubs.uspto.gov/dirsearch-public/print/downloadPdf/3140841
Rolls Royce quickly took the Bristol Harrier engine as their own in their publicity. Shown here in the new Bristol Aerospace Museum, is Concorde's Bristol Olympus engine :
and the Tornado's RB199 in Hangar 16R:
1960 Bristol Siddeley Engine Applications below - before RR bought us in 1966 (did Govt force this? thinking of the old Hunter and Lightning Avon only (SGHooker's WW2 influence), not the more modern competition from the later SGHooker's BSEL) -
we were all upset by that buyout, for we were a very good collaborative Company with overseas Engineers, certainly BIG competitors to RRDerby, whom SGH left in 1948 to join Bristol, after conflict with Hives.
RR became bankrupt in 1971 because they had over extended themselves in buying BSEL, and then the Board lost financial control on the RB211 for they did not tell the Engineers at Derby to stop spending money, and design something different - like make a Titanium large diameter Fan instead. The Engineers were also to blame, for they over committed their embryo technology and bid a research engine to Lockheed - it was mainly Board Directors lack of Control.... and greed? Like sieze that last gold bar which sinks the dinghy.....
Note that Bristol were winning all the later contracts, beating Derby - TSR2 (Olympus 22R), Harrier (Pegasus), AFVG (M45G with SNECMA), and Concorde (Olympus 593 with SNECMA), then Tornado, for even that was Won by Bristol
(The Derby Tech Director Liked our two-shaft Pegasus based BS143, and said we were very capable of design and make for MRCA's (Tornado's) engine, but insisted RRDerby policy was "three shaft")
- so we launched OUR 3shaft design, not RRDerby's "thermodynamically thoughtless" RB199-05, but we had to use a RRDerby RB number : RB199-34R, together with the excellent MTU and Fiat Engineers.
The following list is a summary of Bristol Siddeley engines and their current applications in 1960 - words taken without modification, from the 1960 booklet. A competitive Company! :
TURBOFANS
BE 53 Pegasus : Hawker P 1127 (then Kestrel, now Harrier)
BS 59 : V/STOL applications
BS 75 : Short/Medium range airliners and military applications
M45G-AFVG, BS143 for MRCA-Tornado was 1966/7, so not here.
TURBOJETS
Olympus : Avro Vulcan, British Aircraft Corporation TSR-2, Projected supersonic transports (Concorde)
Gyron Junior : Blackburn Buccaneer S1, Bristol Type 188 supersonic research aircraft
Sapphire : Gloster Javelin, Handley Page Victor B Mk 1
Sapphire (J65 built in USA under licence) : Douglas A4D Skyhawk, Grumman F 11 F- 1 Tiger, Martin B-57 (Canberra), North American Fury, Republic RF-84F
Orpheus : Dassault BaIzac V, Fiat G91 and G91-Trainer, Folland Gnat and Gnat-Trainer, Fuji T1A, Hindustan HF24, Short SB-5
Ghost : de Havilland Venom and Sea Venom, SAAB J29
Goblin : de Havilland Vampire and Vampire Trainer
Viper : Bell X-14 V/STOL research aircraft, de Havilland DH 125, Handley Page HP 115, Hunting Jet Provost, Jindivik target drone, Macchi MB 326 (and MB339 later), Piaggio/Douglas Vespa Jet, Westland SR-N1 Hovercraft
TURBOPROPS
Proteus : Bristol Britannia
Double Mamba : Fairey Gannet
Gnome : Feeder-line and executive aircraft
TURBOSHAFTS
Marine Olympus : Frigates, hydrofoils, air cushion vehicles and planing craft - we were the first in marine, and beat Derby hands down.
Industrial Olympus : 15 Megawatt turbo-generator set - again the first
Marine Proteus : HMS Brave class fast patrol boats, Vosper Ferocity fast patrol boat, Vosper Mercury express yacht, Fast patrol boats for the Federal German Navy and the Royal Danish Navy, Motor gun boats and motor torpedo boats for the Italian and Swedish Navies
A special version of the Marine Proteus is used in Donald Campbell's Bluebird
Industrial Proteus : 3 Megawatt turbo-generator sets
Gnome : Agusta Bell 101 G, Agusta Bell 204 B, Boeing/Vertol 107, Westland Wessex, Westland Whirlwind
Nimbus : Westland Scout, Westland Wasp, Westland SR-N2 Hovercraft
Turmo : Vickers Armstrongs VA 3 Hovercraft, Admiralty landing craft
RAMJETS
Thor : Bristol/Ferranti Bloodhound ground-to-air missile
(not in 1962 booklet for it was Secret - my JQ addition for I worked on the combustion chamber and double cone intake performance characteristic for this one: 1961 Odin : Hawker Siddeley Sea Dart long-range ship-to-air missile)
And hypersonic turbo-ramjets such as BS1012 in 1964, were Secret so not included.
ROCKET ENGINES
Gamma : Black Knight space research vehicle
Stentor : Avro Blue Steel stand-off bomb
PR 37 : Jindivik
AUXILIARY POWER UNITS
Artouste : Canadair CL 44, de Havilland Trident, Handley Page Victor, Short Belfast
Cumulus : Advanced strike aircraft
Palouste : Canadair CL 66, Ground starting units
DIESEL ENGINES
MD Series : British Transport Commission Type 3 and 4 locomotives, Brush Falcon locomotive, Blacktail fleet of trawlers, Vosper patrol boats for the Malayan Government, 1200 kW generator sets
PISTON ENGINES (AERO)
Centaurus : Blackburn Beverley, de Havilland Elizabethan Hawker Sea Fury
Hercules : Bristol Freighter, CASA 207 Azor, Handley Page Hastings, Handley Page Hermes, Nord-Aviation Noratlas, Short Solent, Vickers Viking, Vickers Valetta, Vickers Varsity
Cheetah : Avro Anson
Gipsy Major : Beagle-Auster Terrier, de Havilland Chipmunk, de Havilland Tiger Moth
Gipsy Queen : de Havilland Dove, de Havilland Heron
Gipsy Six : de Havilland Dragon Rapide
~~~~






