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Liberty L-6
Six-cylinder water-cooled inline aircraft engine
Six-cylinder water-cooled inline aircraft engine
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Liberty L-6 |
| image | File:LibertyL-6 edit.jpg |
| caption | Liberty L-6 aircraft engine on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force |
| engine_type | Piston aero engine |
| manufacturer | Wright Aeronautical, Thomas-Morse Aircraft |
| national_origin | United States |
| first_run | about 1917 |
| major_applications | Engineering Division TW-1 |
| number_built | 52 |
| variants_with_their_own_articles | Liberty L-4, Liberty L-8, Liberty L-12 |
The Liberty L-6 was a six-cylinder water-cooled inline aircraft engine developed in the United States during World War I.
Design and development

The Liberty L-6, which developed 200–215 hp, was built by the Thomas-Morse Aircraft Corp. and Wright Aeronautical Corp. Since it was based on the same engine design as the more successful Liberty L-12 V-12 liquid-cooled aviation engine, the L-6's resemblance to the Mercedes D.III German aviation engine, the source for the Liberty V-12's own cylinder and valvetrain design, resulted in the American L-6 engine design bearing a close visual resemblance to the German straight-six aviation powerplant in a number of respects, with at least one L-6 even being mounted postwar into a captured Fokker D.VII fighter for testing in the US. The Liberty L-6's smaller displacement of some 825 cu. in. (13.5 liters) versus the late-war German Mercedes D.IIIaü's 903 cubic inches (14.8 liters) do not seem to have handicapped the American straight-six design, however, as the "Liberty Six" possessed a 5.42:1 CR, while the D.IIIaü had only a 4.64:1 CR, explaining a good bit of the American powerplant's output level—in addition to the 735.5 watt level for German Pferdestärke metric horsepower, versus the then solely-American-based SAE organization's standard of almost 746 watts per one horsepower.
Since the L-6 was too large for mail airplanes and other engines were available, the L-6 was canceled after only 52 had been built. In 1920 10 more L-6 engines were ordered, designated L-825, several of which were installed in the Curtiss PN-1, (only two built), and the Engineering Division TW-1, (only six built).
Hall-Scott also produced a six-cylinder engine using Liberty L-12 components, as the Hall-Scott L-6.
Specifications

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References
This article incorporates text from Liberty L-6, a public domain work of the United States Government.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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