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Working Merlin Engine Questions

Can an early Merlin be made by altering later marks?

Has a complete new-build Merlin been made / are there plans to?

Powerplants for the newly surfaced Mk1s: Origin? (Andy I promise to the buy ‘the book’ for Xmas!)

Are there specialised dealers with thousands of spare parts/ancilliary items for Merlins, or have they long gone?

Do operators today have to rely on reconditioned items?

RR299 cut-out: Design flaw or faulty operation?

Thank you.

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By: Seafuryfan - 10th October 2012 at 23:25

Thank you for all posts so far. MerlinPete – I was hoping you might pop by 🙂 At least it means you don’t get waylaid for too long by me when I next see you on an engine run. I’m surprised about your comment about early mark Merlins out there. I’d have assumed most of them vanished years ago.

Cheers!

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By: MerlinPete - 10th October 2012 at 22:40

You can backward modify Merlins to a degree, yes. It was done with the Merlin III to make it Merlin II spec with later standard blocks after overhaul during the war, but there are still quite a few early engines around for the time being. The MkI at Duxford has a Merlin III, as does the Shuttleworth Sea Hurricane, and, I think, Peter Vacher`s Hurricane. The other recent Spitfire MkI, at Biggin Hill has a post-war Merlin 35 and Hydromatic propeller. There is a good argument for using late manufacture Merlins, but it does go against originality, it`s the owner`s choice at the end of the day.

168,000 Merlins were built, along with a load of spare parts. Engines and parts are still widely available, with a few exceptions, so although some parts are now being remanufactured, such as camshafts, the likelihood of complete engines ever being built is slim. There are 11,000 parts in a Merlin, and the demand would not, in my opinion, be high enough to justify the costs, which would be immense.

Reconditioning is fine. The Merlin doesn`t have any “lifed” components, so parts are subjected to condition, dimension and non-destructive testing examination, and if suitable, refitted.

The failure of the engines on RR299 was aggravated by a tolerance issue between the carburettor floats and the top of the float chamber. I haven`t read the report lately, but it is on the AAIB website, I think.

Pete

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By: minimans - 10th October 2012 at 22:29

I just read the accident report after seeing the last post, what a ****-up! they didn’t say who last did the flow checks on the carbs was anything done to find out or at least check all other operators carbs?

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By: PeterVerney - 10th October 2012 at 21:08

I believe RR299 was due to faulty maintenance/ignorance.

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