Hall-Scott A-7-A In-line 4 Engine, 1917. Creator: Hall-Scott.

Hall-Scott A-7-A In-line 4 Engine, 1917. Creator: Hall-Scott.

2-839-516 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

The Hall-Scott Motor Car Company, with general offices in San Francisco and factories at Berkeley, California, began specializing in the construction of airplane engines in 1911. The water-cooled 30 kW (40 hp) Type A-1 was the first aircraft engine produced by the company. This was followed the 45 kW (60 hp) Model A-2 and the 60 kW (80 hp) Model A-3, both water-cooled V-8 engines. The Hall-Scott Model A-7-A primarily powered the World War I Standard Aero Corporation Standard J aircraft. The Standard J and its Hall-Scott A-7-A engine along with the Curtiss JN-4D with its OX-5 engine were the two primary trainer aircraft and engines built in the U.S. during World War I. Despite vibration common to four-cylinder engines at the time, the A-7-A was otherwise regarded by experts as a rugged and dependable motor. The A-7-A also powered other Standard, Aero Marine, and Dayton-Wright aircraft.


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. Hall-Scott, attributed to: American: Maker, manufacturer

Medium
  1. Aluminum, steel, copper, textile, paint, rubber, preservative coating, brass, phenolic

Picture Type
  1. Object
  2. Propulsion-reciprocating & rotary

Category Hierarchy

Lifestyle & Leisure Transport & Travel

Science & Nature Technology & Innovation


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 5523x4395
File Size : 71,115kb


Aliases

  1. A19270003000
  1. NASM-A19270003000-NASM2014-02028-000001.txt
  1. 0990010100
  1. 2-839-516
  1. 2839516
  1. A19270003000

Buy a Print  

Keywords - refine your search by combining multiple keywords below.