Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki
Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki
Advertisement
Argus Motoren
Fate shut down
Founded 1906
Defunct end of World War II
Headquarters Berlin, Germany
Industry Aerospace
Products aircraft engines
Parent Horch

Argus Motoren was a German manufacturing firm known for their series of small inverted-V engines and the V-1 (flying bomb) pulse jet engine.

History[]

Started in Berlin in 1906 as a subsidiary of Henri Jeannin's automobile business, Argus Motoren company spun off entirely in November 1906. Their early products were car and boat engines, but later that year they were contracted to produce engines for the French airship, Ville de Paris, supplying them with a converted boat motor. They turned increasingly to the aviation market, and were widely used by 1910, receiving an order from Sikorsky for one of his large airplanes under construction in Russia. During World War I Argus produced engines for the German army and air corps.

After WWI the company manufactured automobile engines and acquired a majority interest in Horch Automobile in 1919.[1] In 1926 they resumed aircraft engine design, producing a series of inverted inline and V engines. Although all were at the "low-power" end of the market by the start of World War II, they saw extensive use in training aircraft and other utility roles. Most famous of these designs are the Argus As 10, used in the Fieseler Fi 156 Storch, in the Arado Ar 66 and in the Focke-Wulf Fw 56 Stösser; and the Argus As 410, used on many German trainers, including the Arado Ar 96.

Argus Model 4

Argus As.IV

Argus As 17a

Argus As 17a

The Berlin-Reinickendorf subcamp of Sachsenhausen concentration camp provided labor for the Argus-Werke.[2]

List of Argus engines[]

  • Argus 1908 4-cylinder[3]
  • Argus As I 4-cylinder, 100-hp, year 1913[4]
  • Argus As II 6-cylinder, 120-hp, year 1914[5]
  • Argus As III 6-cylinder upright inline, used in WWI aircraft
  • Argus As 5 odd radial-like arrangement 24-cylinder inline
  • Argus As 7 9R 700 hp[3]
  • Argus As 8 4-cylinder inverted inline[3]
  • Argus As 10 8-cylinder inverted V[3]
  • Argus As 12 16H 550 hp[3]
  • Argus As 014 pulse jet engine for V-1 flying bomb and Tornado boat
  • Argus As 044[3]
  • Argus As 16 4-cylinder inverted inline 40 hp[3]
  • Argus As 17 6-cylinder inverted inline 225 hp / 285 hp[3]
  • Argus As 401 development and renumbering of the As 10
  • Argus As 402[3]
  • Argus As 403 radial engine project, not built.
  • Argus As 410 12-cylinder inverted V[3]
  • Argus As 411 12-cylinder inverted V[3]
  • Argus As 412 24-cylinder H-block, prototyped[3]
  • Argus As 413 similar to 412, never built[3]
  • Argus 109-014
  • Argus 109-044[3]

See also[]

  • List of aircraft engines

References[]

  1. Media AudiUSA, link gone, failed 18 August 2009
  2. Bundesrecht, Denmark
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 Nowarra, Heinz J.. Die Deutsche Luftruestung 1933-1945 Vol.4 – Flugzeugtypen MIAG-Zeppelin. Bernard & Graefe Verlag. 1993. Koblenz. ISBN 3-7636-5464-4 (Gesamtwerk), ISBN 3-7637-5468-7 (Band 4)
  4. Military Factory: Sikorsky Il'ya Muromets
  5. 3dWearehouse: Argus As II, 120cv Engine

External links[]

Smallwikipedialogo This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Argus Motoren. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons by Attribution License and/or GNU Free Documentation License. Please check page history for when the original article was copied to Wikia



Advertisement