A Bentley BR.2 is on public display in the
Science Museum (London), another forms part of the aero engine collection at the
Royal Air Force Museum Cosford. Another one (serial number 40543, manufactured by Gwynnes) is in the
National Military Museum, Romania. The sole operational BR.2 is mounted in
Fantasy of Flight's replica of the
Sopwith Snipe. A ¼ scale working replica of the Bentley BR.2 World War I rotary aero engine built by Lewis Kinleside Blackmore is currently on display at the Bentley Memorial Building in Oxfordshire, UK. This was the first model built of this engine and is the subject also of a book by L K Blackmore. The Canada Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada has a BR.2 installed in their Sopwith 7F.1 Snipe. ==Specifications (BR.2)==