air-cooled aircraft engine Early flat-six engines include the
Franklin O-265 which began production in 1940, and the
Lycoming O-435 which began production in 1942. Several manufacturers use the letter
O in their model codes for flat-layout engines as a designation for “opposed” cylinder layouts. The
Franklin O-335 was used in the
Bell 47 light helicopter. Flat engines largely replaced the historically more popular radial engines in small aircraft after World War II because they were less expensive to manufacture. The smaller frontal area compared with a radial engine also results in less drag, although the radial design offers improved cooling. Some aircraft have used flat-six engines originally designed for cars. The
Porsche PFM 3200 engine, produced from 1985 to 1991, was based on the engine used in the Porsche 911 sports car. Several examples of the
Pietenpol Air Camper homebuilt monoplane aircraft have used the air-cooled engine from the
Chevrolet Corvair compact car. Compared with the engines used in cars, flat-six engines used by helicopters have large displacements and are low revving, producing more torque and less power. A notable recent flat-six aero-engine is the 4-litre
side-valve Belgian D-Motor LF39, a modular variant of the 2.7-litre
flat-four D-Motor LF26. Although the side-valve format has long been abandoned for most automotive applications because its combustion chamber is a bar to high engine
rpm, the massively over-square (1.295:1) D-Motor is a very simple, low-revving, compact, reliable lightweight aero-engine (without the heavy (and bulky) complication of
ohv valve-gear). == Use in automobiles ==