gas engine 1867.
Lenoir There were many experiments with gas engines in the 19th century, but the first practical gas-fuelled
internal combustion engine was built by the Belgian engineer
Étienne Lenoir in 1860. However, the Lenoir engine suffered from a low power output and high fuel consumption.
Otto and Langen Lenoir's work was further researched and improved by a German engineer
Nicolaus August Otto, who was later to invent the first four-stroke engine to efficiently burn fuel directly in a piston chamber. In August 1864 Otto met
Eugen Langen who, being technically trained, glimpsed the potential of Otto's development, and one month after the meeting, founded the first engine factory in the world, NA Otto & Cie, in Cologne. In 1867 Otto patented his improved design and it was awarded the Grand Prize at the 1867 Paris World Exhibition. This atmospheric engine worked by drawing a mixture of gas and air into a vertical cylinder. When the piston has risen about eight inches, the gas and air mixture is ignited by a small pilot flame burning outside, which forces the piston (which is connected to a toothed rack) upwards, creating a partial vacuum beneath it. No work is done on the upward stroke. The work is done when the piston and toothed rack descend under the effects of atmospheric pressure and their own weight, turning the main shaft and flywheels as they fall. Its advantage over the existing steam engine was its ability to be started and stopped on demand, making it ideal for intermittent work such as barge loading or unloading.
Four-stroke engine The atmospheric gas engine was in turn replaced by Otto's
four-stroke engine. The changeover to four-stroke engines was remarkably rapid, with the last atmospheric engines being made in 1877. Liquid-fuelled engines soon followed using diesel (around 1898) or gasoline (around 1900).
Crossley The best-known builder of gas engines in the United Kingdom was
Crossley of Manchester, who in 1869 acquired the United Kingdom and world (except German) rights to the patents of Otto and Langen for the new gas-fuelled atmospheric engine. In 1876 they acquired the rights to the more efficient Otto four-stroke cycle engine. An engine is on display at
Science and Industry Museum Manchester
Tangye There were several other firms based in the
Manchester area as well.
Tangye Ltd., of Smethwick, near Birmingham, sold its first gas engine, a 1
nominal horsepower two-cycle type, in 1881, and in 1890 the firm commenced manufacture of the four-cycle gas engine.
Preservation The
Anson Engine Museum in
Poynton, near
Stockport,
England, has a collection of engines that includes several working gas engines, including the largest running Crossley atmospheric engine ever made. A 3/4 AE & H Robinson engine is on display at
Science and Industry Museum Manchester == Current manufacturers ==