Aircraft in flight over France during
World War I The primary use of the Liberty was in aircraft. • American-built versions of the
Airco DH.4 •
Airco DH.9A •
Airco DH.10 Amiens •
Breguet 14 B2 L •
Caproni Ca.60 •
Curtiss H-16 •
Curtiss HS •
Curtiss NC •
Curtiss Carrier Pigeon •
Douglas C-1 •
Douglas DT •
Douglas O-2 •
Felixstowe F5L •
Fokker T.II •
Handley Page H.P.20 •
Keystone LB-5 •
Witteman-Lewis XNBL The engine was also used in the
RN-1 (Zodiac) blimp.
Automobile Based on aircraft use the engine provided a good power-to-weight ratio. This made it ideal for use in land speed attempt vehicles. It was selected for two land speed record attempts. •
Babs, a single engined vehicle •
White Triplex, mounting three Liberty engines working in tandem Both attempts set new records. Both crashed during further attempts, resulting in the deaths of the drivers and a newsreel cameraman.
Tank Mark VIII "Liberty" tank As early as 1917 the Liberty showed good potential for use in tanks as well as aircraft. The Anglo-American, or "Liberty",
Mark VIII tank was designed in 1917–18. The American version used an adaptation of the Liberty V-12 engine of 300 hp (220 kW), designed to use
cast iron cylinders rather than drawn
steel ones. One hundred tanks were manufactured at the
Rock Island Arsenal in 1919–20, too late for
World War I. They were eventually sold to Canada for training in 1940, except for two that have been preserved. Inter-war,
J. Walter Christie combined aircraft engines with new suspension design, producing a rapid and highly mobile tank. Using Christie's concept, Russian forces selected and copied the Liberty in the
BT-2 & BT-5 Soviet interwar tank (at least one reconditioned Liberty was installed in a BT-5). Demonstration of this tank was witnessed by the British, and Christie's design characteristics were licensed and incorporated into the British
A13 design specification. Centaur tank, the last type to fit the Nuffield Liberty As
World War II loomed, Nuffield, producing British
cruiser tanks, licensed and re-engineered the Liberty for use in the A13 (produced as the
Cruiser Mk III) and later cruiser tanks, with an output of 340 hp (410 hp from the Mark IV version). In later British tanks it was replaced by the
Rolls-Royce Meteor, an engine based on the
Rolls-Royce Merlin aero engine, which offered greater engine power (600 hp). Nuffield Liberty engines were used in British tanks of immediate pre-war and Second World War: •
Cruiser Mk III (A13 Mark I) – Nuffield Liberty Mk I •
Cruiser Mk IV (A13 Mark II) – Nuffield Liberty Mk II •
Crusader tank – Nuffield Liberty Mk III, IIIA, IIIB, or IV •
Cavalier tank – Nuffield Liberty Mk IVA •
Centaur tank – a parallel version of the
Meteor-engined
Cromwell British World War II tank – Nuffield Liberty Mk V
Watercraft HD-4 or
Hydrodome number 4 was an early research
hydrofoil watercraft developed by the scientist
Alexander Graham Bell. In 1919, it set a
world marine speed record of powered by two 350 hp Liberty L-12s. and five-time
Gold Cup champion
Gar Wood at the helm of triple Liberty L-12-powered
Miss America 2, the second of nine Packard V-12 driven
Miss Americas and 1921
Harmsworth Trophy winner Inventor, entrepreneur, and boat racer
Gar Wood set a new water speed record of in 1920 in a new twin Liberty V-12 powered boat called
Miss America. In the following twelve years, Wood built nine more Packard V-12 driven
Miss Americas and broke the record five times, raising it to . He also won five straight powerboat
Gold Cup races between 1917 and 1921, and the prestigious
Harmsworth Trophy nine times between 1920 and 1933, at the helm of his
Miss Americas. Many
gentlemen's runabouts, Gold Cup, and other race-winners were built with Liberty L-12 engines. ==Surviving engines==