with Ricardo's "Turbulent Head" In 1919 Ricardo was studying the phenomena affecting the combustion within the
petrol engine and the
diesel engine. He realised that
turbulence within the
combustion chamber increased flame speed, and that he could achieve this by offsetting the
cylinder head. He also realised that making the chamber as compact as possible would reduce the distance that the flame had to travel and would reduce the likelihood of detonation. He later developed the induction swirl chamber, which was an attempt to achieve orderly air motion in a diesel engine, the swirl being initiated by inclined
ports and accentuated by forcing the air into a small cylindrical volume. Finally he developed the compression swirl chamber for diesel engines. This design embodied intense swirl with a reasonable rate of pressure rise and good fuel consumption. The compression swirl chamber design was called a "Comet" design (patented in 1931) and was subsequently licensed to a large number of companies for use in trucks, buses, tractors and cranes, as well as private cars and taxis. A Comet combustion chamber was used in the first
Associated Equipment Company (AEC) diesel buses operated in 1931 by
London General Omnibus Co, later part of the
London Passenger Transport Board/
London Transport. A later development of it featured in the world's first volume production diesel passenger car, the 1934
Citroën Rosalie. This meant that Britain led the world in the field of high-speed diesels for road transport at that time. This advantage was lost to the United Kingdom as a result of the heavy tax imposed on diesel fuel in the budget of 1938. in the 1922 RAC T. T. O Payne in the Ricardo Vauxhall came 3rd, Jean Chassagne on a
1921 Grand Prix Sunbeam winning outright. The engine was later developed by
Mays and
Villiers, who fitted a supercharger, and was still a winner fifteen years later. In 1922 and 1923 Ricardo published a two-volume work "The Internal Combustion Engine". Although Ricardo did not invent the
sleeve valve, in 1927, he produced a seminal research paper that outlined the advantages of the sleeve valve, and suggested that
poppet valve engines would not be able to offer power outputs much beyond 1500 hp (1,100 kW). A number of sleeve valve aircraft engines were developed following this paper, notably by
Napier,
Bristol and
Rolls-Royce. Bristol produced the
Perseus,
Hercules,
Taurus and the
Centaurus, Napier produced the
Napier Sabre, and Rolls-Royce produced the
Eagle and
Crecy, all using sleeve valves. In 1929 Ricardo was elected
Fellow of the Royal Society. ==World War II==