V12 engine

Aviation
The first V12 engines were used in aircraft. By the end of World War I, V12s were popular in the newest and largest fighters and bombers and were produced by companies such as Renault and Sunbeam. Many Zeppelins had 12-cylinder engines from German manufacturers Maybach and Daimler. Various U.S. companies produced the Liberty L-12; the Curtiss NC Flying boats, including the four V12 engine powered NC-4, the first aircraft to make a transatlantic flight.
V12 engines reached their apogee during World War II. Fighters and bombers used V12 engines such as the British Rolls-Royce Merlin and Griffon, the Soviet Klimov VK-107, the American Allison V-1710, or the German Daimler-Benz DB 600 series and Junkers-Jumo. These engines generated about 1,000 hp (750 kW) at the beginning of the war and above 1,500 hp (1,100 kW) at their ultimate evolution stage. The German DB 605D engine reached 2,000 hp (1,500 kW) with water injection. In contrast to most Allied V12s, the engines built in Germany by Daimler-Benz, Junkers-Jumo, and Argus (As 410 and As 411)
were primarily inverted, which had the advantages of lower centers of
gravity and improved visibility for single-engined designs. Only the
pre-war origin BMW VI V12 of Germany was an "upright" engine. The United States had the experimental Continental IV-1430
inverted V12 engine under development, with a higher power-to-weight
ratio than any of the initial versions of the German WW II inverted
V12s, but was never developed to production status, with only 23
examples of the Continental inverted V12 ever being built.

After World War II, V12 engines became generally obsolete in aircraft due to the introduction of turbojet and turboprop engines that had more power for their weight, and fewer complications in large aircraft.
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