The Daimler-Benz DB 603 engine was a Germanaircraft engine used during World War II. It was a liquid-cooled 12-cylinder inverted V12 enlargement of the DB 601, which was in itself a development of the DB 600. Production of the DB 603 commenced in May 1942, and with a 44.52 litre displacement figure, was the largest displacement inverted V12 aviation engine to be produced and used in front line aircraft of the Third Reich during World War II. The DB 603 powered several aircraft, including the Do 217 N&M, Do 335, He 219, Me 410, BV 155 and Ta 152C.
Design and development
The Mercedes-Benz T80land speed record car, designed by aircraft engineerJosef Mickl with assistance from Ferdinand Porsche and top German Grand Prix racing driver Hans Stuck, incorporated the third prototype DB 603. It was set up for the land speed record run attempt to operate on an exotic fuel mix based on a 63% methanol, 16% benzene and 12% ethanol content, with minor percentages of acetone, nitrobenzene, avgas and ether. Adding to the power output was a pioneering form of the Luftwaffe's later MW 50 methanol/water injection boost, and was tuned to 3,000 PS — enough, it was believed, to propel the aerodynamic three-axle T80 up to 750 km/h on a specially-prepared, nearly length stretch of the roughly north/south oriented Berlin — Halle/Leipzig, which passed close to the east side of Dessau and with the actual length's location due south of Dessau, reworked to be wide with a paved-over median, for the record to be set in January 1940 during Rekord Woche. Due to the outbreak of the war in September 1939, the T80 never raced. The DB 603 engine was removed from the vehicle for use in fighter aircraft. As Germany's largest displacement inverted V12 aviation powerplant in production during the war years, the DB 603 saw wide operational use as the primary engine type for many twin and multi-engined combat aircraft designs — the promising twin-engined Dornier Do 335Pfeil prototype heavy fighter, the front-line Messerschmitt Me 410Hornisse heavy fighter and Heinkel He 219Uhu twin-engined night fighter were all designed for DB 603 power. The Dornier Do 217M and -N medium bomber and night fighter subtypes powered by inline engines, and the enormous sixty-metre wingspan, six-engined Blohm & Voss BV 238flying boat prototype, essentially had their DB 603 powerplants installed within what appeared to be the same unitized complete engine/cowl/radiator assembly as a complete unit-replaceable "power system" for twin and multi-engined aircraft — this particular design featured a "chin"-style radiator installation directly beneath the crankcase, and the oil cooler placed on the dorsal portion of the installation for the earlier examples, as the BV 238 had no visible upper-cowl openings for engine cooling of any sort for its half-dozen unitized DB 603s. The He 219 airframe pioneered what is believed to be a Heinkel-specific Kraftei unitized engine package for the DB 603 engine using a well-streamlined annular radiator set for primary engine cooling between the propeller and its reduction gear housing with a nearly-cylindrical cowl behind it, pierced only by the twin rows of six exhaust stacks, one row per side. The characteristic portside-cowl supercharger intake for Daimler-Benz inverted V12s was usually accommodated away from the nacelle's sheetmetal itself for the Heinkel/DB 603 unitized engine package, most often within the airframe's wing panel design. The same Kraftei packaging for the He 219 was also used for powering the four-prototype He 177B strategic bomber series, and with an added turbocharger in each nacelle, the six ordered prototypes of Heinkel's He 274 high-altitude strategic bomber project.
Variants
Production versions
DB 603A, rated altitude of 5.7 km, B4 fuel
DB 603AA DB 603A with an improved supercharger, rated altitude of 7.3 km, B4 fuel
DB 603E rated altitude of 7.0 km, B4 fuel
Prototypes and other versions
DB 603D, a DB 603A with propellers rotating counter-clockwise; production unknown
DB 603F, a DB 603E with propellers rotating counter-clockwise; production unknown
DB 603G
DB 603L/LA
DB 603L/M two-stage supercharger, rated altitude of 10.5 km, C3 fuel
DB 603N
DB 603S - Intended for the Heinkel He 274 prototype airframes.
DB 613 Coupled side-by-side DB 603s, meant to replace the DB 606 and DB 610, in prototype form only from March 1940 through 1943 and weighing an estimated 1.8 tonnes apiece.
DB 614 a 2000 PS development.
DB 615 Coupled DB 614 engines
DB 617 A long-range derivative of the DB 603
DB 618 Coupled DB 617 engines
DB 622 A DB 603 with a two-stage supercharger and single-stage turbocharger
DB 623 A DB 603 with twin turbochargers
DB 624 A DB 603 with a two-stage supercharger and single-stage turbocharger
DB 626 A DB 603 with twin turbochargers and intercooler
DB 627 The DB 603 fitted with a two-stage supercharger and after-cooler.
DB 631 An abandoned three stage supercharged DB 603G.
MB 509 Development as a tank engine for the super-heavy Panzerkampfwagen Maus
All power data is given in metric horsepower as stated per manufacturer. Power is Takeoff and Emergency power, combat power is climb and combat power, continuous is without time limit.