Definition
A French aircraft engine manufacturer that produces compression-ignition (diesel) aircraft engines designed to run on jet fuel rather than aviation gasoline. SMA engines are used in certain general aviation aircraft as an alternative to traditional spark-ignition reciprocating engines.
Plain English
A French company that builds aircraft engines which burn jet fuel instead of avgas, similar in principle to a diesel engine in a car.
Context Anchor
Seen in discussions of reciprocating aircraft engines, especially when comparing spark-ignition gasoline engines with diesel-type aircraft engines.
Derivation
From French: Société (company), de Motorisations (of engine manufacturing / powerplants), Aéronautiques (aeronautical). Knowing the name simply identifies it as a French aeronautical engine company helps explain why SMA appears alongside other European powerplant references in U.S. aviation texts.
Why Pilots Care
SMA engines provide a diesel alternative that can offer better fuel efficiency and the ability to use jet fuel, affecting range and operating costs on certain aircraft.
Intuition Check
Do not read SMA as a generic engine type. In this context, SMA is the name of a manufacturer associated with diesel-type aircraft piston engines.
Example Sentence 1
The aircraft was equipped with an SMA engine, so the pilot fueled it with Jet A instead of 100LL avgas.
Example Sentence 2
Preflight checks on the SMA powerplant include verifying the diesel fuel system and turbocharger operation.