Saturday, August 14, 2010

Another confusing article on the F-35 engine debate.


I'm a fan of aviation.  I have no actual experience with it (outside of riding in the back of helicopters and cursing the pilots and crew chiefs for seeming to try and make me sick or because the damn thing leaks fluid like a new born baby pees its pants)...so articles like this don't help one bit in trying to determine who's right or wrong.

Take these segments of Guy Norris' article in Aviation Week...
The intense battle over powering the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter could be heading to new levels following test results that show the General Electric/Rolls-Royce F136 alternate engine has more than 15% thrust margin against specification, significantly exceeding the power of the baseline Pratt & Whitney F135.
and then this later on...
“Initial results show we have more than 15% margin at sea level combat-rated thrust than the specification. That’s significantly beyond the thrust requirement right out of the chute,” says GE-Rolls. In March this year, following the first maximum afterburner test of a system development and demonstration engine, the team quietly expressed confidence the F136 would exceed the thrust of the baseline F135 by 5%. Actual thrust achieved in the test remains undisclosed, but it is in excess of 40,000 lb.
So for an observer and not expert, I'm left with the thought that...ok, the F136 produces 5% more thrust than the F135...but haven't we known that all along?

I'm not an engine guy (there actually is a guy that goes by that name over on F-16.net...maybe I should ask him) but I believe it has to do with engine cores or something like that.  But I'm off topic.  The point is that this article didn't clear up a thing for me, and  it actually muddied the waters.  Read it for yourself here

1 comment :

  1. From both a customer and strategic outlook, having an alternate engine option looks smart. Having competing engines drops prices and creates a fall back.

    The fear, as I understand it, is about loosing (aircraft) funding which has to be diverted to engine integration.

    The F35 is so tightly engineered you can't hide a cigar box without cutting the airframe, some massive rewiring and adding an extra million lines of software code.

    I understand that's undesireable, but if it delivers a superior engine, I'd be all for it.

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