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Pratt & Whitney F100

The Pratt & Whitney F100 (company designation JTF22[1]) is an afterburning turbofan engine designed and manufactured by Pratt & Whitney to power the U.S. Air Force's "FX" initiated in 1965, which became the F-15 Eagle. The engine was to be developed in tandem with the F401 which shares a similar core but with the fan upscaled for the U.S. Navy's F-14 Tomcat, although the F401 was later abandoned due to costs and reliability issues. The F100 would also power the F-16 Fighting Falcon for the Air Force's Lightweight Fighter (LWF) program.

F100
F100 for an F-15 Eagle being tested
Type Turbofan
National origin United States
Manufacturer Pratt & Whitney
First run 1970s
Major applications F-15 Eagle
F-15E Strike Eagle
F-16 Fighting Falcon
Northrop Grumman X-47B
Developed into Pratt & Whitney F401
Pratt & Whitney PW1120

Development edit

 
Afterburner - concentric ring structure inside the exhaust

In 1967, the United States Navy and United States Air Force issued a joint engine Request for Proposals (RFP) for the F-14 Tomcat and the FX, which became the parallel fighter design competition that led to the F-15 Eagle in 1970. This engine program was called the IEDP (Initial Engine Development Program) and was funded and managed out of the Aeronautical Systems Division (ASD) at Wright-Patterson AFB. Under ASD, a Systems Project Office Cadre was assigned to manage both the FX Aircraft and Engine definition phase. The Turbine Engine Division of the Air Force Propulsion Laboratory was employed in a support role to assist ASD Systems Engineering in evaluations of technical risks. Later upon selection of the F-15 the ASD engineering cadre became the F-15 Systems Project Office.[2]

 
Adjustable exhaust nozzle contracted

The IEDP was created to be a competitive engine design/demonstration phase followed with a down select to one winning engine design and development program. General Electric and Pratt & Whitney were placed on contract for an approximately 18-month program with goals to improve thrust and reduce weight to achieve a thrust-to-weight ratio of 8. At the end of the IEDP, General Electric and Pratt & Whitney submitted proposals for their engine candidates for the aircraft that had been selected in the FX Competition, the McDonnell Douglas F-15. The Pratt & Whitney proposal was selected as the winner and the engine was designated the F100.[3] The Air Force would award Pratt & Whitney a contract in 1970 to develop and produce F100-PW-100 (USAF) and F401-PW-400 (USN) engines. The Navy would use the engine in the planned F-14B and the XFV-12 project but would cut back and later cancel its order after the latter's failure due to costs and reliability issues, and chose to continue to use the Pratt & Whitney TF30 engine from the F-111 in its F-14s.[4][5]

Design and variants edit

The F100 is a twin spool, axial flow, afterburning turbofan engine. It has a 3-stage fan driven by a two-stage low-pressure turbine and a 10-stage compressor driven by a two-stage high-pressure turbine. The initial F100-PW-100 variant generates nearly 24,000 lbf (107 kN) of thrust in full afterburner and weighs approximately 3,000 lb (1,361 kg), achieving its target thrust-to-weight ratio of 8 and providing the F-15 with its desired thrust-to-weight ratio of greater than 1:1 at combat weight.

F100-PW-100 edit

 
F100-PW-100 on display at the Virginia Air and Space Center

The F100-PW-100 first flew in an F-15 Eagle in 1972 with a maximum continuous power rating of 12,410 lbf (55.2 kN), military power of 14,690 lbf (65.3 kN), and afterburning thrust of 23,930 lbf (106.4 kN) with 5-minute limit. Due to the advanced nature of engine stemming from ambitious performance goals, numerous problems were encountered in its early days of service including high wear, stalling and "hard" afterburner starts.[6] These "hard" starts could be caused by failure of the afterburner to start or by extinguishing after start, in either case the large jets of jet fuel were lit by the engine exhaust resulting in high pressure waves causing the engine to stall; these stagnation stalls usually occurred at high Mach and high altitude, and could seriously damage the turbine if the condition was not corrected. The problems were contributed by pilots making much more abrupt throttle changes than previous fighters and engines due to the excess thrust available. Early problems were eventually solved by the development of the F100-PW-220 in the early 1980s, which the -100 could be upgraded to.

F100-PW-200 edit

The F-16 Fighting Falcon entered service with the F100-PW-200; compared to the -100, the -200 has some additional redundancies for single-engine reliability and almost identical thrust ratings. In particular, a "proximate splitter" was introduced on the -200 that reduced the severity of the high pressure waves from "hard" afterburner starts. This greatly reduced the rate of stagnation stalls, and the -200 on the F-16 saw much better reliability than the -100 on the F-15, although some of the issues from the -100 remained. Similarly, these problems were eventually solved by the F100-PW-220, which the -200 could be upgraded to as well.

F100-PW-220/220E edit

Due to the unsatisfactory reliability, maintenance costs, and service life of the F100-100/200, Pratt & Whitney was eventually pressured into upgrading the engine to address these issues. The Air Force also began funding the General Electric F101 Derivative Fighter Engine, which eventually became the F110, as a competitor to the F100 to coerce more urgency from Pratt & Whitney. The result of Pratt & Whitney's improvement efforts was the F100-PW-220, which eliminates almost all stall-stagnations and augmentor instability issues from the -100 as well as doubling time between depot overhauls. Reliability and maintenance costs were also drastically improved, and the engine incorporates a digital electronic engine control (DEEC). The -220 engine produces static thrust of 14,590 lbf (64.9 kN) in military (intermediate) power and 23,770 lbf (105.7 kN) afterburning, very slightly lower than the static thrust of the -100/200, but the -220 has better dynamic thrust across most of the envelope.

The F100-220 was introduced in 1986 and was installed on the F-15 or F-16, gradually replacing the -100/200.[7] Seeking a way to drive unit costs down, the USAF implemented the Alternate Fighter Engine (AFE) program in 1984 (nicknamed "The Great Engine War"), under which the engine contract would be awarded through competition; the -220 would be Pratt & Whitney's initial offering in the AFE program, competing with the General Electric F110-GE-100. The F-16C/D Block 30/32s were the first to be built with the common engine bay, able to accept the existing F100-200/220 engine (Block 32) or the F110-100 (Block 30). A non-afterburning variant, the F100-PW-220U powers the Northrop Grumman X-47B UCAV. The -100 and -200 series engines could be upgraded to become equivalent to -220 specifications; the "E" abbreviation from 220E is for "equivalent" and given to engines which have been upgraded as such.

F100-PW-229 edit

The F100-PW-229 and its competitor, the General Electric F110-GE-129, were the result of the USAF seeking greater power for its tactical aircraft through the Improved Performance Engine (IPE) program in the 1980s. It was developed under company designation PW1128; in addition to greater thrust, the -229 incorporates the reliability and durability improvements of the -220 as well as an enhanced DEEC. Compared to earlier variants, the -229 has a higher turbine inlet temperature, higher airflow of 248 lb/s (112 kg/s), and lower bypass ratio.[8] The first engine was flown in 1989 and produced thrust of 17,800 lbf (79.2 kN) (dry/intermediate thrust) and 29,160 lbf (129.7 kN) with afterburner. The -229 powers late model F-16C/D Block 52s and F-15Es.

 
The F-15 ACTIVE showing its 3D axisymmetric thrust vectoring nozzles on its F100-PW-229s.

A variant of the -229 fitted with a 3-dimensional axisymmetric thrust vectoring nozzle, referred by Pratt & Whitney as the Pitch/Yaw Balance Beam Nozzle (P/YBBN), was tested on the F-15 ACTIVE (Advanced Control Technology for Integrated Vehicles) in the 1990s.[9]

In 2007, the F100-PW-229EEP (Engine Enhancement Package) began development to increase reliability and number of accumulated cycles between depot overhauls. This was done by applying technology from the F100-PW-232 (see below), which in turn incorporated technology and advancements from the F119 program for the F-22, as well as (for -229EEP) from the F135 program for the F-35; the -229EEP incorporates updated turbine materials, cooling management techniques, compressor aerodynamics, split cases (top and bottom) and updated DEEC software.[10] Deliveries of the -229EEP began in 2009.

F100-PW-232 edit

The F100-PW-232, originally called F100-PW-229A (Advanced), was a further enhanced variant that incorporated engineering advances and technology from Pratt & Whitney's F119 engine for the F-22 as well as operational experience from the -229; development began in the late 1990s.[11] Both the -232 and its competitor, the General Electric F110-GE-132, were designed to make full use of the F-16's Modular Common Inlet Duct (MCID), or "Big Mouth" inlet introduced in the Block 30 variant. The fan was larger for increased airflow of 275 lb/s (125 kg/s) and redesigned to be more reliable; it incorporated stages with the blades and disk formed into a single piece called an integrally-blades rotor (IBR), or blisk.[12] The stators were also redesigned for better aerodynamics to improve stall margin. The -232 could produce 20,100 lbf (89.4 kN) of thrust in intermediate power and 32,500 lbf (144.6 kN) in afterburner; alternatively it could produce the same thrust levels as the -229 but increase inspection intervals by 40%. The -232 was not pursued by the USAF, but many of the improvements were incorporated into the -229EEP to increase its reliability and inspection intervals.[13][14]

Derivatives edit

The F401 was the naval development of the F100 and designed in tandem. It was intended to power the F-14B Tomcat and Rockwell XFV-12, but the engine was canceled due to costs and development issues. The PW1120 turbofan was a smaller derivative of the F100; it was installed as a modification to a single F-4E fighter jet, and powered the canceled IAI Lavi.

Applications edit

Specifications (F100) edit

F100-PW-220 edit

Data from DTIC,[7] Florida International University,[15] National Museum of the U.S. Air Force[16]

General characteristics

  • Type: Afterburning turbofan
  • Length: 191 inches (485 cm)
  • Diameter: 34.8 inches (88 cm) inlet, 46.5 inches (118 cm) maximum external
  • Dry weight: 3,234 pounds (1,467 kg)

Components

Performance

F100-PW-229 edit

Data from Pratt & Whitney[17][18]

General characteristics

  • Type: Afterburning turbofan
  • Length: 191 inches (485 cm)
  • Diameter: 34.8 inches (88 cm) inlet, 46.5 inches (118 cm) maximum external
  • Dry weight: 3,829 pounds (1,737 kg)

Components

Performance

  • Maximum thrust:
    • 17,800 pounds-force (79 kN) intermediate power
    • 29,160 pounds-force (129.7 kN) with afterburner
  • Overall pressure ratio: 32:1
  • Air mass flow: 248 lb/s (112 kg/s)
  • Turbine inlet temperature: 2,460 °F (1,350 °C)[19]
  • Specific fuel consumption: Intermediate Power: 0.76 lb/(lbf·h) (77.5 kg/(kN·h)) Full afterburner: 1.94 lb/(lbf·h) (197.8 kg/(kN·h))
  • Thrust-to-weight ratio: 7.8:1

See also edit

Related development

Comparable engines

Related lists

References edit

  1. ^ "Designations Of U.S. Military Aero Engines". www.designation-systems.net. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  2. ^ Connors, pp. 382-385
  3. ^ Connors, pp. 385-391
  4. ^ Davies, Steve. Combat Legend, F-15 Eagle and Strike Eagle. London: Airlife Publishing, Ltd., 2002. ISBN 1-84037-377-6.
  5. ^ McDermott 1972, pp. 1-5
  6. ^ Fernandez 1983, pp. 241–245, 251–254
  7. ^ a b "The Development of the F100-PW-220 and F110-GE-100 Engines: A Case Study of Risk Assessment and Risk Management" (PDF). dtic.mil. (PDF) from the original on June 28, 2014. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  8. ^ Frank W. Burcham; Donald L. Gatlin; James F. Stewart (1995). An Overview of Integrated Flight-Propulsion Controls Flight Research on the NASA F-15 Research Airplane (PDF) (Technical report). Edwards, CA: NASA Dryden Flight Research Center.
  9. ^ James W. Smolka; Laurence A. Walker; Major Gregory H. Johnson; Gerard S. Schkolnik; Curtis W. Berger; Timothy R. Conners; John S. Orme; Karla S. Shy; C. Bruce Wood; et al. (1996). F-15 ACTIVE Flight Research Program (PDF) (Technical report). Edwards, CA: NASA Dryden Flight Research Center.
  10. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-01-12. Retrieved 2014-01-12.
  11. ^ "Aerodynamics Mostly Settled On P&W's Newest F100". Aviation Week. 13 February 1998.
  12. ^ Norris, Guy (26 January 1999). "P&W starts F100-299A fan blade tests". Flight International.
  13. ^ "Fighter engine boasts P&W engineering". Flight Global. 24 February 2000.
  14. ^ "P&W completes series of tests on fifth-generation F100 engine". Aviation Week. 21 April 2000.
  15. ^ . Florida International University. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016.
  16. ^ "Pratt & Whitney F100-PW-220". National Museum of the United States Air Force. May 28, 2015.
  17. ^ P&W F100 product page. August 15, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ P&W F100-PW-229 Product Card
  19. ^ Clancy, Tom (2007). Fighter Wing: A Guided Tour of an Air Force Combat Wing. ISBN 978-0-425-21702-3.

Bibliography edit

  • Connors, Jack (2010). The Engines of Pratt & Whitney: A Technical History. American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA). doi:10.2514/4.867293. ISBN 978-1-60086-711-8.
  • McDermott, John F. (1972). "F100/F401 Augmented Turbofan Engines - High Thrust-to-Weight Propulsion Systems". SAE Technical Paper Series. Vol. 1. doi:10.4271/720842. ISSN 0148-7191.
  • Fernandez, Ronald (1983), Excess Profits: The Rise of United Technologies, Boston: Addison-Wesley, ISBN 9780201104844.

External links edit

  • F100-PW-100/-200 page on GlobalSecurity.com
  • F100 page on LeteckeMotory.cz (cs)

pratt, whitney, f100, company, designation, jtf22, afterburning, turbofan, engine, designed, manufactured, pratt, whitney, power, force, initiated, 1965, which, became, eagle, engine, developed, tandem, with, f401, which, shares, similar, core, with, upscaled,. The Pratt amp Whitney F100 company designation JTF22 1 is an afterburning turbofan engine designed and manufactured by Pratt amp Whitney to power the U S Air Force s FX initiated in 1965 which became the F 15 Eagle The engine was to be developed in tandem with the F401 which shares a similar core but with the fan upscaled for the U S Navy s F 14 Tomcat although the F401 was later abandoned due to costs and reliability issues The F100 would also power the F 16 Fighting Falcon for the Air Force s Lightweight Fighter LWF program F100F100 for an F 15 Eagle being testedType TurbofanNational origin United StatesManufacturer Pratt amp WhitneyFirst run 1970sMajor applications F 15 Eagle F 15E Strike Eagle F 16 Fighting Falcon Northrop Grumman X 47BDeveloped into Pratt amp Whitney F401 Pratt amp Whitney PW1120 Contents 1 Development 2 Design and variants 2 1 F100 PW 100 2 2 F100 PW 200 2 3 F100 PW 220 220E 2 4 F100 PW 229 2 5 F100 PW 232 2 6 Derivatives 3 Applications 4 Specifications F100 4 1 F100 PW 220 4 1 1 General characteristics 4 1 2 Components 4 1 3 Performance 4 2 F100 PW 229 4 2 1 General characteristics 4 2 2 Components 4 2 3 Performance 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksDevelopment edit nbsp Afterburner concentric ring structure inside the exhaustIn 1967 the United States Navy and United States Air Force issued a joint engine Request for Proposals RFP for the F 14 Tomcat and the FX which became the parallel fighter design competition that led to the F 15 Eagle in 1970 This engine program was called the IEDP Initial Engine Development Program and was funded and managed out of the Aeronautical Systems Division ASD at Wright Patterson AFB Under ASD a Systems Project Office Cadre was assigned to manage both the FX Aircraft and Engine definition phase The Turbine Engine Division of the Air Force Propulsion Laboratory was employed in a support role to assist ASD Systems Engineering in evaluations of technical risks Later upon selection of the F 15 the ASD engineering cadre became the F 15 Systems Project Office 2 nbsp Adjustable exhaust nozzle contractedThe IEDP was created to be a competitive engine design demonstration phase followed with a down select to one winning engine design and development program General Electric and Pratt amp Whitney were placed on contract for an approximately 18 month program with goals to improve thrust and reduce weight to achieve a thrust to weight ratio of 8 At the end of the IEDP General Electric and Pratt amp Whitney submitted proposals for their engine candidates for the aircraft that had been selected in the FX Competition the McDonnell Douglas F 15 The Pratt amp Whitney proposal was selected as the winner and the engine was designated the F100 3 The Air Force would award Pratt amp Whitney a contract in 1970 to develop and produce F100 PW 100 USAF and F401 PW 400 USN engines The Navy would use the engine in the planned F 14B and the XFV 12 project but would cut back and later cancel its order after the latter s failure due to costs and reliability issues and chose to continue to use the Pratt amp Whitney TF30 engine from the F 111 in its F 14s 4 5 Design and variants editThe F100 is a twin spool axial flow afterburning turbofan engine It has a 3 stage fan driven by a two stage low pressure turbine and a 10 stage compressor driven by a two stage high pressure turbine The initial F100 PW 100 variant generates nearly 24 000 lbf 107 kN of thrust in full afterburner and weighs approximately 3 000 lb 1 361 kg achieving its target thrust to weight ratio of 8 and providing the F 15 with its desired thrust to weight ratio of greater than 1 1 at combat weight F100 PW 100 edit nbsp F100 PW 100 on display at the Virginia Air and Space CenterThe F100 PW 100 first flew in an F 15 Eagle in 1972 with a maximum continuous power rating of 12 410 lbf 55 2 kN military power of 14 690 lbf 65 3 kN and afterburning thrust of 23 930 lbf 106 4 kN with 5 minute limit Due to the advanced nature of engine stemming from ambitious performance goals numerous problems were encountered in its early days of service including high wear stalling and hard afterburner starts 6 These hard starts could be caused by failure of the afterburner to start or by extinguishing after start in either case the large jets of jet fuel were lit by the engine exhaust resulting in high pressure waves causing the engine to stall these stagnation stalls usually occurred at high Mach and high altitude and could seriously damage the turbine if the condition was not corrected The problems were contributed by pilots making much more abrupt throttle changes than previous fighters and engines due to the excess thrust available Early problems were eventually solved by the development of the F100 PW 220 in the early 1980s which the 100 could be upgraded to F100 PW 200 edit The F 16 Fighting Falcon entered service with the F100 PW 200 compared to the 100 the 200 has some additional redundancies for single engine reliability and almost identical thrust ratings In particular a proximate splitter was introduced on the 200 that reduced the severity of the high pressure waves from hard afterburner starts This greatly reduced the rate of stagnation stalls and the 200 on the F 16 saw much better reliability than the 100 on the F 15 although some of the issues from the 100 remained Similarly these problems were eventually solved by the F100 PW 220 which the 200 could be upgraded to as well F100 PW 220 220E edit Due to the unsatisfactory reliability maintenance costs and service life of the F100 100 200 Pratt amp Whitney was eventually pressured into upgrading the engine to address these issues The Air Force also began funding the General Electric F101 Derivative Fighter Engine which eventually became the F110 as a competitor to the F100 to coerce more urgency from Pratt amp Whitney The result of Pratt amp Whitney s improvement efforts was the F100 PW 220 which eliminates almost all stall stagnations and augmentor instability issues from the 100 as well as doubling time between depot overhauls Reliability and maintenance costs were also drastically improved and the engine incorporates a digital electronic engine control DEEC The 220 engine produces static thrust of 14 590 lbf 64 9 kN in military intermediate power and 23 770 lbf 105 7 kN afterburning very slightly lower than the static thrust of the 100 200 but the 220 has better dynamic thrust across most of the envelope The F100 220 was introduced in 1986 and was installed on the F 15 or F 16 gradually replacing the 100 200 7 Seeking a way to drive unit costs down the USAF implemented the Alternate Fighter Engine AFE program in 1984 nicknamed The Great Engine War under which the engine contract would be awarded through competition the 220 would be Pratt amp Whitney s initial offering in the AFE program competing with the General Electric F110 GE 100 The F 16C D Block 30 32s were the first to be built with the common engine bay able to accept the existing F100 200 220 engine Block 32 or the F110 100 Block 30 A non afterburning variant the F100 PW 220U powers the Northrop Grumman X 47B UCAV The 100 and 200 series engines could be upgraded to become equivalent to 220 specifications the E abbreviation from 220E is for equivalent and given to engines which have been upgraded as such F100 PW 229 edit The F100 PW 229 and its competitor the General Electric F110 GE 129 were the result of the USAF seeking greater power for its tactical aircraft through the Improved Performance Engine IPE program in the 1980s It was developed under company designation PW1128 in addition to greater thrust the 229 incorporates the reliability and durability improvements of the 220 as well as an enhanced DEEC Compared to earlier variants the 229 has a higher turbine inlet temperature higher airflow of 248 lb s 112 kg s and lower bypass ratio 8 The first engine was flown in 1989 and produced thrust of 17 800 lbf 79 2 kN dry intermediate thrust and 29 160 lbf 129 7 kN with afterburner The 229 powers late model F 16C D Block 52s and F 15Es nbsp The F 15 ACTIVE showing its 3D axisymmetric thrust vectoring nozzles on its F100 PW 229s A variant of the 229 fitted with a 3 dimensional axisymmetric thrust vectoring nozzle referred by Pratt amp Whitney as the Pitch Yaw Balance Beam Nozzle P YBBN was tested on the F 15 ACTIVE Advanced Control Technology for Integrated Vehicles in the 1990s 9 In 2007 the F100 PW 229EEP Engine Enhancement Package began development to increase reliability and number of accumulated cycles between depot overhauls This was done by applying technology from the F100 PW 232 see below which in turn incorporated technology and advancements from the F119 program for the F 22 as well as for 229EEP from the F135 program for the F 35 the 229EEP incorporates updated turbine materials cooling management techniques compressor aerodynamics split cases top and bottom and updated DEEC software 10 Deliveries of the 229EEP began in 2009 F100 PW 232 edit The F100 PW 232 originally called F100 PW 229A Advanced was a further enhanced variant that incorporated engineering advances and technology from Pratt amp Whitney s F119 engine for the F 22 as well as operational experience from the 229 development began in the late 1990s 11 Both the 232 and its competitor the General Electric F110 GE 132 were designed to make full use of the F 16 s Modular Common Inlet Duct MCID or Big Mouth inlet introduced in the Block 30 variant The fan was larger for increased airflow of 275 lb s 125 kg s and redesigned to be more reliable it incorporated stages with the blades and disk formed into a single piece called an integrally blades rotor IBR or blisk 12 The stators were also redesigned for better aerodynamics to improve stall margin The 232 could produce 20 100 lbf 89 4 kN of thrust in intermediate power and 32 500 lbf 144 6 kN in afterburner alternatively it could produce the same thrust levels as the 229 but increase inspection intervals by 40 The 232 was not pursued by the USAF but many of the improvements were incorporated into the 229EEP to increase its reliability and inspection intervals 13 14 Derivatives edit Main articles Pratt amp Whitney F401 and Pratt amp Whitney PW1120 The F401 was the naval development of the F100 and designed in tandem It was intended to power the F 14B Tomcat and Rockwell XFV 12 but the engine was canceled due to costs and development issues The PW1120 turbofan was a smaller derivative of the F100 it was installed as a modification to a single F 4E fighter jet and powered the canceled IAI Lavi Applications editGeneral Dynamics F 16 Fighting Falcon 200 220 229 McDonnell Douglas F 15 Eagle 100 220 McDonnell Douglas F 15E Strike Eagle 220 229 Northrop Grumman X 47B 220U Vought YA 7FSpecifications F100 editF100 PW 220 edit Data from DTIC 7 Florida International University 15 National Museum of the U S Air Force 16 General characteristics Type Afterburning turbofan Length 191 inches 485 cm Diameter 34 8 inches 88 cm inlet 46 5 inches 118 cm maximum external Dry weight 3 234 pounds 1 467 kg Components Compressor Dual Spool Axial compressor with 3 stage fan 10 stage compressor Bypass ratio 0 71 1 Combustors annular Turbine 2 stage high pressure 2 stage low pressurePerformance Maximum thrust 14 590 pounds force 64 9 kN military intermediate power 23 770 pounds force 105 7 kN with afterburner Overall pressure ratio 25 1 Air mass flow 228 lb s 103 kg s Specific fuel consumption Intermediate Power 0 73 lb lbf h Thrust to weight ratio 7 4 1F100 PW 229 edit Data from Pratt amp Whitney 17 18 General characteristics Type Afterburning turbofan Length 191 inches 485 cm Diameter 34 8 inches 88 cm inlet 46 5 inches 118 cm maximum external Dry weight 3 829 pounds 1 737 kg Components Compressor Dual Spool Axial compressor with 3 fan and 10 compressor stages Bypass ratio 0 36 1 Combustors annular Turbine 2 low pressure and 2 high pressure stagesPerformance Maximum thrust 17 800 pounds force 79 kN intermediate power 29 160 pounds force 129 7 kN with afterburner Overall pressure ratio 32 1 Air mass flow 248 lb s 112 kg s Turbine inlet temperature 2 460 F 1 350 C 19 Specific fuel consumption Intermediate Power 0 76 lb lbf h 77 5 kg kN h Full afterburner 1 94 lb lbf h 197 8 kg kN h Thrust to weight ratio 7 8 1See also editRelated development Pratt amp Whitney F401 Pratt amp Whitney PW1120Comparable engines General Electric F110 Klimov RD 33 Saturn AL 31 Shenyang WS 10Related lists List of aircraft enginesReferences edit Designations Of U S Military Aero Engines www designation systems net Retrieved 17 April 2018 Connors pp 382 385 Connors pp 385 391 Davies Steve Combat Legend F 15 Eagle and Strike Eagle London Airlife Publishing Ltd 2002 ISBN 1 84037 377 6 McDermott 1972 pp 1 5 Fernandez 1983 pp 241 245 251 254 a b The Development of the F100 PW 220 and F110 GE 100 Engines A Case Study of Risk Assessment and Risk Management PDF dtic mil Archived PDF from the original on June 28 2014 Retrieved 17 April 2018 Frank W Burcham Donald L Gatlin James F Stewart 1995 An Overview of Integrated Flight Propulsion Controls Flight Research on the NASA F 15 Research Airplane PDF Technical report Edwards CA NASA Dryden Flight Research Center James W Smolka Laurence A Walker Major Gregory H Johnson Gerard S Schkolnik Curtis W Berger Timothy R Conners John S Orme Karla S Shy C Bruce Wood et al 1996 F 15 ACTIVE Flight Research Program PDF Technical report Edwards CA NASA Dryden Flight Research Center F100 PW 229 Engine Enhancement Package brochure PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 01 12 Retrieved 2014 01 12 Aerodynamics Mostly Settled On P amp W s Newest F100 Aviation Week 13 February 1998 Norris Guy 26 January 1999 P amp W starts F100 299A fan blade tests Flight International Fighter engine boasts P amp W engineering Flight Global 24 February 2000 P amp W completes series of tests on fifth generation F100 engine Aviation Week 21 April 2000 Pratt amp Whitney Engines F100 PW 220 F100 PW 220E Florida International University Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Pratt amp Whitney F100 PW 220 National Museum of the United States Air Force May 28 2015 P amp W F100 product page Archived August 15 2010 at the Wayback Machine P amp W F100 PW 229 Product Card Clancy Tom 2007 Fighter Wing A Guided Tour of an Air Force Combat Wing ISBN 978 0 425 21702 3 Bibliography editConnors Jack 2010 The Engines of Pratt amp Whitney A Technical History American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics AIAA doi 10 2514 4 867293 ISBN 978 1 60086 711 8 McDermott John F 1972 F100 F401 Augmented Turbofan Engines High Thrust to Weight Propulsion Systems SAE Technical Paper Series Vol 1 doi 10 4271 720842 ISSN 0148 7191 Fernandez Ronald 1983 Excess Profits The Rise of United Technologies Boston Addison Wesley ISBN 9780201104844 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pratt amp Whitney F100 F100 page on Pratt amp Whitney s site F100 PW 100 200 page on GlobalSecurity com F100 page on LeteckeMotory cz cs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pratt 26 Whitney F100 amp oldid 1185053270, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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