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Rolls-Royce/Snecma Olympus 593

The Rolls-Royce/Snecma Olympus 593 was an Anglo-French turbojet with reheat, which powered the supersonic airliner Concorde. It was initially a joint project between Bristol Siddeley Engines Limited (BSEL) and Snecma, derived from the Bristol Siddeley Olympus 22R engine.[1][2] Rolls-Royce Limited acquired BSEL in 1966 during development of the engine, making BSEL the Bristol Engine Division of Rolls-Royce.[2]

Olympus 593
On display at the Aerospace Bristol museum
Type Turbojet
National origin United Kingdom/France
Manufacturer Rolls-Royce Limited/Snecma
First run June 1966
Major applications Concorde
Developed from Rolls-Royce Olympus

Until regular commercial flights by Concorde ceased in October 2003, the Olympus turbojet was unique in aviation as the only turbojet with reheat powering a commercial aircraft.

The overall thermal efficiency of the engine in supersonic cruising flight (supercruise) was about 43%, which at the time was the highest figure recorded for any normal thermodynamic machine.[3]

Development edit

The initial design of the engine was a civil version of the Olympus 22R, redesignated as the 591.[1] The 22R had been designed for sustained (45 minutes) flight at Mach 2.2[3] as the engine for the BAC TSR-2. The 591 was redesigned, being known as the 593, with specification finalised on 1 January 1964.[1]Bristol Siddeley of the UK and Snecma Moteurs of France were to share the project. SNECMA and Bristol Siddeley were also involved in an unrelated joint project, the M45H turbofan.

The early development stages validated the basic design concept, but many studies were required to meet the specifications which included thrust-specific fuel consumption (TSFC or simply SFC), engine pressure ratio, size and weight, and turbine entry temperature.

Initial studies looked at turbojets and turbofans, but the lower frontal cross-sectional area of turbojets in the end was shown to be a critical factor in achieving superior performance. The competing Russian Tu-144 initially used a turbofan with reheat, but changed to a turbojet without reheat[4] with considerable improvement in performance.

 
Olympus-powered Concorde 216 (G-BOAF) on the final-ever Concorde landing, at Bristol, England

Development of the engine and engine accessories was the responsibility of Bristol Siddeley; BAC was responsible for the variable intake and overall engine installation, with Snecma taking on the exhaust nozzle incorporating the thrust reverser, noise attenuation, and reheat.[5] Britain was to have a larger share in production of the Olympus 593 based powerplant as France had a larger share in fuselage production. Ground test running of the engines was co-ordinated between Bristol Siddeley, Patchway; the National Gas Turbine Establishment (NGTE), Pystock, UK; and the Centre d'Essais des Propulseurs (CEPr) at Saclay, France.[5]

Increases in aircraft weight during the design phase led to a take-off thrust requirement which could not be met by the engine. The required shortfall of 20% was met with the introduction of partial reheat which was produced by SNECMA.[3]

In July 1964, two prototypes of the 593D engine ("D" for "Derivative", i.e., derived from the 22R) were produced. These two derivative engines were built to determine the validity of design concepts such as turbine stator and rotor cooling and testing the system at high environmental temperatures. They also demonstrated the need for larger engines, which were designated 593B.[6]

The Olympus 593B was first run in November 1965. The B (for "Big") was a redesign of the 593D which was planned for an earlier smaller Concorde design. Test results from the 593D were used for the design of the B.[7] The B was dropped later from the designation. Snecma used an Olympus 301 in testing scaled models of the nozzle system.[8]

In June 1966, a complete Olympus 593 engine and variable geometry exhaust assembly was first run at Melun-Villaroche. At Bristol, flight tests began using a RAF Avro Vulcan bomber with the engine and its nacelle attached below the bomb-bay. Due to the Vulcan's aerodynamic limitations, the tests were limited to a speed of Mach 0.98 (1,200 km/h). During these tests, the 593 achieved 35,190 lbf (157 kN) thrust, which exceeded the specification for the engine.[9]

In early 1966, the Olympus 593 produced 37,000 lbf (160 kN) of thrust with reheat.[10]

In April 1967, the Olympus 593 ran for the first time in a high altitude chamber, at Saclay. In January 1968, the Vulcan flying test bed logged 100 flight hours, and the variable geometry exhaust assembly for the Olympus 593 engine was cleared at Melun-Villaroche for flight in the Concorde prototypes.

Concorde prototype 001 made its maiden flight from Toulouse on 2 March 1969. It was captained by André Turcat, chief test pilot of Sud Aviation. Using reheat it lifted off at 205 knots (380 km/h) after a ground run of 4,700 feet (1.4 km).

A quieter, higher thrust version, the Mk 622, was proposed. Reheat was not required and the lower jet velocity reduced the noise from the exhaust.[11] The improved efficiency would have allowed greater range and opened up new routes, particularly across the Pacific as well as transcontinental routes across America. However, the poor sales of Concorde meant that this plan for a Concorde 'B' was not pursued.[12]

Propulsion system design edit

Engine edit

The Olympus 593 was a two-shaft turbojet with reheat. The low pressure (LP) and high pressure (HP) compressors both had seven stages and were each driven by a single-stage turbine. Due to the high inlet air temperatures at Mach 2 cruise - in excess of 120 °C (393 K; 248 °F)[5] - the compressor drums and blades were made from titanium except for the last four HP stages, which were Nimonic 90[13] nickel alloy.[14] Nickel alloys were normally only required in the hotter turbine areas, but the high temperatures that occur in the last stages of the compressor at supersonic flight speeds dictated its use in the compressor also. The HP turbine stator and rotor blades and LP turbine rotor blades were cooled.[15]

Reheat providing a 20% thrust increase[3] was installed to give the take-off thrust required for Concorde to operate from existing runways, and for transonic acceleration from Mach 0.95 up to Mach 1.7; the aircraft flew supersonically without reheat above that speed. At cruise the engine's direct contribution to forward thrust was 8% of that delivered by the complete propulsion system: 63% derived from forward pressure against structures inside the air intake system, and 28% from forward pressure against the exhaust nozzles.[16][14]

All major components of the Olympus 593 were designed for a life of 25,000 hours, with the exception of the compressor and turbine blades, which were designed for a 10,000-hour life.[13] An engine installed on Concorde could be changed in 1 hour 50 minutes.[17]

Intake edit

 
Concorde's intake system schematics
 
Concorde's intake system
 
The pre-production Concorde G-AXDN, Duxford, close-up of engines, with the scalloped thrust-reversers prominent. On production aircraft, a revised design of "eyelid" variable nozzle/thrust reverser was used

The Concorde's variable-geometry intake, designed by BAC, like any jet-engine intake, has to deliver the air to the engine at as high a pressure as possible (pressure recovery) and with a variation in pressure distribution (distortion) that can be tolerated by the compressor. Poor pressure recovery is an unacceptable loss for the intake compression process, and excessive distortion causes engine surging (from loss of surge margin). If the engine is a turbojet with reheat, the intake also has to supply cooling air for the hot reheat duct and engine nozzle. Meeting all the above requirements over the full range of the certified operating envelope was required for Concorde to become a viable commercial aircraft. They were met with a variable geometry intake and an intake-control system that compromised neither the operation of the engine nor the control of the aircraft.

Supersonic pressure recovery is addressed by the number of shock waves that are generated by the intake: the greater the number, the higher the pressure recovery. Supersonic flow is compressed or slowed by changes in direction.[18] The Concorde intake front ramps changed the flow direction, causing oblique external shocks and isentropic compression in the supersonic flow. The TSR-2 had used a half-cone translating centre-body to change the direction.[19] Subsonic pressure recovery is addressed by removal of the boundary layer (at the ramp bleed slot) and suitable shaping of the subsonic diffuser leading to the engine. The pressure recovery achieved by Concorde's engine intakes at Mach 2 cruise gave an intake pressure ratio of 7.3:1.[20]

Shock waves gave rise to excessive boundary-layer growth on the front ramp. The boundary layer was removed through the ramp bleed slot and bypassed the subsonic diffuser and engine, where it would otherwise have caused excessive duct loss and unacceptable distortion at the engine.[21] Since the ramp bleed slot was in the subsonic diffuser, and downstream of the shock system, changes in flow demanded by the engine would be accommodated with corresponding changes in the bleed slot flow without significantly affecting the external shock pattern. Engine flow reductions caused by throttling or shutting down were dealt with by dump-door opening.[21]

The dump doors were closed at cruise to prevent loss in thrust, since air leaking from the duct does not contribute to the pressure recovery in the intake.[18]

Since the intake area was optimal for cruise, an auxiliary inlet was provided to meet the higher engine air flow needed for take-off. Distortion of the flow at the engine face also had to be addressed, leading to an aerodynamic cascade with the auxiliary door.[21]

Forces from the internal airflow on the intake structure are rearward (drag) on the initial converging section, where the supersonic deceleration takes place, and forward on the diverging duct where subsonic deceleration takes place up to the engine entry. The sum of the two forces gave a 63% thrust contribution at cruise from the intake part of the propulsion system.[16]

In order to achieve the necessary accuracy in the control of the intake ramp and spill positioning, it was found necessary to use a digital signal processor in the Air Intake Control Units. This was developed in around 1972, relatively late in the programme, by the Electronics and Space Systems division of the British Aircraft Corporation at Filton. The Air Intake Control Units ensured the required fuel economy for transatlantic flights. The digital processor also accurately calculated the necessary engine speed scheduling to ensure an adequate surge margin under all engine and airframe operating conditions.

Concorde's Air Intake Control System also pioneered the use of digital data highways (multiplexed serial data buses) which connected the Air Intake Sensor Units that collected aerodynamic data at the nose of the aircraft (total pressure, static pressure, angle of attack and sideslip) and sent it to the Air Intake Control Units located nearer the air intakes, a distance of around 190 ft (58 m), using screened twisted pair cables to replace what would have been a much greater weight in aircraft wiring had only analogue signal wiring and pneumatic piping been used.

The intake control system had the unique ability to keep the powerplants operating correctly and to aid recovery whatever the pilots, the aircraft, and the atmosphere were doing in combination at the time.

The overall pressure ratio for the powerplant at Mach 2.0 cruise at 51,000 ft (15,500 m) was about 82:1, with 7.3:1 from the intake and 11.3:1 from the two engine compressors, far higher than any subsonic aircraft of the day, giving a correspondingly high thermal efficiency of about 43%.[3][20]

Exhaust nozzle edit

 
Concorde's variable geometry exhaust nozzle
 
Concorde's exhaust system usage when A) taking off B) supersonic C) thrust reversing

The variable-geometry exhaust nozzle, developed by SNECMA, consisted of two "eyelids" which varied their position in the exhaust flow dependent on the flight regime; for example, when fully closed (into the exhaust flow), they acted as thrust-reversers, aiding deceleration from landing to taxi speed. In the fully open cruise position, together with the engine nozzle, they formed an ejector nozzle to control the expansion of the exhaust. The eyelids formed the divergent passage while the engine exhaust ejected or pumped the secondary flow from the intake ramp bleed slot.

The expanding flow in the diverging section caused a forward thrust force on the exhaust nozzle: a 29% contribution to the overall propulsion system thrust at cruise.[16]

During cruise at Mach 2.02 each Olympus 593 was producing around 10,000 lbf (44 kN) of thrust, equivalent to 36,000 hp (27,000 kW) per engine.[22] Eames (SAE Transactions 1991) however mentions the cruise thrust of each engine to be 6,790 lbf (30 kN), which corresponds to 2,000 hp (1,500 kW) per engine and 100,000 hp (75,000 kW) for the entire vehicle. 10,000 lbf is perhaps the maximum thrust available at cruising speed (used during acceleration and climb just before transitioning to cruise). The difference between the two thrust figures above is due to the altitude at which the aircraft is flying. Concorde climbs from 50,000 ft (15,200 m) to 60,000 ft (18,300 m) when cruising since the aircraft becomes lighter as it burns fuel. Each engine would produce approximately 10,000 lbf at 50,000 ft and only 6,790 lbf at 60,000 ft due to the reduction in air density.[citation needed]

The primary exhaust nozzle and jet pipe were designed for a life of 30,000 hours; the Thrust Reverser Aft (TRA) structure for a life of 40,000 hours.[23]

Variants edit

  • 593 - Original version designed for Concorde
    • Thrust : 20,000 lbf (89 kN) dry / 30,610 lbf (136 kN) reheat
  • 593-22R - Powerplant fitted to prototypes. Higher performance than original engine due to changes in aircraft specification.
    • Thrust : 34,650 lbf (154 kN) dry / 37,180 lbf (165 kN) reheat
  • 593-610-14-28 - Final version fitted to production Concorde
    • Thrust : 32,000 lbf (142 kN) dry / 38,050 lbf (169 kN) reheat

Engines on display edit

Preserved examples of the Rolls-Royce/Snecma Olympus 593 are on display at the following museums:

In addition to these museums, other sites that display examples of the Olympus 593 include:

Specifications (Olympus 593 Mk 610) edit

 
Turbine and reheat gutter section of an Olympus 593 on display at the Fleet Air Arm Museum

Data from Jane's.[28][29]

General characteristics

  • Type: turbojet
  • Length: 4.039 m (13 ft 3.0 in)
  • Diameter: 1.212 m (3 ft 11.7 in)
  • Dry weight: 3,175 kg (7,000 lb)

Components

  • Compressor: Axial-flow, 7-stage low-pressure, 7-stage high-pressure
  • Combustors: Nickel alloy construction annular chamber, 16 vaporizing burners, each with twin outlets
  • Turbine: Two stages: one high-pressure, one low-pressure
  • Fuel type: Jet A1

Performance

See also edit

Related development

Comparable engines

Related lists

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Olympus-the first forty years" Alan Baxter, RRHT No15, ISBN 978-0-9511710-9-7, p. 135.
  2. ^ a b Leney, David; Macdonald, David (July 2020). Aérospatiale/BAC Concorde 1969 onwards (all models). Sparkford, Somerset: Haynes Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84425-818-5.
  3. ^ a b c d e Hooker, Stanley (1984). Not much of an Engineer: an autobiography. Assisted by Bill Gunston. Shrewsbury, England: Airlife. pp. 154–155. ISBN 9780906393352. OCLC 11437258.
  4. ^ "Development of ABE Theory in Russia: Past, Present and Future" Ivanov, Central Institute of Aviation Motors, Moscow 111116
  5. ^ a b c . www.flightglobal.com. Archived from the original on 23 June 2015.
  6. ^ Beanland, M.H. (1969). . Flight International: 16. Archived from the original on 3 November 2012.
  7. ^ "Aero Engines", Flight: 28, 6 January 1966
  8. ^ "Flight April 1966". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  9. ^
  10. ^ "Historical Highlights", Flight International: 14, 17 April 1969
  11. ^ . Flight International. London: IPC Transport Press. 7 February 1974. Archived from the original on 28 December 2014.
  12. ^ "CONCORDE SST : CONCORDE B". www.concordesst.com. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  13. ^ a b . www.flightglobal.com. Archived from the original on 6 August 2010.
  14. ^ a b . Concorde SST. Gordon Roxburgh. Archived from the original on 29 October 2023. Retrieved 29 October 2023. During the Supersonic cruse only 8% of the power is derived by the engine with the other 29% being from Nozzles and an impressive 63% from the intakes.
  15. ^ Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1975-76,ISBN 0 531 03250 7, p.706
  16. ^ a b c "Brian Trubshaw Test Pilot" ISBN 0 7509 1838 1, Appendix VIIIb
  17. ^ . www.flightglobal.com. Archived from the original on 23 June 2015.
  18. ^ a b "How Supersonic Inlets Work" J. Thomas Anderson, Copyright Lockheed Martin Corporation, published by Aero Engine Historical Society at "enginehistory.org"
  19. ^ Carlo Kopp (June 1997), "Profile - The BAC TSR.2", Australian Aviation, 1997 (June), Ausairpower.net, retrieved 19 February 2007, First published in Australian Aviation,
  20. ^ a b c "Jet Propulsion" Nicholas Cumpsty, ISBN 0 521 59674 2, p.149
  21. ^ a b c "Design and Development of an Air Intake for a Supersonic Transport Aircraft" Rettie and Lewis, Journal of Aircraft, November–December 1968 Vol. 5, No. 6
  22. ^ Hooker, Sir Stanley; Gunston, Bill (20 September 2011). Not Much of an Engineer. Crowood. ISBN 9781847973252. Retrieved 18 April 2018 – via Google Books.
  23. ^ . www.flightglobal.com. Archived from the original on 23 June 2015.
  24. ^ "Things to see and do". Aerospace Bristol. Retrieved 31 August 2022.
  25. ^ "Engine Collection". Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  26. ^ "Rolls-Royce Dedicates Concorde's Olympus Engine to AE." AE Illinois, Vol.16 (2014).
  27. ^ "ASDL Unveils a Piece of Aviation History | Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering". ae.gatech.edu. Retrieved 2 September 2023.
  28. ^ . Janes Transport News. Janes. 25 July 2000. Archived from the original on 6 August 2010. Retrieved 9 November 2008.
  29. ^ . 23 February 2001. Archived from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  • M. H. Beanland "Development of the Olympus 593" 1969 Flight International

External links edit

  • "Four Olympus Engines will Propel Concorde ..." a 1965 advertisement for the Olympus in Flight
  • "Olympus for Concorde" a 1966 Flight article on the basis of the Olympus 593 for Concorde
  • Olympian buckets and spades - a 1971 Flight International article on the Olympus 593s Type 28 TRA secondary nozzle/thrust reverser
  • "Olympus Flight-testing" a 1972 Flight article on testing the Olympus 593
  • Concorde Olympus 593 MK.610 Engines Heritage Concorde

rolls, royce, snecma, olympus, anglo, french, turbojet, with, reheat, which, powered, supersonic, airliner, concorde, initially, joint, project, between, bristol, siddeley, engines, limited, bsel, snecma, derived, from, bristol, siddeley, olympus, engine, roll. The Rolls Royce Snecma Olympus 593 was an Anglo French turbojet with reheat which powered the supersonic airliner Concorde It was initially a joint project between Bristol Siddeley Engines Limited BSEL and Snecma derived from the Bristol Siddeley Olympus 22R engine 1 2 Rolls Royce Limited acquired BSEL in 1966 during development of the engine making BSEL the Bristol Engine Division of Rolls Royce 2 Olympus 593On display at the Aerospace Bristol museumType TurbojetNational origin United Kingdom FranceManufacturer Rolls Royce Limited SnecmaFirst run June 1966Major applications ConcordeDeveloped from Rolls Royce OlympusUntil regular commercial flights by Concorde ceased in October 2003 the Olympus turbojet was unique in aviation as the only turbojet with reheat powering a commercial aircraft The overall thermal efficiency of the engine in supersonic cruising flight supercruise was about 43 which at the time was the highest figure recorded for any normal thermodynamic machine 3 Contents 1 Development 2 Propulsion system design 2 1 Engine 2 2 Intake 2 3 Exhaust nozzle 3 Variants 4 Engines on display 5 Specifications Olympus 593 Mk 610 5 1 General characteristics 5 2 Components 5 3 Performance 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDevelopment editThe initial design of the engine was a civil version of the Olympus 22R redesignated as the 591 1 The 22R had been designed for sustained 45 minutes flight at Mach 2 2 3 as the engine for the BAC TSR 2 The 591 was redesigned being known as the 593 with specification finalised on 1 January 1964 1 Bristol Siddeley of the UK and Snecma Moteurs of France were to share the project SNECMA and Bristol Siddeley were also involved in an unrelated joint project the M45H turbofan The early development stages validated the basic design concept but many studies were required to meet the specifications which included thrust specific fuel consumption TSFC or simply SFC engine pressure ratio size and weight and turbine entry temperature Initial studies looked at turbojets and turbofans but the lower frontal cross sectional area of turbojets in the end was shown to be a critical factor in achieving superior performance The competing Russian Tu 144 initially used a turbofan with reheat but changed to a turbojet without reheat 4 with considerable improvement in performance nbsp Olympus powered Concorde 216 G BOAF on the final ever Concorde landing at Bristol EnglandDevelopment of the engine and engine accessories was the responsibility of Bristol Siddeley BAC was responsible for the variable intake and overall engine installation with Snecma taking on the exhaust nozzle incorporating the thrust reverser noise attenuation and reheat 5 Britain was to have a larger share in production of the Olympus 593 based powerplant as France had a larger share in fuselage production Ground test running of the engines was co ordinated between Bristol Siddeley Patchway the National Gas Turbine Establishment NGTE Pystock UK and the Centre d Essais des Propulseurs CEPr at Saclay France 5 Increases in aircraft weight during the design phase led to a take off thrust requirement which could not be met by the engine The required shortfall of 20 was met with the introduction of partial reheat which was produced by SNECMA 3 In July 1964 two prototypes of the 593D engine D for Derivative i e derived from the 22R were produced These two derivative engines were built to determine the validity of design concepts such as turbine stator and rotor cooling and testing the system at high environmental temperatures They also demonstrated the need for larger engines which were designated 593B 6 The Olympus 593B was first run in November 1965 The B for Big was a redesign of the 593D which was planned for an earlier smaller Concorde design Test results from the 593D were used for the design of the B 7 The B was dropped later from the designation Snecma used an Olympus 301 in testing scaled models of the nozzle system 8 In June 1966 a complete Olympus 593 engine and variable geometry exhaust assembly was first run at Melun Villaroche At Bristol flight tests began using a RAF Avro Vulcan bomber with the engine and its nacelle attached below the bomb bay Due to the Vulcan s aerodynamic limitations the tests were limited to a speed of Mach 0 98 1 200 km h During these tests the 593 achieved 35 190 lbf 157 kN thrust which exceeded the specification for the engine 9 In early 1966 the Olympus 593 produced 37 000 lbf 160 kN of thrust with reheat 10 In April 1967 the Olympus 593 ran for the first time in a high altitude chamber at Saclay In January 1968 the Vulcan flying test bed logged 100 flight hours and the variable geometry exhaust assembly for the Olympus 593 engine was cleared at Melun Villaroche for flight in the Concorde prototypes Concorde prototype 001 made its maiden flight from Toulouse on 2 March 1969 It was captained by Andre Turcat chief test pilot of Sud Aviation Using reheat it lifted off at 205 knots 380 km h after a ground run of 4 700 feet 1 4 km A quieter higher thrust version the Mk 622 was proposed Reheat was not required and the lower jet velocity reduced the noise from the exhaust 11 The improved efficiency would have allowed greater range and opened up new routes particularly across the Pacific as well as transcontinental routes across America However the poor sales of Concorde meant that this plan for a Concorde B was not pursued 12 Propulsion system design editEngine edit The Olympus 593 was a two shaft turbojet with reheat The low pressure LP and high pressure HP compressors both had seven stages and were each driven by a single stage turbine Due to the high inlet air temperatures at Mach 2 cruise in excess of 120 C 393 K 248 F 5 the compressor drums and blades were made from titanium except for the last four HP stages which were Nimonic 90 13 nickel alloy 14 Nickel alloys were normally only required in the hotter turbine areas but the high temperatures that occur in the last stages of the compressor at supersonic flight speeds dictated its use in the compressor also The HP turbine stator and rotor blades and LP turbine rotor blades were cooled 15 Reheat providing a 20 thrust increase 3 was installed to give the take off thrust required for Concorde to operate from existing runways and for transonic acceleration from Mach 0 95 up to Mach 1 7 the aircraft flew supersonically without reheat above that speed At cruise the engine s direct contribution to forward thrust was 8 of that delivered by the complete propulsion system 63 derived from forward pressure against structures inside the air intake system and 28 from forward pressure against the exhaust nozzles 16 14 All major components of the Olympus 593 were designed for a life of 25 000 hours with the exception of the compressor and turbine blades which were designed for a 10 000 hour life 13 An engine installed on Concorde could be changed in 1 hour 50 minutes 17 Intake edit nbsp Concorde s intake system schematics nbsp Concorde s intake system nbsp The pre production Concorde G AXDN Duxford close up of engines with the scalloped thrust reversers prominent On production aircraft a revised design of eyelid variable nozzle thrust reverser was usedThe Concorde s variable geometry intake designed by BAC like any jet engine intake has to deliver the air to the engine at as high a pressure as possible pressure recovery and with a variation in pressure distribution distortion that can be tolerated by the compressor Poor pressure recovery is an unacceptable loss for the intake compression process and excessive distortion causes engine surging from loss of surge margin If the engine is a turbojet with reheat the intake also has to supply cooling air for the hot reheat duct and engine nozzle Meeting all the above requirements over the full range of the certified operating envelope was required for Concorde to become a viable commercial aircraft They were met with a variable geometry intake and an intake control system that compromised neither the operation of the engine nor the control of the aircraft Supersonic pressure recovery is addressed by the number of shock waves that are generated by the intake the greater the number the higher the pressure recovery Supersonic flow is compressed or slowed by changes in direction 18 The Concorde intake front ramps changed the flow direction causing oblique external shocks and isentropic compression in the supersonic flow The TSR 2 had used a half cone translating centre body to change the direction 19 Subsonic pressure recovery is addressed by removal of the boundary layer at the ramp bleed slot and suitable shaping of the subsonic diffuser leading to the engine The pressure recovery achieved by Concorde s engine intakes at Mach 2 cruise gave an intake pressure ratio of 7 3 1 20 Shock waves gave rise to excessive boundary layer growth on the front ramp The boundary layer was removed through the ramp bleed slot and bypassed the subsonic diffuser and engine where it would otherwise have caused excessive duct loss and unacceptable distortion at the engine 21 Since the ramp bleed slot was in the subsonic diffuser and downstream of the shock system changes in flow demanded by the engine would be accommodated with corresponding changes in the bleed slot flow without significantly affecting the external shock pattern Engine flow reductions caused by throttling or shutting down were dealt with by dump door opening 21 The dump doors were closed at cruise to prevent loss in thrust since air leaking from the duct does not contribute to the pressure recovery in the intake 18 Since the intake area was optimal for cruise an auxiliary inlet was provided to meet the higher engine air flow needed for take off Distortion of the flow at the engine face also had to be addressed leading to an aerodynamic cascade with the auxiliary door 21 Forces from the internal airflow on the intake structure are rearward drag on the initial converging section where the supersonic deceleration takes place and forward on the diverging duct where subsonic deceleration takes place up to the engine entry The sum of the two forces gave a 63 thrust contribution at cruise from the intake part of the propulsion system 16 In order to achieve the necessary accuracy in the control of the intake ramp and spill positioning it was found necessary to use a digital signal processor in the Air Intake Control Units This was developed in around 1972 relatively late in the programme by the Electronics and Space Systems division of the British Aircraft Corporation at Filton The Air Intake Control Units ensured the required fuel economy for transatlantic flights The digital processor also accurately calculated the necessary engine speed scheduling to ensure an adequate surge margin under all engine and airframe operating conditions Concorde s Air Intake Control System also pioneered the use of digital data highways multiplexed serial data buses which connected the Air Intake Sensor Units that collected aerodynamic data at the nose of the aircraft total pressure static pressure angle of attack and sideslip and sent it to the Air Intake Control Units located nearer the air intakes a distance of around 190 ft 58 m using screened twisted pair cables to replace what would have been a much greater weight in aircraft wiring had only analogue signal wiring and pneumatic piping been used The intake control system had the unique ability to keep the powerplants operating correctly and to aid recovery whatever the pilots the aircraft and the atmosphere were doing in combination at the time The overall pressure ratio for the powerplant at Mach 2 0 cruise at 51 000 ft 15 500 m was about 82 1 with 7 3 1 from the intake and 11 3 1 from the two engine compressors far higher than any subsonic aircraft of the day giving a correspondingly high thermal efficiency of about 43 3 20 Exhaust nozzle edit nbsp Concorde s variable geometry exhaust nozzle nbsp Concorde s exhaust system usage when A taking off B supersonic C thrust reversingThe variable geometry exhaust nozzle developed by SNECMA consisted of two eyelids which varied their position in the exhaust flow dependent on the flight regime for example when fully closed into the exhaust flow they acted as thrust reversers aiding deceleration from landing to taxi speed In the fully open cruise position together with the engine nozzle they formed an ejector nozzle to control the expansion of the exhaust The eyelids formed the divergent passage while the engine exhaust ejected or pumped the secondary flow from the intake ramp bleed slot The expanding flow in the diverging section caused a forward thrust force on the exhaust nozzle a 29 contribution to the overall propulsion system thrust at cruise 16 During cruise at Mach 2 02 each Olympus 593 was producing around 10 000 lbf 44 kN of thrust equivalent to 36 000 hp 27 000 kW per engine 22 Eames SAE Transactions 1991 however mentions the cruise thrust of each engine to be 6 790 lbf 30 kN which corresponds to 2 000 hp 1 500 kW per engine and 100 000 hp 75 000 kW for the entire vehicle 10 000 lbf is perhaps the maximum thrust available at cruising speed used during acceleration and climb just before transitioning to cruise The difference between the two thrust figures above is due to the altitude at which the aircraft is flying Concorde climbs from 50 000 ft 15 200 m to 60 000 ft 18 300 m when cruising since the aircraft becomes lighter as it burns fuel Each engine would produce approximately 10 000 lbf at 50 000 ft and only 6 790 lbf at 60 000 ft due to the reduction in air density citation needed The primary exhaust nozzle and jet pipe were designed for a life of 30 000 hours the Thrust Reverser Aft TRA structure for a life of 40 000 hours 23 Variants edit593 Original version designed for Concorde Thrust 20 000 lbf 89 kN dry 30 610 lbf 136 kN reheat 593 22R Powerplant fitted to prototypes Higher performance than original engine due to changes in aircraft specification Thrust 34 650 lbf 154 kN dry 37 180 lbf 165 kN reheat 593 610 14 28 Final version fitted to production Concorde Thrust 32 000 lbf 142 kN dry 38 050 lbf 169 kN reheatEngines on display editPreserved examples of the Rolls Royce Snecma Olympus 593 are on display at the following museums Aerospace Bristol Bristol UK 24 Newark Air Museum Newark UK 25 In addition to these museums other sites that display examples of the Olympus 593 include Talbot Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Illinois US 26 Weber Space Science and Technology Building at the Georgia Institute of Technology Georgia US 27 Whittle building at the Cranfield University Cranfield UK nbsp An engine pair with thrust reversers at the Musee aeronautique et spatial Safran nbsp An engine on display at Cranfield UniversitySpecifications Olympus 593 Mk 610 edit nbsp Turbine and reheat gutter section of an Olympus 593 on display at the Fleet Air Arm MuseumData from Jane s 28 29 General characteristics Type turbojet Length 4 039 m 13 ft 3 0 in Diameter 1 212 m 3 ft 11 7 in Dry weight 3 175 kg 7 000 lb Components Compressor Axial flow 7 stage low pressure 7 stage high pressure Combustors Nickel alloy construction annular chamber 16 vaporizing burners each with twin outlets Turbine Two stages one high pressure one low pressure Fuel type Jet A1Performance Maximum thrust wet 169 2 kN 38 000 lbf dry 139 4 kN 31 300 lbf Overall pressure ratio 15 5 1 with aircraft stationary Overall pressure ratio about 82 1 at Mach 2 0 includes pressure rise in intake 7 3 1 and in engine 11 3 1 which is less than when stationary due to ram temperature rise 20 Air mass flow 186 kg 410 lb s Specific fuel consumption 1 195 lb lbf h 33 8 g kN s cruise 1 39 lb lbf h 39 g kN s SL sea level citation needed Thrust to weight ratio 5 4 1See also editRelated development Rolls Royce OlympusComparable engines Kolesov RD 36 51 Kuznetsov NK 144 Pratt amp Whitney J58 General Electric YJ93 General Electric GE4Related lists List of aircraft enginesReferences edit a b c Olympus the first forty years Alan Baxter RRHT No15 ISBN 978 0 9511710 9 7 p 135 a b Leney David Macdonald David July 2020 Aerospatiale BAC Concorde 1969 onwards all models Sparkford Somerset Haynes Publishing ISBN 978 1 84425 818 5 a b c d e Hooker Stanley 1984 Not much of an Engineer an autobiography Assisted by Bill Gunston Shrewsbury England Airlife pp 154 155 ISBN 9780906393352 OCLC 11437258 Development of ABE Theory in Russia Past Present and Future Ivanov Central Institute of Aviation Motors Moscow 111116 a b c 1971 0615 Flight Archive www flightglobal com Archived from the original on 23 June 2015 Beanland M H 1969 Development of the Olympus 593 Flight International 16 Archived from the original on 3 November 2012 Aero Engines Flight 28 6 January 1966 Flight April 1966 flightglobal com Retrieved 18 April 2018 Testing of Concorde s engine on a Vulcan Historical Highlights Flight International 14 17 April 1969 Up to date with Rolls Royce Bristol Flight International London IPC Transport Press 7 February 1974 Archived from the original on 28 December 2014 CONCORDE SST CONCORDE B www concordesst com Retrieved 18 April 2018 a b concorde Bristol Siddeley 1967 0824 Flight Archive www flightglobal com Archived from the original on 6 August 2010 a b Concorde technical specs powerplant Concorde SST Gordon Roxburgh Archived from the original on 29 October 2023 Retrieved 29 October 2023 During the Supersonic cruse only 8 of the power is derived by the engine with the other 29 being from Nozzles and an impressive 63 from the intakes Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1975 76 ISBN 0 531 03250 7 p 706 a b c Brian Trubshaw Test Pilot ISBN 0 7509 1838 1 Appendix VIIIb 1971 0613 Flight Archive www flightglobal com Archived from the original on 23 June 2015 a b How Supersonic Inlets Work J Thomas Anderson Copyright Lockheed Martin Corporation published by Aero Engine Historical Society at enginehistory org Carlo Kopp June 1997 Profile The BAC TSR 2 Australian Aviation 1997 June Ausairpower net retrieved 19 February 2007 First published in Australian Aviation a b c Jet Propulsion Nicholas Cumpsty ISBN 0 521 59674 2 p 149 a b c Design and Development of an Air Intake for a Supersonic Transport Aircraft Rettie and Lewis Journal of Aircraft November December 1968 Vol 5 No 6 Hooker Sir Stanley Gunston Bill 20 September 2011 Not Much of an Engineer Crowood ISBN 9781847973252 Retrieved 18 April 2018 via Google Books 1971 0614 Flight Archive www flightglobal com Archived from the original on 23 June 2015 Things to see and do Aerospace Bristol Retrieved 31 August 2022 Engine Collection Retrieved 4 December 2022 Rolls Royce Dedicates Concorde s Olympus Engine to AE AE Illinois Vol 16 2014 ASDL Unveils a Piece of Aviation History Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering ae gatech edu Retrieved 2 September 2023 Rolls Royce SNECMA Olympus Janes Transport News Janes 25 July 2000 Archived from the original on 6 August 2010 Retrieved 9 November 2008 Data on Large Turbofan Engines 23 February 2001 Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 18 April 2018 M H Beanland Development of the Olympus 593 1969 Flight InternationalExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rolls Royce Snecma Olympus 593 Four Olympus Engines will Propel Concorde a 1965 advertisement for the Olympus in Flight Olympus for Concorde a 1966 Flight article on the basis of the Olympus 593 for Concorde Olympian buckets and spades a 1971 Flight International article on the Olympus 593s Type 28 TRA secondary nozzle thrust reverser Olympus Flight testing a 1972 Flight article on testing the Olympus 593 Concorde Olympus 593 MK 610 Engines Heritage Concorde Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rolls Royce Snecma Olympus 593 amp oldid 1217784830, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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