Providing graphic proof
of aviation’s never-ending drive for higher bypass ratios and greater
propulsive efficiency, General Electric’s gargantuan GE9X, the largest
turbofan ever to fly, is poised to return to the skies in November for a
final evaluation campaign on the company’s Boeing 747-400 flying testbed.
Ready for flight test in
its definitive production configuration, the 105,000-lb.-thrust GE9X is in
development for Boeing’s new 777X twinjet flagship, about to enter the
closing stages of an intense and broad-ranging process that began with core
tests in late 2015. The effort will clear it for the start of flight tests of
the 777-9, the initial 777X-family variant, in March 2019, followed shortly
by certification of the engine itself.
The flight-test engine, which
is due to be attached to the 747-400 at GE’s Victorville, California,
flight-test operations facility in the second half of October, is one of
eight GE9X development units in the baseline program. A further batch of
eight compliance engines, plus two spares, are also under assembly, with the
first expected to arrive at Boeing’s Everett, Washington, site in November
for completion with buildup units and accessories prior to installation on
the first 777-9.
Rebuilt for the
flight-test program, Engine 004 is the same unit that was used for the
initial flight phase between March and May. The rebuild adds stronger
variable stator vane (VSV) actuator lever arms, which in the original design
failed during runs of the second ground-test engine as it was being used to
demonstrate extreme performance conditions required to pass the official FAA
150-hr. block test. During this intensive test, the engine was run at triple
red-line conditions (maximum fan speed, core speed and exhaust gas
temperature) to evaluate the engine at its operational limits.
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