General Electric CJ805
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The General Electric CJ805 is a jet engine which was developed by
GE Aviation GE Aviation, a subsidiary of General Electric, is headquartered in Evendale, Ohio, outside Cincinnati. GE Aviation is among the top aircraft engine suppliers, and offers engines for the majority of commercial aircraft. GE Aviation is part of t ...
in the late 1950s. It was a civilian version of the
J79 The General Electric J79 is an axial-flow turbojet engine built for use in a variety of fighter and bomber aircraft and a supersonic cruise missile. The J79 was produced by General Electric Aircraft Engines in the United States, and under lice ...
and differed only in detail. It was developed in two versions. The basic CJ805-3 was a
turbojet The turbojet is an airbreathing jet engine which is typically used in aircraft. It consists of a gas turbine with a propelling nozzle. The gas turbine has an air inlet which includes inlet guide vanes, a compressor, a combustion chamber, an ...
and powered the Convair 880, while CJ805-23 (military designation TF35), a
turbofan The turbofan or fanjet is a type of airbreathing jet engine that is widely used in aircraft propulsion. The word "turbofan" is a portmanteau of "turbine" and "fan": the ''turbo'' portion refers to a gas turbine engine which achieves mechanic ...
derivative, powered the Convair 990 airliners.


Design and development


Impetus

Turbojet engines consist of a compressor at the front, a burner area, and then a turbine that powers the compressor. In order to reach worthwhile compression ratios, compressors consist of multiple "stages", each further compressing the air leaving the previous one. One common problem with early jet engines was the phenomenon of "surging" or
compressor stall A compressor stall is a local disruption of the airflow in the compressor of a gas turbine or turbocharger. A stall that results in the complete disruption of the airflow through the compressor is referred to as a compressor surge. The severity of ...
. Stalls could occur when the approaching airflow was not in-line with the aircraft inlet to the compressor or when the throttle was advanced too quickly. When engines had to be designed with pressure ratios greater than about 5, to meet demands for reduced fuel consumption, a new stalling phenomenon came to light, rotating stall. It occurred at low compressor speeds and caused blades in the first stage to break. This troublesome speed area is known as "off-design" and required the invention of special devices to make the compressor work. The compressor worked well near its maximum speed, known as "design", with a fixed area convergence from entry to exit to go with the design values of compression/density and with fixed blade angles set to give low pressure losses. At low speeds the much lower compression didn't squeeze the air enough to get through the now too-small exit. The velocity triangle combined the now too-slow entry air with the blade speed and gave a stalling angle. One common solution used on early engines, and widely used today, was to give the air extra escape holes to speed up the entry air, i.e. the use of "bleed air" which is allowed to escape from openings near the middle of the compressor stages and vented overboard. The bleed valves close as the engine RPM increases towards operational speeds. Another solution was the use of variable inlet vanes. The angle of incidence of the vanes at the front of the engine is changed to partially block the inlet area, which reduces the compression, and also angle the air onto the compressor blades to prevent stalling. This has the advantage of being more efficient than allowing valuable compressed air to escape, although fuel consumption at low speeds is relatively unimportant. Further increases in pressure ratio, demanded by government procurement agencies and commercial airlines for long-range aircraft, caused a bigger mismatch of flow areas/density changes and blade angles. Two approaches were followed: slowing the blade speeds at the front of the compressor by splitting it into two separately rotating parts (spools) or making stators variable on the first few stages as well as the inlet vanes. A disadvantage is significant mechanical complexity as each stator blade has to be independently rotated to the desired angles. Two spools need more bearings and turned out to be heavier. Bleed valves, two or three spools and variable stators are all used together on modern engines to cope with rotating stall during starts and at low speeds and to allow surge-free fast accelerations.
Rolls-Royce Rolls-Royce (always hyphenated) may refer to: * Rolls-Royce Limited, a British manufacturer of cars and later aero engines, founded in 1906, now defunct Automobiles * Rolls-Royce Motor Cars, the current car manufacturing company incorporated in ...
considered the variable stator idea in the 1940s, but abandoned it until using it in the 1980s on the V2500 engine. They began development of two-spool designs, a concept that was also selected by Pratt & Whitney. The variable stator path was only selected by GE after a year-long design study competition comparing two spools and several stages of variable stators with objectives of efficient performance at cruise Mach 0.9 and at Mach 2, increased thrust, reduced fuel consumption and weight. The J79 emerged as a powerful, lightweight design 2,000 lb lighter than its 2-shaft competitor for the B-58, the J57 engine, and GE began considering it as the basis for a high-power engine for commercial use.


CJ805 program

In 1952, Chapman Walker's design team at GE built a one-off prototype of a jet engine designed specifically for transatlantic airliners. It used a single-stage fan powered by the same turbine shaft as the main engine compressor, as opposed to the Pratt & Whitney designs that were using a separate power shaft to run the fan. The GE design proved to be difficult to start and operate and was not developed further. In 1955 Jack Parker took over GE's Aircraft Gas Turbine division. He hired Dixon Speas to begin interviewing executives at airlines to try to get a sense of the future market. Parker asked Speas to interview not the CEO's, but executives that might be the CEO by the time GE was ready to enter the civilian jet engine market. Parker, Speas and Neil Burgess, who ran the J79 program, spent a month meeting with AA,
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,
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, Swissair and SAS. The meetings demonstrated that those airlines that were flying propeller aircraft across the
Atlantic The Atlantic Ocean is the second-largest of the world's five oceans, with an area of about . It covers approximately 20% of Earth's surface and about 29% of its water surface area. It is known to separate the " Old World" of Africa, Europe an ...
were all looking to replace them with jets.


CJ805-3

Around the same time,
Convair Convair, previously Consolidated Vultee, was an American aircraft manufacturing company that later expanded into rockets and spacecraft. The company was formed in 1943 by the merger of Consolidated Aircraft and Vultee Aircraft. In 1953, i ...
was canvassing US carriers and found demand for a smaller jet aircraft for medium-range domestic routes. They began development of what would become the 880, and approached Burgess to see if GE could develop a version of the J79 for this role. Burgess responded by quickly sketching a version of the J79 with the
afterburner An afterburner (or reheat in British English) is an additional combustion component used on some jet engines, mostly those on military supersonic aircraft. Its purpose is to increase thrust, usually for supersonic flight, takeoff, and co ...
removed and replaced by a
thrust reverser Thrust reversal, also called reverse thrust, is the temporary diversion of an aircraft engine's thrust for it to act against the forward travel of the aircraft, providing deceleration. Thrust reverser systems are featured on many jet aircraft ...
, giving them an estimated unit price of $125,000 per engine. The 880's primary sales feature over the competing
Douglas DC-8 The Douglas DC-8 (sometimes McDonnell Douglas DC-8) is a long-range narrow-body airliner built by the American Douglas Aircraft Company. After losing the May 1954 US Air Force tanker competition to the Boeing KC-135, Douglas announced in July ...
and Boeing 707 was a higher cruise speed. This demanded more engine power from a lighter design, which naturally led to a design like the J79. To gain experience with the engine in a civil setting, GE equipped a Douglas RB-66 with the new engine and flew simulated civil aviation routes out of Edwards Air Force Base. As development progressed, the 707 began to enter service, and noise complaints became a serious issue. There was already a lawsuit, by residents around Newark airport, concerning the noise from existing propeller-driven aircraft such as the Super Constellation, Stratocruiser and DC-7C. One way to reduce this problem is to mix cold air into the jet exhaust, which was accomplished on early engines with the addition of scalloped nozzles. This solution was also adopted for the CJ805.


CJ805-23

Several airlines asked Convair for a larger version of the 880 with potential transatlantic range. Such a design would be larger to hold more seating, as well as having to carry more fuel. To power it, a more powerful engine would be needed. By this time, the
Rolls-Royce Conway The Rolls-Royce RB.80 Conway was the first turbofan engine to enter service. Development started at Rolls-Royce in the 1940s, but the design was used only briefly, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, before other turbofan designs replaced it. ...
was entering service, and the
Pratt & Whitney JT3D The Pratt & Whitney JT3D is an early turbofan aircraft engine derived from the Pratt & Whitney JT3C. It was first run in 1958 and was first flown in 1959 under a B-45 Tornado test aircraft. Over 8,000 JT3Ds were produced between 1959 and 1985. M ...
was following close behind. These designs both had twin-spool compressors, as opposed to using variable stators, and the lower speed of the front, low-pressure, spool made it easy to power a fan. The problems RR and P&W had addressed with the two-spool system had been solved on the J79 with the variable stators, so in relative terms, the single compressor rotational speed was much faster than the low-pressure stage of these other engines. This meant it was not suitable for direct connection to a fan stage. Instead, GE solved this problem with the addition of a completely separate fan system at the rear of the engine, powered by a new turbine stage. The system was essentially a bolt-on extension to the existing design and had almost no effect on the operation of the original engine. Each turbine blade was an integral part of a "blucket", the outboard section of which was a fan rotor blade. Running freely on a stub shaft, a series of buckets, mounted on a disc, made up the aft rotor assembly. The efflux from the turbojet expanded through the (inner) turbine annulus, thus providing power directly to the fan blades located in the outer annulus. A full-length cowl, an annular exhaust system and a bucket thrust-reverser were fitted for the Convair 990. The unique feature of the -23 was the transonic single stage fan.
NACA The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) was a United States federal agency founded on March 3, 1915, to undertake, promote, and institutionalize aeronautical research. On October 1, 1958, the agency was dissolved and its assets ...
had done a lot of research on multistage transonic compressors during the 50s. Using this data, GE decided to design and test a high-pressure ratio single stage transonic fan. Much to their amazement the unit more than met the design target, including that of high efficiency. A modified version of this research unit was subsequently incorporated into the CJ805-23 aft fan. With no experience of transonic fan design and little time available, Pratt & Whitney had to resort to using 2 fan stages to produce a similar pressure ratio for their JT-3D turbofan. Although not an overhung design, the -23 transonic fan did not require any inlet guide vanes. There was, however, a series of structural vanes to help support the fan casing.


Production ends

With additional changes, fuselage stretches, and the addition of
anti-shock bodies Anti-shock body is the name given by Richard T. Whitcomb to a pod positioned on the upper surface of a wing. Its purpose is to reduce wave drag while travelling at transonic speeds (Mach number, Mach 0.8–1.0), which includes the typical cruising ...
, the new airliner emerged as the Convair 990. However, by this time the project had suffered several delays, allowing new versions of the DC-8 and 707 to lock up major sales. In the end, Convair sold only 102 880s and 990s in total, losing $600 million on the program. There was only one other customer for the 805-23. In 1961, Sud Aviation approached GE to pitch them on the idea of adapting the
Rolls-Royce Avon The Rolls-Royce Avon was the first axial flow jet engine designed and produced by Rolls-Royce. Introduced in 1950, the engine went on to become one of their most successful post-World War II engine designs. It was used in a wide variety of ...
powered Caravelle to the 805-23, producing a flying technology showcase for both companies. For this role they introduced a new version with a relatively short fan cowl and thrust reverser, compared to the full-length cowling on the 990. Rolls-Royce quickly built and tested an aft-fan demonstrator Avon to compete with the greater thrust and lower specific fuel consumption of the CJ805-23. In the end, the Caravelle was instead re-engined with the P&W
JT8D The Pratt & Whitney JT8D is a low-bypass (0.96 to 1) turbofan engine introduced by Pratt & Whitney in February 1963 with the inaugural flight of the Boeing 727. It was a modification of the Pratt & Whitney J52 turbojet engine which powered the ...
turbofan. The CJ805 program was not a commercial success, and GE lost approximately $80 million on the program with only a few hundred engines produced in total. In service, the design proved fragile, but these problems led to the programs ultimate success for the company. During the time they were talking to airline CEOs, in 1956 the company hired the former head of American Airlines' maintenance department, John Montgomery, to run the production lines. Montgomery gathered comments from the industry on the state of the engine market, and found that many were complaining about the unreliability of the large piston engines then being used, notably the
Wright R-3350 The Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone is an American twin-row, supercharged, air-cooled, radial aircraft engine with 18 cylinders displacing nearly . Power ranged from 2,200 to over 3,700 hp (1,640 to 2,760 kW), depending on the model. ...
. Wright management refused to put more money into the program to improve the engine, leading to a serious backlash from the customers. Montgomery hired Walter Van Duyan away from Wright to set up GE's service department, and they provided excellent service in spite of the engine's problems. GE quickly gained a reputation for standing behind their products that endures to this day. The work on the 805 also had several spin-off products. Among them was another aft-fan design, the
General Electric CF700 The General Electric CF700 (military designation TF37) is an aft-fan turbofan development of the CJ610 turbojet. The fan blades are an extension of the low-pressure turbine blades. Variants ;CF700-2B:Baseline aft-fan CJ610 variant rated at for ...
used in the
Dassault Falcon 20 The Dassault Falcon 20 is a French business jet developed and manufactured by Dassault Aviation. The first business jet developed by the firm, it became the first of a family of business jets to be produced under the same name; of these, both t ...
business jet, which was developed from the
General Electric J85 The General Electric J85 is a small single-shaft turbojet engine. Military versions produce up to of thrust dry; afterburning variants can reach up to . The engine, depending upon additional equipment and specific model, weighs from . It is on ...
in the same way as the J79 was adapted to the 805. Their fan technology was also used in the
XV-5 Vertifan The Ryan XV-5 Vertifan was a jet-powered V/STOL experimental aircraft in the 1960s. The United States Army (US Army) commissioned the Ryan VZ-11-RY (re-designated XV-5A in 1962) in 1961, along with the Lockheed VZ-10 Hummingbird (re-designated ...
."The Power to Fly" Brian Rowe, Pen & Sword Aviation 2005, , p.25


Variants and applications

;CJ805-1: ;CJ805-2: ;CJ805-3: Convair 880 ;CJ805-3A: Convair 880-22 : Revised variable inlet guide vane and stator control. ;CJ805-3B: Convair 880-22M : Increased thrust. ;CJ805-11: ;CJ805-13: ;CJ805-21: ;CJ805-23:Flight testing in a Douglas RB-66: Aft-fan variant with a direct drive fan attached to a free-running LP turbine. ;CJ805-23A: ;CJ805-23B: Convair 990 ;CJ805-23C:Intended for the proposed Sud Aviation Caravelle 10A. Only a single airframe, intended as a prototype for the US market, was equipped with the CJ805. ;TF35:Military version of the CJ805-23 turbofan.


Specifications (CJ805-3B)


Specifications (CJ805-23B)


See also


Notes


References


Citations


Bibliography

* * * *


External links


General Electric Aviation, J79 page



Animation of J79 turbojet (German language)
{{USAF gas turbine engines CJ805 1950s turbojet engines Low-bypass turbofan engines