GE,
Textron team up to make new turboprop engine, aircraft
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[November 16, 2015]
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - GE Aviation
said on Monday it had teamed up with Textron Aviation to produce an
all-new turboprop aircraft and engine for the general aviation market,
part of an effort GE expects will generate up to $1 billion in annual
sales of engines by around 2020.
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GE Aviation, a unit of General Electric, said its so-called advanced
turboprop engine takes aim at a widely used engine by United
Technologies unit Pratt & Whitney known as the PT6, which has
dominated the small turboprop market for 50 years, and has produced
51,000 units.
GE said it plans to invest up to $1 billion in the project,
including $400 million for a manufacturing center in Europe.
The venture with General Dynamics Corp subsidiary Textron is
aimed at producing an all-new single-engine aircraft seating up to
12 passengers, the companies said. The target range and speed are in
excess of 1,500 nautical miles and 280 knots, according to Textron.
GE said Textron's decision to develop an all-new aircraft using the
engine allowed GE to justify the engine investment. Textron, maker
of Cessna, Beechcraft and Hawker airplanes and Bell helicopters, is
the largest user of small turboprop engines.
The new engine will use technology proven on GE’s larger jetliner
and military engines and adapt it to an engine suitable for single
and twin-engine general aviation aircraft and helicopters, said Brad
Mottier, head of GE business and general aviation.
“Our plan is to create a family of engines like Pratt successfully
did, and we’re talking to other airframers now,” he said in a
interview.
Mottier said the engine would have up to 1,650 horsepower, burn 20
percent less fuel than the competing PT6, and generate 10 percent
more thrust at cruising altitude, in part because of integrated
computer control of both the propeller and engine.
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GE began the effort by purchasing Walter Engine, a turboprop engine
maker in the Czech Republic, and began talking with airframe makers
about four years ago. GE already is producing a smaller PT6
competitor known as the H80, with up to 850 horsepower.
“We’ve been working with airframers around the world to see if we
could design an engine that would create essentially a new class of
aircraft because frankly, if we didn’t bring something significantly
different or better, why would the airframers change engines,”
Mottier said.
(Reporting by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)
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