Mon, Mar 10, 2014
Primary Function Will Be Testing Components For Next Generation Aero Engines
Rolls-Royce will expand its aerospace research and technology capabilities in Dahlewitz, building a new test-bed for power gearboxes which will support the development of next generation aero-engine designs. Close to 20% of the total investment of €65m (approx. $89 million) in the new test-bed will be funded by the German and the Brandenburg government. The investment in the facility by Rolls-Royce is part of the company’s existing mid to long-term technology investment plans.

Rolls-Royce recently shared details of its next generation engine designs, one of which, called UltraFan, includes a geared engine design, which will use components of the type that will be tested at the new Dahlewitz facility.
Rolls-Royce has a long heritage of gear design capability from turbo-shaft, turbo-prop and LiftFan gearbox designs and will use that knowledge and capability to develop technology for the very high bypass ratio designs of future engines. The UltraFan design, with a variable pitch fan system, is based on such technology and could be ready for service from 2025. It will offer at least 25 per cent improvement in fuel burn and emissions compared with the first generation of Trent engines.
Rolls-Royce Germany has acquired exceptional engineering capability over the past 20 years and has already implemented development packages for the Trent engine family. A new test-bed for the most powerful version of the Trent XWB, the world’s most efficient engine flying today, and the newest Trent engine, will be inaugurated in Dahlewitz in the second half of this year.
“We are delighted by the decision of Rolls-Royce to build this test-stand in Germany," said Secretary of State, Ministry for Economics and Energy, Brigitte Zypries during the official ground-breaking for the new site. "The proposed activities are fully in line with our funding strategy to develop the aerospace industry and will contribute further to our increasingly strong footprint in this sector.”
“Rolls-Royce has been in the region for more than 20 years now and contributed greatly to the high-tech landscape of our State," said Dietmar Woidke, Prime Minister of Brandenburg. "The company powers employment, growth and innovation in the region. It is the backbone of a thriving aerospace industry, which in Brandenburg alone employs more than 7,000 people. Leading airframers rely on Rolls-Royce technology ‘made in Brandenburg’.”
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