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Thu, Nov 18, 2010

Accelerated Mission Tests Completed On F100-229 In Record Time

Engines Power F-15, F-16 Fighter Jets

The newest member of Pratt & Whitney's F100 engine family, the F100-PW-229 Engine Enhancement Package (EEP), has successfully completed more than 6,000 total accumulated cycles (TACs) in an accelerated mission test (AMT) at the U.S. Air Force's Arnold Engine Development Center in Tennessee. This year's long test was specifically designed to demonstrate the new engine's capabilities to provide dependable operation and significantly reduce life-cycle-costs for our customers.

"The conditions the engine experienced throughout this test represent the outer edge of the operating environment," said Mark Buongiorno, director of F100 Programs, Pratt & Whitney. "It would take the average engine 10,000 TACs, or more than 25 years of operation, to experience the same levels of time and temperature exposure built into this test plan. Furthermore, the EEP engine ran the duration of the test flawlessly, without having to replace any of the turbo machinery. Completing this benchmark test, ahead of schedule and within budget, is a great accomplishment for the Pratt & Whitney and U.S. Air Force team." 

The F100-PW-229 is designed to extend the periodic engine inspection requirement from 4,300 to 6,000 cycles, eliminating one out of every three overhaul cycles. This increase in time between overhauls provides our customers with significantly reduced maintenance and life cycle costs, which will save hundreds of millions of dollars, at a time when value and efficiency are top priorities. The F100-PW-229 EEP engine is available as a complete engine or can be easily incorporated into existing customers' engines during their normal overhaul cycle.


F-16s File Photo

Pratt & Whitney's F100 engine family powers F-16 and F-15 military fighter jets operated by the U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy and the Air Forces of 22 allied nations. Pratt & Whitney says the F100-PW-229 EEP incorporates groundbreaking technology developed for the F135 and F119 propulsion systems, the world's only fifth-generation fighter jet engines.

FMI: www.pw.utc.com

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