GE Rolls-Royce Fighter Engine Team Beats Test Schedule with First Engine

Feb. 2, 2009
First complete engine assembled following U.S. Government validation of the F136 design in 2008.

EVENDALE, OHIO -- The GE Rolls-Royce Fighter Engine Team has begun testing its first production-configuration F136 engine for the F-35 Lightning II aircraft a month ahead of contract schedule.

In keeping with previous contractual milestones, the first engine test was completed within budget and on schedule.

The first complete new-build F136 engine began testing Jan. 30, 2009, under the System Development and Demonstration (SDD) contract with the US Government Joint Program Office for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program. This represents the first complete engine assembled following U.S. Government validation of the F136 design in 2008.

The F136 program has already totaled more than 800 hours of risk-reduction testing with two earlier engine prototypes, incorporating new-build components.

The first runs of the new F136 engine occurred at the GE facility in Evendale, Ohio. Additional engine builds are already under way, with several engines scheduled to be in test by the end of 2009.

"This new F136 engine represents a major achievement for our powerful partnership," says Jean Lydon-Rodgers, President of the GE Rolls-Royce Fighter Engine Team. "We are into the exciting part of the program, as we begin demonstrating what the F136 can do. We’ve combined the best technologies from GE and Rolls-Royce into an outstanding design that will benefit the military customer over the long run."

"This is our biggest milestone yet. Once again, the F136 team delivered on time and on budget," says Mark Rhodes, Senior Vice President of the GE Rolls-Royce Fighter Engine Team. "With a significant temperature margin and affordable growth built into the design, the F136 will offer outstanding value when it becomes available to the first military customer in 2012."

The F136 fighter aircraft engine will be available to power all variants of the F-35 Lightning II aircraft for the U.S. military and eight partner nations.