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General Electric J47

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J47
Preserved General Electric J47
Type Turbojet
Manufacturer General Electric
First run 21 June 1947
Major applications Boeing B-47 Stratojet
Convair B-36 Peacemaker
North American B-45 Tornado
North American F-86 Sabre
Number built 36,500
Developed from General Electric J35
Developed into General Electric J73

The General Electric J47 turbojet (GE company designation TG-190) was developed by General Electric from its earlier J35.[1] It first flew in May 1948. The J47 was the first axial-flow turbojet approved for commercial use in the United States. It was used in many types of aircraft, and more than 30,000 were manufactured before production ceased in 1956. It saw continued service in the US military until 1978. Packard built 3,025 of the engines under license.

The J47's greatest advantage, as advertised, was its array of features which were unavailable and unprecedented in any other engine. It was advertised as an 'all-weather engine' due to its anti-icing systems which allowed it to perform at high altitudes and extreme temperatures where other aircraft's performance suffered. Its development began without an explicit need for it, although this design was quickly purchased by the military for its many potential benefits.[2]

In 1978, J47s were formally withdrawn from active military duty when the Air National Guard retired the jet-boosted KC-97Js.[3] Despite this, these engines are still extensively utilized in F-86 Sabre jets owned by civilians, making them a common sight at air shows.

Design and development

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The J47 design used experience from the TG-180/J35 engine which was described by Flight magazine in 1948[4] as the most widely used American-conceived turbojet.

The turbojet featured a revolutionary anti-icing system where hollow frame struts allowed heated airflow to pass through from the compressor, allowing fighter jets equipped with the engine to function at high altitudes, and in cold conditions such as the top of Mount Washington in New Hampshire's White Mountains, where the engine was first tested.

The engine featured an electronically controlled afterburner, a system that dumped additional fuel into the combustor pipe 'behind' the engine, reheating the exhaust and producing significantly more thrust, although with greatly reduced efficiency and high fuel burn rates.

The engine production process in the Lockland facility (renamed to the Evendale facility) utilized vertical engine assembly to ensure compressor rotor balance and stability. The technological jump provided by the engine led to it becoming the most produced jet engine in aviation history, and established GE Aviation as a worldwide leader in jet propulsion.

Overhaul life for the J47 ranged from 15 hours (in 1948) to a theoretical 1,200 hours (625 achievable in practice) in 1956. For example, the J47-GE-23 was rated to run 225 hours time between overhauls. As installed on the F-86F, it experienced one in-flight shutdown every 33,000 hours in 1955 and 1956.[5]

Variants

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J47-GE-1
(TG-190A) 4,850 pounds-force (22 kN) thrust.[6]
J47-GE-2
(TG-190E) 6,000 pounds-force (27 kN) at 7,950 rpm, powered the North American FJ-2 Fury[7]
J47-GE-3
(TG-190A) 4,850 pounds-force (22 kN) thrust.[6]
J47-GE-7
(TG-190B) 5,000 pounds-force (22 kN) thrust.[6]
J47-GE-9
(TG-190B) 5,000 pounds-force (22 kN) thrust.[6]
J47-GE-11
(TG-190C) Powered the Boeing B-47A and B-47B[7]
J47-GE-13
(TG-190C) Powered the North American F-86E Sabre & North American B-45C tornado[7]
J47-GE-15
(7E-TG-190C) Powered the North American B-45C tornado[7]
J47-GE-17
(7E-TG-190D) 5,425 pounds-force (24 kN) at 7,950 rpm dry, 7,350 pounds-force (33 kN) at 7,950 rpm wet, powered the North American F-86D Sabre[7]
J47-GE-17B
5,425 pounds-force (24 kN) thrust
J47-GE-19
(TG-190C) 5,200 pounds-force (23 kN), powered the Convair B-36D & B-36F[7]
J47-GE-23
(7E-TG-190E) 5,800 pounds-force (26 kN), powered the Boeing B-47B and RB-47B[7]
J47-GE-25
5,970 pounds-force (27 kN) thrust dry, (6,970 pounds-force (31 kN) with water injection), powered the Boeing B-47E and RB-47E[7]
J47-PM-25
(TG-190E) Production by Packard Motor Car Company
J47-ST-25
(TG-190E) Production by Studebaker Corp.
J47-GE-27
(TG-190E) 5,970 pounds-force (27 kN) thrust, powered the North American F-86F Sabre[7]
J47-GE-29
(TG-190E) Similar to -27
J47-GE-33
5,550 pounds-force (25 kN) thrust, powered the F-86F & F-86K[7]

Applications

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Two J47 turbojet engines were mounted outboard of the three Pratt & Whitney R-4360 Wasp Major piston engines on each wing of the B-36.

Ground-based vehicles that used the engine include:

Nuclear-powered X39

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In the 1950s, interest in the development of nuclear-powered aircraft led GE to experiment with two nuclear-powered gas turbine designs, one based on the J47, and another new and much larger engine called the X211.

The design based on the J47 became the X39 program. This system consisted of two modified J47 engines which, instead of combusting jet fuel, received their heated, compressed air from a heat exchanger that was part of the Heat Transfer Reactor Experiment (HTRE) reactor. The X-39 was successfully operated in conjunction with three different reactors, the HTRE-1, HTRE-2 and HTRE-3.[8] Had the program not been cancelled, these engines would have been used to power the proposed Convair X-6.

Specifications (J47-GE-25)

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Data from [7]

General characteristics

  • Type: turbojet
  • Length: 145 inches (370 cm) (with tailcone)
  • Diameter: 36.75 inches (93.3 cm) maximum
  • Dry weight: 2,554 pounds (1,158 kg) dry, equipped

Components

Performance

See also

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Related development

Comparable engines

Related lists

References

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  1. ^ "1954 | 0996 | Flight Archive". www.flightglobal.com. Archived from the original on 2016-05-07.
  2. ^ Daugherty, Gina (2019-07-01). "Cold War Child: How the GE J47 Became the World's Most Produced Jet Engine". The GE Aerospace Blog | Aviation & Flight News. Retrieved 2024-02-07.
  3. ^ "TINKER HISTORY: General Electric J47 turbojet engine profile". Tinker Air Force Base. 2017-08-31. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2018-03-26. Retrieved 2016-04-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ 1956 | 0590 | Flight Archive. Flightglobal.com. Retrieved on 2013-08-16.
  6. ^ a b c d Wilkinson, Paul H. (1950). Aircraft engines of the World 1950 (11th ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons Ltd. pp. 54–55.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bridgman, Leonard (1955). Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1955-56. London: Jane's all the World's Aircraft Publishing Co. Ltd.
  8. ^ Thornton, G; Blumbeg, B. (January 1961). "Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Heat Transfer Reactor Experiments Fulfill Test Goals". Nucleonics. 19 (1). McGraw-Hill. ISSN 0096-6207.
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