Print
Email
>
>
F-35 Alternate Engine Encounters Development Problems
Tags
2011 budget Acquisition Reform Aegis AEHF Afghan surge Afghanistan AgustaWestland airborne laser Airbus Al Qaeda Allies Alternate Engine Al-Yamamah American Enterprise Institute Ammunition Industrial Base APL Arms Control Arms Sales Arms Transfers Army Arrow Ashton Carter Babcock & Wilcox BAE Systems Bath Iron Works Bechtel BMDR Boeing Brown C-17 C-2 CAPE Carriers CENTCOM CH-47 Chabraja China climate change Cluster Bombs Cluster Munitions Conflicts of Interest Constellation CVN-78 CVN-91 cyber attack cyber defense cyber offense Cyber Threats Cyber Warfare DDG-1000 DDG-51 defense acquisitions Defense Budget Defense Business Board Defense Industry Defense Planning Defense Spending deficit Democrats & Defense deterrence Donald Rumsfeld Dong Feng DRS Technologies EA-18G EADS Efficiency Initiative EFV EH101 energy security Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle Export Controls F-16 F-22 F-35 Finmeccanica FMS FMTV force structure forcible entry Ford class Foreign Military Sales Free Trade Future Combat Systems GBI GCV General Dynamics General Mattis General McChrystal Global Hawk Global Strike GMR Greyhound Ground Combat Vehicle guns versus butter Handheld Manpack Radio Hapag-Looyd Helicopters Heritage Foundation High-Speed Rail Homeland Security Humvee hybrid warfare ICBM Inherently Governmental insourcing Intellectual Property Intelligence Community Iran Iran Sanctions Iraq Israel Jammer JFCOM Joint Forces Command Joint Heavy Lift Joint Operating Environment Joint Stars Joint Strike Fighter JSTARS JTRS KC-45 KC-X Kent Kresa Korea Larry Prior Linda Hudson Littoral Combat Ship Lockheed Martin Logistics Lynn M1 Mabus Maersk ManTech manufacturing Marine Corps Marine One Marinette Massachusetts M-ATV MH-60 Mid-term election Mine Countermeasures Mine Warfare Missile Defense MQ-9 MRAP NASA National Security Strategy NATO Navy NCADE Network-Centric Warfare Next Generation Jammer NGEN Nigeria NII Nimitz class NLOS-LS NMCI Non-Proliferation Norm Dicks North Korea Northrop Grumman NPR Nuclear Power Nuclear Shipbuilding Nuclear strategy Nuclear weapons Nunn-McCurdy O&M Operations and Maintenance Oshkosh Osprey P-8 Partnering Patriot PBL Performance-Based Logistics Persian Gulf Phalanx presidential helicopter Private Contractors Public-Private Partnerships QDR QHSR Rapid Fielding Initiative Ray Mabus Raytheon Rebalancing Reset RIMPAC Robert Gates Rocket Motors Ron Epstein RQ-7 Russia S-300 Samsung SBINet Scan Eagle Secretary Gates Shadow shipbuilding Sikorsky Soft Power solid rocket motor South Korea Space Tracking and Surveillance Satellite Space-X SSBN SSBN(X) Standard Missile Standard Missile 3 START Treaty Strategic Architecture strategic arms control Submarines Super Hornet Sustainable Defense Sustainment Taiwan Taliban Tanker terror terrorism THAAD Trade Deficit Trade Policy Trident Trident submarine UH-60 Unmanned Aerial Systems Unmanned Aerial Vehicles US Ports US101 USS Missouri V-22 Vertical Lift Virginia class weapons spending Wes Bush WGS Wideband Global Satcom William Perry World Trade Organization WTO Yemen
Recent
<< Previous
Next >>

F-35 Alternate Engine Encounters Development Problems


The alternate engine that General Electric is developing for use on the F-35 joint strike fighter has run into problems. After nine months of "system development and demonstration" testing, it has only managed to run for 52 hours and had four failures. At the same stage in development, the competing Pratt & Whitney engine had undergone 700 hours of SDD testing with no failures.

The repeated failure of the GE engine has given rise to rumors that its combustor -- the vital component that burns a mixture of fuel and compressed air -- will have to be redesigned. One version of the rumor has GE giving up all its testing time at the Air Force's Arnold Engineering Development Center until next April -- the kind of lengthy delay typically associated with a design problem. If true, this would put the GE team in a financial bind, because it has already expended 70% of funding for the current phase of development.

A recent "joint estimating team" finding of potential cost overruns in development of the F-35 fighter traced 28% of projected cost problems to the alternate engine. While the estimating team is probably being too pessimistic about the fighter, the prediction of a big funding shortfall on the alternate engine appears to reflect the difficulties the GE engine has encountered. A normal failure rate in development of a new gas turbine engine would be on the order of one incident every 300 hours, but GE seems to be having problems every 13 hours. As a result, it may be up to a year behind schedule on its testing plan.

This issue underscores a logical flaw in the case for an alternate engine. Backers argue that having a second engine is insurance against a design flaw in the primary powerplant being built by Pratt & Whitney for the single-engine F-35 fighter. But that reasoning works both ways -- add a second engine to the mix, and you've doubled the potential for design issues, just like you've doubled the cost of developing engines by having to fund two design teams and two development programs. With several billion dollars remaining to be spent before the alternate engine joins the fleet, there is still time to rethink whether a second engine is really needed. The Pentagon says one engine is enough.

Loren B. Thompson, Ph.D.

Return to Early Warning Blog
<< Previous
Next >>
1600 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 900
Arlington, VA 22209
P: 703-522-5828 | F: 703-522-5837
©2009 Lexington Institute. All Rights Reserved.
Website designed by Borcz:Dixon | Powered by Agency of Record