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General Electric YJ101

1970s American prototype turbojet aircraft engine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

General Electric YJ101
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The General Electric YJ101 was an afterburning turbojet engine, as signified by its "J" designation, in the 15,000 lbf class. It was designed for the Northrop P-530 Cobra[1] but its initial application was the Northrop YF-17 entry in the Lightweight Fighter (LWF) competition. It was subsequently developed into the widely used General Electric F404.

Quick facts YJ101, Type ...
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Design

Two essential requirements for the engine were reliability, which can be measured by the number of times a particular engine model has to be shutdown during flight (in-flight shut-down rate), and handling, which means stall-free operation throughout the flight envelope together with allowing the pilot to make unrestricted throttle movements anywhere between idle and maximum afterburner.[2]

The engine used continuous bypass bleed from the compressor to cool the afterburner liner and nozzle. The bypass air was not mixed with hot air from the turbine[3] as the afterburner was a simple turbojet style with no requirement for intentional mixing of the bypass flow with the turbine exhaust.[4] However, mixing is an important requirement for turbofan engines.

General Electric chose to describe the engine differently depending on circumstance. To emphasize simplicity it was a "leaky turbojet". For advanced technology it was "the world's first self-cooled turbojet".[5] This referred to using the compressor bypass air to cool the afterburner instead of using much hotter turbine exhaust gas.

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Applications

Specifications (YJ101)

Data from Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1975-76 [6], NASA Technical Report[7]

General characteristics

  • Type: Two-shaft afterburning turbojet with continuous bypass bleed
  • Length: 145 inches (3,683 mm)
  • Diameter: 32.5 inches (826 mm), 26.32 inches (669 mm) inlet[8]
  • Dry weight: 1,870 pounds (848 kg)[9] (approx)

Components

  • Compressor: Three-stage axial LP, seven-stage axial HP
  • Combustors: Annular
  • Turbine: Single-stage LP, single-stage HP

Performance

See also

Related development

Related lists

References

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