This article presents a study of Pratt & Whitney’s J58, till date the best and high-powered engine for manufacturing lessons required for the development of F35 Joint Strike Fighter. The J58 Blackbird engine is a variable cycle engine, a turbojet/ramjet combined-cycle engine. It is a conventional afterburning turbojet for take-off and transonic flight, and it approximates a ramjet during high-speed supersonic cruise. The power plant for the Blackbirds is a marvelous development on the part of Pratt & Whitney, as it is the only engine of its kind in the world. The noise and vibration from a J58 test was so great that it could rattle the side-view mirror off nearby cars. The engine was developed at an isolated research center in Florida. At take-off and low-speed flight, the J58 engine/afterburner provides most of the thrust. Both of the Blackbird’s twin nacelles contain an engine supersonic inlet, the J58 engine with its afterburner, and an exhaust ejector nozzle. All three components contribute to the Blackbird’s propulsive thrust in varying proportions, depending on flight speed.
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December 2013
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Powering Out of Trouble
Engineers who Built the Engine for the Fastest Ever Aircraft had to Solve two Kinds of Problems: Those Inherent to the Concept. Those Resulting from the First Set of Solutions.
Lee S. Langston is an ASME Fellow and professor emeritus of the mechanical engineering department at the University of Connecticut in Storrs.
Mechanical Engineering. Dec 2013, 135(12): 36-41 (6 pages)
Published Online: December 1, 2013
Citation
Langston, L. S. (December 1, 2013). "Powering Out of Trouble." ASME. Mechanical Engineering. December 2013; 135(12): 36–41. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2013-DEC-3
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