GE Aerospace, General Electric

G8000

Старожил
GE Unions обсуждают условия нового договора. Встречное предложение руководства они восприняли как оскорбительное и вследствие этого работники двух заводов покинули рабочие места.

Hundreds of GE Aerospace employees at the company’s locations in Evendale, Ohio, and Erlanger, Kentucky, have walked off the job, saying the company made “insulting counteroffers” that would raise health care costs.

В статье отмечено что юнионы GE объеденены с юнианами автопроизводителей. Таким образом они представляют из себя серьезную силу противостоящую руководству GE.

А как же теперь обязательства данные Airbus что с LEAP к концу года проблемы решаться? Мы тоже попадаем по раздачу

 
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Договорились еще на 5 лет. Забастовка окончена. Могли бы договориться и без забастовки, но это ведь классика жанра. Как без этого


GE Aerospace and the United Auto Workers (UAW) tentatively agreed on 12 September to a five-year employment contract that could end a strike affecting company sites near Cincinnati.

“We are pleased to have reached a tentative agreement with the UAW… We look forward to continuing to work side by side to serve our customers and build our future together,” says GE.

“The next step is for the UAW to hold a vote on the agreement,” the company adds. The strike will end if members approve the deal.

More than 600 UAW members walked off the job on 28 August after union leaders rejected a previous contract proposal from GE that would have provided workers with a 12% general pay increase over the contract term.

Union leaders rejected that deal without putting it up for a member vote, citing a large increase in healthcare costs.

The striking employees work at GE’s Evendale site in Ohio and Erlanger facility in Kentucky near Cincinnati & Northern Kentucky International airport.

The Evendale location performs work related to “aero-derivative” engines used for marine and industrial applications, while the Erlanger site ships new and spare aircraft engine parts.

“After a long and challenging path, your bargaining committee is proud to announce that we have reached a tentative agreement with the company,” says the UAW Local 647 arm that represents the GE workers. “This five-year agreement delivers significant wins for our members.”

The union says it will hold a member vote next week. It requests members continue striking until an agreement is ratified.

The new agreement would provide the union with a “minimum workforce guarantee”. Employees would receive $3,500 in cash to “offset rising healthcare costs”, and more time off.

Neither party discloses more details.
 

1761264244747.png

The third stream enhances particle separation while providing variable bypass.

Adaptive engines traditionally have been associated with military propulsion. But as CFM International digs deeper into next-generation propulsion technology, the engine-maker is turning to the idea for its future commercial powerplant.

Like the U.S. military adaptive engines in development, the application of a form of variable cycle in the open fan study under the Revolutionary Innovation for Sustainable Engines (RISE) initiative is based on control and manipulation of a third stream of airflow outside the conventional core and bypass flows.

  • Variable bypass enables smaller fan
  • Third stream centrifuges out dust
However, while the overall principle is similar in both military and civil engines, the reasons for adopting the concept for the open fan are notably different, the GE Aerospace-Safran Aircraft Engines joint venture says. Unlike its military counterpart, in which the third stream is varied to increase either combat power or cruise efficiency, the RISE design aims to use the third flow to make the engine more durable and easier to install.

In a military adaptive engine, the added airflow is used to boost either mass core flow for greater acceleration or bypass ratio for greater range. In RISE, the third stream is intended to increase effective bypass ratio, and therefore efficiency, without a large expansion in fan diameter, making installation simpler. At the same time, it is designed to enable lower core operating temperatures and reduce dust ingestion, both of which should lead to greater overall durability.

1761264315241.png

Dust ingestion durability tests of advanced high-pressure turbine blades for the compact RISE core are underway using an F110 engine. Credit: CFM International

“It’s something we’ve been working toward all along as one of the benefits of the open fan architecture,” says Arjan Hegeman, vice president for future of flight at GE Aerospace. Now that tests of the system have quantified the expected benefits, he adds, “we can start talking about it more publicly.”

In the open fan design, the third stream enters the inlet behind the single-stage fan and passes through the intermediate section containing the fan gear system and on which the variable guide vanes are mounted before exiting the engine and merging with the external fan bypass stream. Although further details have not been revealed, it is likely that a splitter in the inlet would be used to divert flow into the fan bypass or core as needed.

“I can make the bypass larger or smaller,” Hegeman says. “The larger I make the bypass, the higher the fuel efficiency, but you get a little less thrust responsiveness. So for takeoff, when you want a more rapid thrust response, we make the core flow larger and the bypass flow smaller by manipulating that third stream. If you don’t do it with a third stream, the only other way to do it is with a larger fan.”

The adaptive approach “allows for a smaller fan size, and you still get the right thrust responsiveness when you need it without giving up any efficiency,” Hegeman says. Ducting more airflow through the core at higher power settings increases mass flow and fan pressure ratio. Conversely, as the third stream is mixed with the fan bypass, the effective bypass ratio increases while the fan pressure ratio decreases.

The design helps improve durability—a key parameter for the open fan. “Clearly, for next-generation engines, durability and maintainability are going to be as important as fuel burn,” Hegeman says. “If you hit your high fuel burn efficiency target, but it doesn’t meet the durability target, then from an overall operations cost perspective, you still haven’t gained anything for the operator.”

The adaptive approach helps bolster durability in two main ways. First, by improving the overall propulsive efficiency, it reduces the imperative to rely solely on boosting thermodynamic performance in the core with higher temperatures and pressures. Although the push to higher overall pressure ratios and turbine inlet temperatures in recent high-bypass turbofans has helped drive down fuel burn, the extreme operating conditions—particularly in challenging environments—have exposed vulnerabilities to turbine blade and nozzle erosion, among other durability issues.

Second, the additional flow acts as a “fantastic centrifugal filter,” reducing ingestion of dust and particulates into the core, Hegeman explains. “It filters out so much dust and debris that normally get sucked into that high-pressure, high-temperature part of the engine, and that really is a durability challenge,” he says. “All that gets filtered out and expelled out of the engine before it gets into the core and it goes into the bypass. The data we have now suggest that we should be able to get operators in harsh environments to be close to the same experience as today’s operators in neutral environments.”

Having recently completed critical design review for the open fan, CFM is “much more converged on what that is going to look like for both the demonstrator as well as a product that we would do afterward,” Hegeman notes. “So with those flows much better defined, you can really start quantifying how much filtering of ingested dust you really get. The number is higher than what I was expecting. So that’s the good news and the new finding.”

One benefit of the third stream that the open fan shares with its military engine counterpart is additional cooling. As part of RISE, CFM is studying incorporating in the engine a hybrid--electric system, which is undergoing tests using a modified GE Aerospace Passport engine..

“It is an extremely effective heat sink,” Hegeman notes. “You recover the thrust out of the heat that you dump into the third stream. Everything in this architecture is driving toward efficiency, so when we add hybrid electric into that, you need to manage the heat loads that come with that. This means instead of just wasting the heat, you are recovering thrust out of it by having heat exchangers in that third stream.”

CFM’s acknowledgment of the adaptive design feature comes as it begins key dust ingestion tests on the new high-pressure turbine blades and nozzles at the center of the future small-core design. Tests are being conducted with a specially adapted GE Aerospace F110 military engine at a company site at Edwards AFB, California.

The evaluation targets improved durability in harsh operating environments and involves injecting a bespoke mix of sand and other particles developed by GE into the inlet. Building on similar durability tests developed for other CFM and GE commercial engines—including the Leap-1, GEnx-1B and GE9X—the ingestion work evaluates the interaction of molten particles of a calcium-magnesium-alumino-silicate (CMAS) mix with the thermal barrier coatings (TBC) that protect the turbine blades and nozzles.

TBC are key to enabling the engine to operate at temperatures up to 1,200C (2,200F). CMAS issues can degrade coating performance, leading to blade erosion and—in the worst cases—component failure.

The dust tests follow more than 3,000 endurance cycles on the high-pressure turbine completed this year, as well as an earlier series of tests to validate thermal, mechanical and system performance. Endurance tests of the turbine and nozzle components included simulated high-thrust takeoff and climb to see how parts would withstand flight conditions. CFM has conducted more than 350 tests to date under the RISE initiative.
 

Посмотреть вложение 868480
The third stream enhances particle separation while providing variable bypass.

Adaptive engines traditionally have been associated with military propulsion. But as CFM International digs deeper into next-generation propulsion technology, the engine-maker is turning to the idea for its future commercial powerplant.

Like the U.S. military adaptive engines in development, the application of a form of variable cycle in the open fan study under the Revolutionary Innovation for Sustainable Engines (RISE) initiative is based on control and manipulation of a third stream of airflow outside the conventional core and bypass flows.

  • Variable bypass enables smaller fan
  • Third stream centrifuges out dust
However, while the overall principle is similar in both military and civil engines, the reasons for adopting the concept for the open fan are notably different, the GE Aerospace-Safran Aircraft Engines joint venture says. Unlike its military counterpart, in which the third stream is varied to increase either combat power or cruise efficiency, the RISE design aims to use the third flow to make the engine more durable and easier to install.

In a military adaptive engine, the added airflow is used to boost either mass core flow for greater acceleration or bypass ratio for greater range. In RISE, the third stream is intended to increase effective bypass ratio, and therefore efficiency, without a large expansion in fan diameter, making installation simpler. At the same time, it is designed to enable lower core operating temperatures and reduce dust ingestion, both of which should lead to greater overall durability.

Посмотреть вложение 868481
Dust ingestion durability tests of advanced high-pressure turbine blades for the compact RISE core are underway using an F110 engine. Credit: CFM International

“It’s something we’ve been working toward all along as one of the benefits of the open fan architecture,” says Arjan Hegeman, vice president for future of flight at GE Aerospace. Now that tests of the system have quantified the expected benefits, he adds, “we can start talking about it more publicly.”

In the open fan design, the third stream enters the inlet behind the single-stage fan and passes through the intermediate section containing the fan gear system and on which the variable guide vanes are mounted before exiting the engine and merging with the external fan bypass stream. Although further details have not been revealed, it is likely that a splitter in the inlet would be used to divert flow into the fan bypass or core as needed.

“I can make the bypass larger or smaller,” Hegeman says. “The larger I make the bypass, the higher the fuel efficiency, but you get a little less thrust responsiveness. So for takeoff, when you want a more rapid thrust response, we make the core flow larger and the bypass flow smaller by manipulating that third stream. If you don’t do it with a third stream, the only other way to do it is with a larger fan.”

The adaptive approach “allows for a smaller fan size, and you still get the right thrust responsiveness when you need it without giving up any efficiency,” Hegeman says. Ducting more airflow through the core at higher power settings increases mass flow and fan pressure ratio. Conversely, as the third stream is mixed with the fan bypass, the effective bypass ratio increases while the fan pressure ratio decreases.

The design helps improve durability—a key parameter for the open fan. “Clearly, for next-generation engines, durability and maintainability are going to be as important as fuel burn,” Hegeman says. “If you hit your high fuel burn efficiency target, but it doesn’t meet the durability target, then from an overall operations cost perspective, you still haven’t gained anything for the operator.”

The adaptive approach helps bolster durability in two main ways. First, by improving the overall propulsive efficiency, it reduces the imperative to rely solely on boosting thermodynamic performance in the core with higher temperatures and pressures. Although the push to higher overall pressure ratios and turbine inlet temperatures in recent high-bypass turbofans has helped drive down fuel burn, the extreme operating conditions—particularly in challenging environments—have exposed vulnerabilities to turbine blade and nozzle erosion, among other durability issues.

Second, the additional flow acts as a “fantastic centrifugal filter,” reducing ingestion of dust and particulates into the core, Hegeman explains. “It filters out so much dust and debris that normally get sucked into that high-pressure, high-temperature part of the engine, and that really is a durability challenge,” he says. “All that gets filtered out and expelled out of the engine before it gets into the core and it goes into the bypass. The data we have now suggest that we should be able to get operators in harsh environments to be close to the same experience as today’s operators in neutral environments.”

Having recently completed critical design review for the open fan, CFM is “much more converged on what that is going to look like for both the demonstrator as well as a product that we would do afterward,” Hegeman notes. “So with those flows much better defined, you can really start quantifying how much filtering of ingested dust you really get. The number is higher than what I was expecting. So that’s the good news and the new finding.”

One benefit of the third stream that the open fan shares with its military engine counterpart is additional cooling. As part of RISE, CFM is studying incorporating in the engine a hybrid--electric system, which is undergoing tests using a modified GE Aerospace Passport engine..

“It is an extremely effective heat sink,” Hegeman notes. “You recover the thrust out of the heat that you dump into the third stream. Everything in this architecture is driving toward efficiency, so when we add hybrid electric into that, you need to manage the heat loads that come with that. This means instead of just wasting the heat, you are recovering thrust out of it by having heat exchangers in that third stream.”

CFM’s acknowledgment of the adaptive design feature comes as it begins key dust ingestion tests on the new high-pressure turbine blades and nozzles at the center of the future small-core design. Tests are being conducted with a specially adapted GE Aerospace F110 military engine at a company site at Edwards AFB, California.

The evaluation targets improved durability in harsh operating environments and involves injecting a bespoke mix of sand and other particles developed by GE into the inlet. Building on similar durability tests developed for other CFM and GE commercial engines—including the Leap-1, GEnx-1B and GE9X—the ingestion work evaluates the interaction of molten particles of a calcium-magnesium-alumino-silicate (CMAS) mix with the thermal barrier coatings (TBC) that protect the turbine blades and nozzles.

TBC are key to enabling the engine to operate at temperatures up to 1,200C (2,200F). CMAS issues can degrade coating performance, leading to blade erosion and—in the worst cases—component failure.

The dust tests follow more than 3,000 endurance cycles on the high-pressure turbine completed this year, as well as an earlier series of tests to validate thermal, mechanical and system performance. Endurance tests of the turbine and nozzle components included simulated high-thrust takeoff and climb to see how parts would withstand flight conditions. CFM has conducted more than 350 tests to date under the RISE initiative.
...занятно...
 
Я полумал а чем это регулирование двухконтурности отличается от системы перепуска воздуха?
Вы поняли правильно.
...только после гоооораздо меньшего подпора и в гоооораздо большего количества перепуска...
Теоретически, позволяет перестраивать линию совместных режимов работы узлов двигателя.
Насколько эффективно и какие плюшки там можно реализовать, на пальцах сказать невозможно... необходимо хотя бы представлять "подпор" за винтом на входе в первый контур...
Я довольно скептичен.
 
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Вы поняли правильно.
...только после гоооораздо меньшего подпора и в гоооораздо большего количества перепуска...
Теоретически, позволяет перестраивать линию совместных режимов работы узлов двигателя.
Насколько эффективно и какие плюшки там можно реализовать, на пальцах сказать невозможно... необходимо хотя бы представлять "подпор" за винтом на входе в первый контур...
Я довольно скептичен.
На Passport20, у которого газогенератор Leap56 нет клапанов перепуска в обычном виде у компрессора ВД. Сbловой корпус разделяющий потоки за вентилятором имеет створки. Через эти створки регулируется отбор на перепуск на режимах, обогрев воздухозаборника. Клапанов перепуска как я говорил на компрессоре не стоит (как на RR Pearl 15). Возможно это получит дальнейшее развитие.
 
G8000, клапаны перепуска за вентилятором никак не помогут с устойчивостью квд.
У КВД там, я просто уверен, туева хуча управляемых НА.
Это система не новая, а очень старая... исполнительная её часть, по крайней мере.
Как всегда, надо выбирать - или городить сложную систему управления компрессором, или ставить клапана перепуска (немцами придуманные).
Вся разница - теперь эта вся трахомудия из колец и рычажков управляется актуаторами по командам от фадека по более сложным алгоритмам...
 
G8000, клапаны перепуска за вентилятором никак не помогут с устойчивостью квд.
У КВД там, я просто уверен, туева хуча управляемых НА.
Конечно же есть механизация на первых 4х ступенях. Именно перепуск воздуха осуществляется в заднем корпусе опоры вентилятора (он же разделительный корпус). Есть еще отбор воздуха на регулировку зазора в турбине, но это другое. Я же говорил что GE двигатели для меня как alien machine.
 
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