The Little Engine That Couldn't
The new Eclipse 500 lightjet will no doubt make a lot of customers happy
- By David Noland
- Air & Space magazine, November 2005
Cessna’s T-37 was dubbed “Tweety Bird” for its shrill Teledyne CAE J-69s.
USAF
IT'S AUGUST 26, 2002, A CLEAR, HOT MORNING at Albuquerque International Sunport. Poised for takeoff on Runway 17 is a small orange and white twin-engine jet carrying a heavy load of hype and hope. A press release from its manufacturer says the first flight of this prototype will do nothing less than “forever change the landscape of transportation.” The Eclipse 500’s promised $837,500 price tag—an astonishingly low figure, barely a quarter that of the next cheapest jet—and 56-cents-a-mile direct operating cost have brought in deposits for more than 2,000 airplanes, potentially making it the best-selling private jet in history even before it flies.
Two engine nacelles, stovepipe-skinny and barely four feet long, sprout from the rear fuselage. They hold the key to the Eclipse’s remarkable price and performance claims: a pair of Williams International EJ22 fanjets, breakthrough powerplants developed by Sam Williams, the renowned guru of small jet engines. Using what Eclipse calls “disruptive” technology, the EJ22 has churned out 770 pounds of thrust in ground tests, yet, at 85 pounds, you could pick it up. This 9:1 thrust-to-weight ratio is unprecedented, almost double that of any commercial jet engine. It’s the breakthrough that can make the Eclipse 500 a landscape changer.
Albuquerque Tower clears N500EA for takeoff, and test pilot Bill Bubb releases the brakes and shoves the twin thrust levers forward. The EJ22s spool up into a soft whoosh and the airplane begins to accelerate down the runway.
But something’s wrong. The acceleration is lethargic, especially for an airplane loaded so lightly. In the hot, thin, mile-high air, the EJ22s can generate barely half their rated thrust. After a leisurely takeoff roll of more than 3,000 feet, the airplane lifts off and begins a gentle climb, paralleling the Sangre de Cristo mountains off its left wing. For about an hour, Bubb flies the planned test routine, checking out general handling qualities and systems operation. Overall, the flight is free of major glitches.
And yet, as the little jet taxies back toward the cheering employees at the Eclipse hangar, it’s already clear that the new EJ22 engines aren’t going to hack it.
The Eclipse 500 never again flew with EJ22s. Three months later, Eclipse Aviation announced: “The EJ22 is not a viable solution for the Eclipse 500 aircraft, and Williams International has not met its contractual obligations.” Williams conceded that it had run into “a number of challenges” with the EJ22 but insisted it had satisfied the contract, implying that the airplane had simply grown too heavy.
Eclipse hurriedly signed a deal with Pratt & Whitney to develop a smaller version of a more conventional engine. The PW610F would develop 900 pounds of thrust, but it would weigh 260 pounds—triple the weight of the EJ22. The extra power would give the Eclipse 500 a bit better speed and climb, but there was a big downside: an empty-weight gain of 700 pounds and a 20 percent increase in fuel consumption. The remarkable price and cost projections eventually ballooned to $1.3 million and 89 cents a mile. Three years later, flight tests of the P&W-powered Eclipse 500 are proceeding smoothly, but it’s still not clear whether it will change the landscape of transportation.
The failure of the Williams EJ22 to achieve Federal Aviation Administration certification in the Eclipse and the engine’s disappearance from public view were bitter disappointments to those who for decades have yearned for a certified engine that could lead to a new generation of small, affordable jets. The failure was also a blow to the reputation of its creator, Sam Williams, now 84, who essentially invented the small turbofan engine in the 1960s and remained its unchallenged mastermind for more than three decades.
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Comments (4)
I presently have a experimental 4 seat twin jet sitting in my hanger with out a choice of jet to place on it. The empty weight is 1750. The EJ-22 also known as the FJ-22 by Williams would be the most excellent turbo fan with 800# of thrust and only weights 75# two of those to power my experimental and Spectre would be the "RIGHT STUFF". Williams has to certify the the FJ-22
specifically for the true 4 seat class of light jets.
SPECTRE
Posted by Richard Judge on June 7,2010 | 05:51 PM
After careful consideration of this chapter in the evolution of advanced light aviation what is dissapointing is not the failure of the EJ22. The failure of technical endeavors is as much a part of success as death is to life. However what is unethical is the forty million NASA paid into it. An unmistakable example of government loot from plunder being given to something for nothing in return. At a minimum, for our tax dollars, all of General Aviation should have access to Williams propriatary Fabrication Techniques and Program Data. We paid for it, we should own it.
Posted by Casey Vanderpool on October 28,2011 | 09:40 AM
If Honda did it with their HF 120 Engine why can't NASA pursue the same goal. That engine produces 2,000 pounds of thrust and weighs under 400 lbs.
It is a more practical solution to the light aircraft category. We don't require engines with lower thrust than 2,000 pounds as a practical Matter.
I have designed a VTOL light plane that could achieve the superiority in that industry with the Honda engine. GE is currently supposed to manufacture it for Honda. It would be the first light plane VTOL with a jet engine at the rear of the fuselage. My design does not require vectoring.
I prefer utilizing a jet than tilting propellers like the Osprey V-22. Propellers will soon become obsolete.
Posted by Miles Garnett on June 14,2012 | 01:02 PM
The T-37B's J69-T-25 turbojet engines were a licensed copy of the Teledyne/Marbore' IIC, which weighed only 358 pounds yet produced 1025 pounds of thrust. The little jet was an excellent primary trainer but was hard on the hearing because of its loud, high-pitched whine. A single J69 was used in the Tempco Pinto, another contender in the light jet trainer competition at the time. Although the Pinto proved to be too under powered for the task the Navy envisioned for it with the J69, re-engined versions using a GE J85 with almost three times the thrust and only about a twenty pound weight increase gave impressive performance numbers and outperformed the T-37. A version of the GE J85, the CF700 with an aft end fan section added to the basic engine, increased the power output even further to 4500 pounds of thrust with a total weight of only 750 pounds but reduced fuel consumption by forty percent. I wonder if the same results could have been obtained if the J69 had been fitted with a fan section to the exhaust. And I wonder what has become of all the J69 turbojet engines from the T-37s that were decommissioned by the Air Force.
Posted by D. Howerton on January 31,2013 | 01:03 AM