The Short, Happy Life of the Prop-fan
Meet the engine that became embroiled in round one of Boeing v. Airbus, a fight fueled by the cost of oil.
- By Bill Sweetman
- Air & Space magazine, September 2005
Boeing’s 150-seat 7J7 concept (left) would meld prop-fan technology and lightweight composite structure to deliver big gains in fuel efficiency.
The Boeing Company
LOOMING LIKE AN ALIEN CRAFT ABOVE THE GENERAL ELECTRIC STAND at the 1985 Paris Air Show was an egg-shaped engine nacelle that had, mounted on its smaller end, two rows of scimitar-like propeller blades 12 feet in diameter. The GE people called this new prop-fan engine an UnDucted Fan, and it was the most radical feature of the proposed Boeing 7J7. “2,500 Days” read the Boeing brochures that papered the company’s stand at Paris—within seven years, Boeing proposed to create around this engine a revolutionary 150-seat airliner that would burn only half as much fuel as the new and yet-to-fly Airbus A320, which was about the same size.
But by the time a real UDF flew at an airshow in September 1988, the much-hyped project was dead, a victim of misread history and a changing economic climate. For a brief period, though, prop-fans, a new class of engines that marked a return to propeller blades, but of an advanced type, held center stage as the saviors of the airline industry.
Prop-fans originated, in part, in two wars in the Middle East. The 1967 Six-Day War resulted in Israel’s annexation of vast areas of neighboring Arab territory. The Arabs struck back, launching the 1973 Yom Kippur war, this time imposing an oil embargo on the United States, Europe, and Japan. The embargo drove fuel prices to new heights with little warning, and airlines suffered staggering losses. The stage was set for technology to come to the rescue.
In the United States, NASA’s Lewis Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, is the center for propulsion research. Dan Mikkelson, an engineer there, knew that the secret to an ultra-efficient engine was an extreme bypass ratio, a number describing the proportion of cold air volume driven rearward by the engine’s fan to the volume of hot gases coming from the compressor-turbine core. A propeller would be more fuel-efficient than any jet, but propellers couldn’t operate at high Mach numbers, and passengers would not want to go back to eight-hour transcontinental flights. Mikkelson and Carl Rohrbach, a veteran engineer at prop maker Hamilton Standard, “thrashed ideas back and forth,” Mikkelson recalls, and worked out the broad outlines of a radical propeller that would hold its own against a jet, enabling an aircraft to cruise at up to Mach 0.8.
Out of this emerged the Advanced Turboprop Project. Announced in an October 1975 technical paper, it promised massive fuel savings over a conventional engine: 30 to 35 percent, says Mikkelson—and many people hated it. “The old guys within the airlines were deaf to it,” Mikkelson says. “They remembered the old days with piston engines, with blades falling off.” When fears arose among airline officials that the word “turboprop” would meet with consumer resistance, the term “prop-fan” was used in a poll of United Airlines passengers. It worked: 50 percent of the respondents said they’d fly on a prop-fan-powered airliner. Hamilton Standard and NASA continued to support the project, but it moved forward in slow, careful steps, and it was not until 1981 that Hamilton Standard received a contract to fly a full-size working version.
In 1980 and ’81, following the Iranian revolution and the Iran-Iraq war, fuel prices made another painful jump, one that most oil market experts thought would be more than temporary. Bob Conboy, a market analyst who joined GE from Pratt & Whitney in 1980, recalls, “We had decided that fuel was going to rise to $2 or $2.20 per gallon by the mid- to late 1980s.”
In 1981, Art Adamson, GE’s head of advanced design, formed a team backed by Brian Rowe, senior vice president in charge of GE’s aircraft engine unit, to explore more efficient engine designs. At the time, the company’s CFM56 turbofan engine was being threatened by the new V2500, developed by International Aero Engines (comprising Pratt & Whitney, Rolls-Royce, Japanese Aero Engines, and Germany’s MTU) and promoted as more efficient. “We never believed it,” Rowe recalls. But the perception was that GE’s technology was obsolete. Adamson’s team produced what Conboy calls “a really innovative design, an example of what drives the whole industry.”
Unveiled in 1983, GE’s innovative UDF took NASA by complete surprise, but it galvanized interest in the new propellers. It was bigger and more powerful than the NASA engine, but it would fly earlier, in late 1986. After Boeing’s ’85 Paris offensive, Pratt & Whitney, Hamilton Standard, and Allison teamed up to offer the 578-DX, based on the NASA research. Both teams offered propellers with two rows of blades spinning in opposite directions to reduce losses due to “swirl”—energy wasted in imparting spin to the air behind the airplane. Both would be installed on the airplane’s tail, not under the wings, to allow room for the propeller disc and to keep noise out of the cabin. “The rear row of blades has to chop through the wakes of the front row,” says Hamilton Standard’s Colman Shattuck, an engineer on Rohrbach’s team. “It’s a very good noise generator.”
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Comments (6)
So, if somebody proposes a novel, simple but very advanced diesel fueled piston engine, with a power/weight ratio competitive with a turbo-shaft power plant of equivalent power and promotes it in combination with either UDF or contra-rotating propellers, and predictions are that this combination will result in a reduction in fuel burn to about 30% of the turbo-shaft equivalent, do you think anybody would be interested?
Posted by Nigel Eric Rose on August 18,2008 | 02:52 PM
Dear Nigel,
I think the diesel would still have more moving parts than a turbojet or turbfan or turboprop. More things to look out for in servicing. That is why they like turboprops over pistons -- TBO's. Some can theoretically go near 10,000 hours between overhauls. Plus you would have to find something other than metal to make your diesel engine out of to cut the weight. The holy grail of engine design -- the ceramic ( plastic ) engine !!
Posted by John Fox on July 30,2009 | 04:56 AM
any one remember an engineer at hamilton during the early 1980's last name Reynolds. I think they called him Mr Prop Fan!?!?!? JUst curious!
Paul
Posted by paul damiano on November 19,2010 | 05:39 PM
The Metropolitan Vickers firm in Britain designed, built and ground tested a propfan engine in 1945. It also had a counter-rotating fan at the rear of the engine, driven directly by a turbine inside the hub of the fan blades. It produced a significant increase in thrust and a reduction in fuel consumption compared to the company's turbojet engine, but like GE's UDF it failed to find a market and was abandoned.
Posted by Kurt on July 1,2011 | 12:53 AM
Well folks I'm still here and fuel costs and related matters such as emissions, are still the biggest problem confronting civil aviation. Not long now 'til everybody gets to really face up to reality and all this, when the Carbon Tax comes into effect in Australia. Regards the observation about more moving parts in a diesel, the originla concept was based on the DDC 92 Series engines and in a direct comparison at the time, there were 108 fewer parts per cylnder than the parent form; never actually looked at it on the baiss of moving parts, but I'd be sutrprised if there are more than a dozen per cylinder.
Nigel Eric Rose
Posted by Nigel Eric Rose on April 24,2012 | 02:47 AM
I've been exposing NASA to an advanced variable cycle diesel engine patterned on old Junkers 207 but with APU T/C, bottoming turbine, re-heated exhaust and variable exhaust nozzle. Looks to be about 20-25% better fuel consumption than best N-3 prop fans for 2035 on HWB type airframes. They are coupled with best NASA high Mach C/R props.
Installed weight estimate is about 9000 pounds for engine/ancillary engine equipment/props and pylons for 8 M/W engine. Takes 2 per 120 PAX, 3 per 240 PAX and 6 for a 500K 6000 nm freighter. Meets climb to .8 M. and 31K and looks to be able to get to 45K initial cruise if needed. Engine hits about 60% thermal efficiency at top of climb and cruise.
Engine is 6 cylinder opposed piston layout and part count is probably about 10% or less of comparable turboprop engine. Suspect cost to be about 50% of 10000 SHP turboprop engine.
Posted by Richard Johnston on September 20,2012 | 07:03 PM