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![]() "old hoodoo" wrote in message ... I just read where Russian Su-30 engines are intended to operate 300 hours before major overhaul. How do US engines compare? 300 hours seems awfully short to a layperson like me. I can only speak to our J-75s, but it was teardown inspection and repair every 400 hours; depo overhaul each 1200 hours. |
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The J-52's currently flown in the Navy's EA-6B Prowlers go 1,000 between
overhauls. Interestingly, I understand that motor was intended as a "disposable" motor designed originally for a missile program. -- (¯`·._.· £ărrÿ ·._.·´¯) "old hoodoo" wrote in message ... I just read where Russian Su-30 engines are intended to operate 300 hours before major overhaul. How do US engines compare? 300 hours seems awfully short to a layperson like me. Al |
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![]() I just read where Russian Su-30 engines are intended to operate 300 hours before major overhaul. How do US engines compare? 300 hours seems awfully short to a layperson like me. The whole engine doesn't get overhauled, just modules. Each module, ie fan, compressor, turnine, fan drive turbine, etc has a different interval, usually based on cycles, ie temperature excursions from cold to hot. Fighter engines typically stay installed for 300-600 hours on average and come off for repair not overhaul. The Soviets/Russians have always made disposable fighter engines from what I know. Run'em hot, burn'em up, then salvage/overhaul them. Eliminates most of the logistics tail and cuts way down on traing requirements. Gues you can do that when you own the world's supply of titanium ore and most of your troops are illiterate. |
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Chad Irby wrote:
In article , (Smartace11) wrote: The Soviets/Russians have always made disposable fighter engines from what I know. Run'em hot, burn'em up, then salvage/overhaul them. Eliminates most of the logistics tail ...up until week two or three, when you're out of engines, and your depots are all smoking ruins... The Soviet idea was that combat a/c in a major war weren't going to last that long in any case, so the engines had to have enough remaining TBO in them (on average, 50% of their total TBO) when the ballon went up, enough to to last until they were lost. Replace the whole jet with reserve a/c. In peacetime, it made more sense for them, given their economy and infrastructure, to concentrate the highly-skilled techs at the factories rather than disperse them out to the units. Sukhoi, MiG and others have been pushing the engine companies to to improve the engine TBOs, so that western and western-oriented airforces will be more willing to buy them. Many of the joint venture commercial transports have been offered with western engines, for the same reason. They've still got a ways to go, as ISTR the F100 has a TBO of 4,000 hours now, and IIRC the most modern engines are intended to have only on-condition maintenance between overhauls, but I'll leave it to others with more knowledge and experience to confirm or deny that. Guy |
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In message , Chad Irby
writes In article , (Smartace11) wrote: The Soviets/Russians have always made disposable fighter engines from what I know. Run'em hot, burn'em up, then salvage/overhaul them. Eliminates most of the logistics tail ...up until week two or three, when you're out of engines, and your depots are all smoking ruins... Come on, you must have seen it... Two Soviet tank marshalls sipping champagne on the Champs-Elysees, watching the Red Army's victory parade. One asks the other "So who _did_ win the air war?" If they could dispute air superiority long enough for the Massive Armoured Spearheads(TM) to smash their way to the objective (the Ruhr? The Channel?) they win. Same reason the tanks were only designed for short lives... who cares, they'll be destroyed before then anyway. Now, with hindsight that plan worked a lot better in theory than in practice... but it worked for them in the Great Patriotic War, and the West was hoping to "be the Germans but win" in a Central Front rematch. -- When you have to kill a man, it costs nothing to be polite. W S Churchill Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
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Sukhoi, MiG and others have been pushing the engine companies to to improve
the engine TBOs, so that western and western-oriented airforces will be more willing to buy them. Many of the joint venture commercial transports have been offered with western engines, for the same reason. They've still got a ways to go, as ISTR the F100 has a TBO of 4,000 hours now, and IIRC the most modern engines are intended to have only on-condition maintenance between overhauls, but I'll leave it to others with more knowledge and experience to confirm or deny that. Guy Sounds about right for the turbine. At 2.0 - 2.5 thermal cycles per operating hour, 4000 hours is about 8,000 - 10,000 cycles. The compressor and fan run quite a bit longer, hence the modular maintenance approach. When one module reaches its limit it iw replaced, not the entire engine. There are also intermediate inspections up until the end of the life cycle, but those are mostly for inspection, not replacement except for certain parts like shrouds and combustors. Pretty much the same aproach to maintenance in high bypass fans in the heavies, too though they accumulate thermal cycles more slowly, something around 1.0 or less because of far fewer throttle transients. Different approach for engines like the TF33 in the B-52 and C-141 because those are not mudular engines. The entire engine has a TBO on them, but in those application it is almost more of a fly to failure. |
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) to smash their way to the objective (the Ruhr?
The Channel?) they win. Same reason the tanks were only designed for short lives... who cares, they'll be destroyed before then anyway. Now, with hindsight that plan worked a lot better in theory than in practice... but it worked for them in the Great Patriotic War, and the West was hoping to "be the Germans but win" in a Central Front rematch. -- When you have to kill a man, it costs nothing to be polite. W S Churchill Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk That worked okay when the technology wasn't so expensive. Now stuff is so expensive that it can't be used as cannon fodder. I suspect the main problem with the Russian engines is that they have the turbine inlet temp cranked up really high to produce thrust but haven't gotten around to using advanced metals and ceramics on the blades and vanes in those areas so they lose efficiency quickly. Reducing TIT would give more life to the engines but less thrust. Same issue with the J79 in the 60s and 70s. They smoked like crazy. The TIT could be turned up but the life of the engines would be reduced significantly. There was a combuster mod in the 80s that reduced the smoke a great deal. One thing about flying a "smoker" was that you had far less of a chance of being mistaken for a MiG. On the other hand you were also MiG bait but with numerical superiority in the theaters the F-4 operated, the problem wasn't that significant. |
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