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Rolls-Royce Trent
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Main page For the 1944 turboprop engine, see Rolls-Royce RB.50 Trent. For the 1960s low bypass turbofan, see Rolls-Royce RB.203 Trent.
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Rolls-Royce Trent is a British family of three spool, high bypass turbofan aircraft engines manufactured by Rolls-Royce plc. All are developments of
Featured content Trent
Current events the RB211 with thrust ratings of 53,000 to 97,000 pounds-force (240 to 430 kN). Versions of the Trent are in service on the Airbus A330, A340, A350,
Random article A380, Boeing 777, and 787. The Trent has also been adapted for marine and industrial applications.
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First run in August 1990 as the model Trent 700, the Trent has achieved significant commercial success, having been selected as the launch engine
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for both of the 787 variants (Trent 1000) note 1, the A380 (Trent 900) and the A350 (Trent XWB). Its overall share of the markets in which it competes
Interaction is around 40%.[1] Sales of the Trent family of engines have made Rolls-Royce the second biggest supplier of large civil turbofans after General
Help Electric,[2] relegating rival Pratt & Whitney to third position.
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In keeping with Rolls-Royce's (sometimes neglected) tradition of naming its jet engines after rivers,[3] this engine is named after the River Trent in the
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Recent changes Midlands of England. Singapore Airlines is currently the largest operator of Trents, with five variants in service or on order.note 3
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Contents [hide]
Tools 1 Design and development
What links here 1.1 Origin
Related changes 1.2 Design
Upload file
2 Variants
Special pages
2.1 Trent 600 – First proposal
Permanent link
Page information
2.2 Trent 700 A Trent turbofan engine installed on a test bench at the
2.3 Trent 800 Rolls-Royce Test Facility in Derby, UK.
Wikidata item
Cite this page 2.4 Trent 8104/8115 Type Turbofan

2.5 Trent 500 National origin United Kingdom


Print/export
2.6 Trent 900 Manufacturer Rolls-Royce
Create a book First run August 1990
2.7 Trent 600 – Second proposal
Download as PDF
2.8 Trent 1000 Major applications Airbus A330
Printable version
Airbus A340
2.9 Trent 1500
Airbus A350
In other projects 2.10 Trent XWB Airbus A380
Wikimedia Commons 2.11 Trent 7000 Boeing 777
2.12 Non-aircraft variants Boeing 787
Languages
2.12.1 MT30 Developed from Rolls-Royce RB211
‫اﻟﻌﺮﺑﻴﺔ‬
2.12.2 Industrial Trent 60 Gas Turbine Variants Rolls-Royce Trent 500
Deutsch
3 Future developments Rolls-Royce Trent 700
Español
Rolls-Royce Trent 800
‫ﻓﺎر‬ 3.1 Advanced Low-Pressure System (ALPS)
Rolls-Royce Trent 900
Français 3.2 Advance
Rolls-Royce Trent 1000
Italiano 3.3 Advanced low-emission combustion system (ALECSys) Rolls-Royce Trent XWB
⽇本語 3.4 UltraFan Rolls-Royce Trent 7000
Русский
4 Applications Developed into Rolls-Royce MT30
中文
5 Specifications
6 more 6 See also
Edit links 7 Footnotes
7.1 Notes
7.2 References
8 External links

Design and development [ edit ]

Origin [ edit ]

When Rolls-Royce was privatised in April 1987, its share of the large civil turbofan market was only 8%.[4] Despite increasing sales success with the RB211, General Electric and Pratt & Whitney still
dominated the market. At that time, the aircraft manufacturers were proposing new planes that would require unprecedented levels of thrust. Furthermore, the Boeing 777 and Airbus A330 were to be
twin-engined, and their airline customers were demanding that they be capable of operating in the Extended-range Twin-engine Operations (ETOPS) environment at the time of their initial introduction into
service.

Rolls-Royce decided that to succeed in the large engine market of the future, it would have to offer engines for every large civil airliner. In view of the enormous development costs required to bring a new
engine to market, the only way to do this would be to have a family of engines based on a common core. The three-shaft design of the RB211 was an ideal basis for the new family as it provided flexibility,
allowing the high-pressure (HP), intermediate-pressure (IP) and low-pressure (LP) systems to be individually scaled. Rolls decided to launch a new family of engines, which was formally announced at the
1988 Farnborough Airshow. Reviving a name last used 30 years earlier, the new engine was named the Trent. The name had been used for two previous Rolls-Royce engines: the first Trent was the
world's first turboprop engine; the second Trent was the 1960s RB203 bypass turbofan, designed to replace the Spey. Rated at 9,980 lbf (44.4 kN) it was the first three-spool engine, forerunner of the
RB211 series, but never entered service.

Rolls-Royce has obtained significant sums of "launch investment" from the British government for the Trent programmes, including £200 million approved in 1997 for Trent 8104, 500 and 600 and
£250 million for Trent 600 and 900 in 2001. No aid was sought for Trent 1000. Launch investment is repaid to the government by a royalty on each engine sold.[5]

The basis for the Trent was the RB.211-524L, work on which began in 1987.[6]

Design [ edit ]

Like its RB211 predecessor, the Trent uses a three-spool design rather than the more common two-spool configuration. Although more complex, the engine is
shorter and more rigid, and suffers less performance degradation in service than an equivalent twin-spool. The advantage three spools gives is that the front-most
fan (driven by the third, rearmost turbine) can be tuned to rotate at its optimal (fairly low) speed; the two compressors are driven by the two other turbines via their
spools. The three spools are concentric.

All the engines in the Trent family share a similar layout, but their three-spool configuration allows each engine module to be individually scaled to meet a wide
range of performance and thrust requirements. For example, the large 116-inch (290 cm) diameter fan of the Trent 900 keeps the mean jet velocity at take-off at a
relatively low level to help meet the stringent noise levels required by the Airbus A380's customers.[7] Similarly, core size changes enable the (High Pressure)
turbine rotor inlet temperature to be kept as low as possible, thereby minimising maintenance costs. The overall pressure ratio of the Trent 800 is higher than the Nickel high pressure turbine blades
with cooling holes to operate above
700's despite sharing the same HP system and Intermediate Pressure turbine; this was achieved by increasing the capacity of the IP compressor and the Low their melting point
Pressure turbine.

Trent engines use hollow titanium fan blades with an internal Warren-girder structure to achieve strength, stiffness and robustness at low weight. For the Trent 800, the 110-inch diameter[8] fan can rotate
at 3300 rpm with a tip speed of about 483 m/s, well above the speed of sound. The single-crystal nickel alloy turbine blades are also hollow, and air is pushed through laser-drilled holes in them to cool
them because the gas temperature is higher than the melting point of the blades. Each blade removes up to 560 kW from the gas stream.[9]

The completely redesigned core turbomachinery delivers better performance, noise and pollution levels than the RB211. So significant are the improvements that Rolls-Royce fitted the Trent 700's
improved HP system to the RB211-524G and -524H,[10] creating -524G-T and -524H-T respectively.

When the RB211 programme started, it was intended that none of the compression system would require variable stators, unlike the American competition. Unfortunately, it was found that, because of the
shallow working line on the Intermediate Pressure Compressor (IPC), at least one row of variable stators was required on the IPC, to improve its surge margin at throttled conditions. This feature has
been retained throughout the RB211 and Trent series. Although the original intent was not met, Rolls-Royce eliminated the need for many rows of variable stators, with all their inherent complexity,
thereby saving weight, cost and improving reliability.

On 17 January 2008, a British Airways Boeing 777-236ER, operating as BA038 from Beijing to London, crash-landed at Heathrow after both Trent 800 engines lost power during the aircraft's final
approach. The subsequent investigation found that ice released from the fuel system had accumulated on the fuel-oil heat exchanger, leading to a restriction of fuel flow to the engines.[11] This resulted in
Airworthiness Directives mandating the replacement of the heat exchanger.[12] This order was extended to the 500 and 700 series engines after a similar loss of power was observed on one engine of an
Airbus A330[12] in one incident, and both engines in another.[13] The modification involves replacing a face plate with many small protruding tubes with one that is flat.[14]

Variants [ edit ]

Trent 600 – First proposal [ edit ]

The initial variant, the Trent 600, was to power the McDonnell Douglas MD-11 with British Caledonian as the engine's launch customer. However, British Airways cancelled the MD-11 order when it
acquired British Caledonian in 1987. With the collapse in 1991 of Air Europe in the aftermath of the 1990-91 Gulf War, the only other Trent-powered MD-11 customer was lost. As the MD-11 was itself
suffering poor sales due to its failure to meet its performance targets, the Trent 600 was downgraded to a demonstrator programme, engine development being switched to the Trent 700 for the Airbus
A330.[15]

Trent 700 [ edit ]


Main article: Rolls-Royce Trent 700

In April 1989, Cathay Pacific became the first customer to specify an Airbus aircraft powered by Rolls-Royce engines when it ordered ten Airbus A330s powered
by the Trent 700. The following month Trans World Airlines followed suit with an order for twenty A330s.

The Trent 700 first ran in August 1990, and certification was achieved in January 1994. 90-minutes ETOPS approval was achieved in March 1995, and this was
extended to 120 minutes in December 1995 and 180 minutes in May 1996.[16]

The first Trent 700-powered A330 flew in August 1994, and entered service with Cathay Pacific in March 1995.[17]

Trent 800 [ edit ] Trent 700 on a Saudia A330


Main article: Rolls-Royce Trent 800

At the same time, Boeing was investigating an enlarged development of its 767 model dubbed the 767X, for which Rolls-Royce proposed the Trent 760. By 1990 Boeing abandoned its planned 767X and
instead decided to launch a new, larger aircraft family designated 777 with a thrust requirement of 80,000 lbf (360 kN) or more. The Trent 700's 2.47 m (97 in) diameter fan would not be big enough to
meet this requirement, so Rolls proposed a new version with a 2.80 m (110 in) fan diameter, designated Trent 800.

Testing of the Trent 800 began in September 1993, and certification was achieved in January 1995.[16] The first Boeing 777 with Trent 800 engines flew in May 1995, and entered service with Cathay
Pacific in April 1996.

Initially Rolls-Royce had difficulty selling the engine; British Airways, traditionally a Rolls-Royce customer, submitted a large order for the competing General Electric GE90 engine. The breakthrough came
when it won orders from Singapore Airlines, a staunch Pratt & Whitney customer, for its 34 Boeing 777s. The Trent 800 has a 41% share of the engine market on the 777 variants for which it is
available.[18]

Trent 8104/8115 [ edit ]

In 1998 Boeing proposed new longer range variants of the 777. Taking advantage of the Trent 800's growth capability, Rolls-Royce designed and built an improved engine designated Trent 8104, which
was later scaled upwards to the even larger 8115. This development was the first engine to break through 100,000 lbf (440 kN) thrust and subsequently the first to reach 110,000 lbf (490 kN). However,
GE Aviation former president James McNerney (now Boeing ex-CEO) successfully offered the aircraft manufacturer up to $500 million in money to develop the 777 in exchange for exclusivity in powering
the family. Boeing agreed in July 1999 to such a deal with the GE90-110B and GE90-115B to be the sole engines on the long-range 777s.[19] This resulted in the 8104 becoming just a demonstrator
programme, despite setting further industry firsts for thrust levels achieved and the first to demonstrate the use of a fully swept wide chord fan.

It would have come in two thrust ratings, 104,000 lbf (460 kN) and 114,000 lbf (510 kN), and has been tested up to 117,000 lbf (520 kN). As Boeing's thrust requirements increased, Rolls-Royce began
developing the 115,000 lbf (510 kN) 8115 which was to be an enlarged version of the 8104, with a 3.05 m (120 in) fan and a core scaled up 2.5 percent from the 8104. It featured swept-back fan blades
and a host of new technologies such as contra-rotating spools. The 8115 was never built, as Boeing signed a contract with General Electric to be the sole supplier of engines for the 777X aircraft, owing to
GEs willingness to risk-share on the airframe part of the project, and sales of the aircraft to GECAS.

Trent 500 [ edit ]


Main article: Rolls-Royce Trent 500

In 1995, Airbus began considering an engine for two new long-range derivatives of its four-engine A340 aircraft, designated A340-500/-600. In April 1996, Airbus
signed an agreement with General Electric to develop a suitable engine, but decided not to proceed when GE demanded an exclusivity deal on the A340. After a
contest with Pratt & Whitney, Airbus announced on 15 June 1997 at the Paris Air Show that it had selected the Trent 500 to power the A340-500 and -600.[20] Two
years later, in May 1999, the Trent 500 first ran and certification was achieved in December 2000. It entered service on the A340-600 with Virgin Atlantic Airways in
July 2002 and on the ultra-long range A340-500 with Emirates in December 2003.

After production of the Airbus A340 ended in 2011, a total of 131 A340-500/-600 had been delivered with 524 Trent 500 engines altogether; Lufthansa is the
Trent 500 on wing, cowlings open
largest operator, with 24 delivered A340-600.[21]

Trent 900 [ edit ]


Main article: Rolls-Royce Trent 900

In the early 1990s, Airbus had begun development of a larger successor to the Boeing 747, an aircraft designated A3XX, which was later to be formally launched
as the Airbus A380. By 1996, its definition had progressed to the extent that Rolls-Royce was able to announce that it would develop the Trent 900 to power the
A380. In October 2000, the Trent 900 became the A380's launch engine when Singapore Airlines specified the engine for its order for 10 A380s; this was quickly
followed by Qantas in February 2001.

The Trent 900 first ran on 17 May 2004 on Airbus' A340-300 testbed, replacing the port inner CFM56-5 engine, and its final certification was granted by the
European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) on 29 October 2004 and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on 4 December 2006.[22][23] Rolls-Royce announced
in October 2007 that production of the Trent 900 had been restarted after a twelve-month suspension caused by delays to the A380.[24]

On 27 September 2007, British Airways announced the selection of the Trent 900 to power 12 A380 aircraft,[25] helping to take the engine's share of the A380
Trent 900 on the A380 assembly
engine market to 52% at the end of February 2009. line

On 4 November 2010, a Trent 900 experienced an uncontained failure on Qantas Flight 32 over Singapore. After investigation, Rolls-Royce announced the
problem was specific to the Trent 900,[26] and in particular unrelated to failure of a Trent 1000 under test.[27] However, others have noted that although the specific part may be only found in the 900, in
both cases the intermediate pressure turbine and lubrication system are suspect.[28]

Trent 600 – Second proposal [ edit ]

In July 2000, Rolls-Royce signed an agreement with Boeing to offer the Trent 600 engine on developments of 767 and 747 aircraft.[29] The 767 variant was to be a new longer-range version of the Boeing
767-400ER to be powered by the Trent 600 and Engine Alliance GP7172, although in the end this aircraft was never launched. When Boeing finally launched the 747-8 in 2005 it announced that the
General Electric GEnx would be the only engine that would be available for the 747-8.

Trent 1000 [ edit ]


Main article: Rolls-Royce Trent 1000

On 6 April 2004 Boeing announced that it had selected two engine partners for its new 787, Rolls-Royce and General Electric. Initially, Boeing considered the idea
of sole sourcing the powerplant for the 787, with GE being the most likely candidate. However, potential customers demanded choices and Boeing
relented.[citation needed] Both engine types will have a standard interface with the aircraft, allowing any 787 to be fitted with either a GE or Rolls-Royce engine at any
time as long as the pylon is also modified.Note 2

In June 2004, the first public engine selection was made by Air New Zealand, who chose the Trent 1000 for its two firm orders. In the largest 787 order, that of
Japan's All Nippon Airways, Rolls-Royce was selected as the engine supplier on 13 October 2004. The deal is valued at $1 billion (£560 million) and covers 30
787-3s and 20 787-8s. The Trent 1000 will be the launch engine on all three current 787 models, the -8 with ANA, the -9 with Air New Zealand and the -10 with
Singapore Airlines.[30] On 7 July 2007, Rolls Royce secured its largest ever order from an aircraft leasing company when ILFC placed an order worth $1.3 billion at
list prices for Trent 1000s to power 40 of the 787s which it has on order,[31] and on 27 September 2007 British Airways announced the selection of the Trent 1000 to power 24 Boeing 787 aircraft.

The first run of the Trent 1000 was on 14 February 2006,[32] with first flight on Rolls-Royce's own flying testbed (a modified Boeing 747-200) successfully performed on 18 June 2007 from TSTC Waco
Airport in Waco, TX.[33] The engine received joint certification from the FAA and EASA on 7 August 2007[34] (written 7/8/7 outside the US). Entry into service was delayed to September 2011 following a
series of delays to the Boeing 787 programme.[35] The Trent 1000, along with the General Electric GEnx, is distinguished from other turbofans with the use of noise-reducing chevrons on the engine
nacelle when in use.[citation needed]

In early 2018, of 1277 orders, 681 selected the GEnx (53%), 420 the Trent 1000 (33%) and 176 were undecided (14%).[36]

Trent 1500 [ edit ]

The Trent 1500 was proposed to replace the Airbus A340-500/600 Trent 500 to better compete with the Boeing 777-200LR/300ER, retaining its 2.47 m (8 ft 1 in) fan diameter and nacelle, but with the
smaller and more advanced Trent 1000 gas generator and LP turbine.[37] The evolution of the A350 from the initial to the XWB design did replace the A340 development.

Trent XWB [ edit ]


Main article: Rolls-Royce Trent XWB

The Trent XWB is a series of turbofan engines, developed from the RB211 and used exclusively for the Airbus A350 XWB.[38] It has a take-off thrust range of 75,000–97,000 lbf (330–430 kN) and a fan
diameter of 118 in (3.0 m).[39]

Trent 7000 [ edit ]


Main article: Rolls-Royce Trent 7000

Officially announced on 14 July 2014 at the Farnborough Airshow the Trent 7000 is to be the exclusive engine for the Airbus A330neo. The Trent 7000 will use previous experience from the Trent 700 as
used on the A330, architecture from the Trent 1000-TEN, which is the latest version of the Trent 1000, and technology from the Trent XWB. The engines will offer a thrust range of 68,000–72,000 lbf
(300–320 kN) and have an electronic bleed air system (EBAS). Compared to the A330 engines the Trent 7000 will improve specific fuel consumption by twelve per cent (net ten per cent), double the
bypass ratio to 10:1, increase maximum compression ratio to 50:1 and halve emitted noise energy enabling the A330neo to meet the stricter London airport (QC) noise regulations of QC1/0.25 for
departure and arrivals respectively.[40][41] The Trent 7000 performed its first engine test run on 27 November 2015.[42] The fan diameter is 112 inches (2845 mm) and has 20 fan blades.[43]

Non-aircraft variants [ edit ]

MT30 [ edit ]
Main article: Rolls-Royce MT30

The MT30 is a derivative of the Trent 800, (with a Trent 500 gearbox fitted), producing 36 MW for maritime applications. The current version is a turboshaft engine, producing 36 MW, using the Trent 800
core to drive a power turbine which takes power to an electrical generator or to mechanical drives such as waterjets or propellers. It will power the Royal Navy's Queen Elizabeth class aircraft carriers.

Industrial Trent 60 Gas Turbine [ edit ]

This derivative is designed for power generation and mechanical drive, much like the Marine Trent. It delivers up to 66 MW of electricity at 42% efficiency.[44] It comes in two key versions DLE and WLE.
The WLE is water injected, allowing it to produce 58 MW in ISA conditions instead of 52 MW. It shares components with the Trent 700 and 800.[44] The heat from the exhaust, some 416–433 °C,[44] can
be used to heat water and drive steam turbines, improving efficiency of the package. Besides Rolls-Royce, a leading packager of the Trent 60 is UK-based Centrax LTD,[45] a privately owned engineering
firm based in Newton Abbot, UK.

Future developments [ edit ]

On 26 February 2014, Rolls-Royce detailed its Trent future developments. The Advance is the first design could be ready from the end of the 2010s and aim to offer at least 20% better fuel burn than the
first generation of Trents. Next is the UltraFan, which could be ready for service from 2025, a geared turbofan with a variable pitch fan system, promising at least 25% improvement in fuel burn.[46] The
Advance bypass ratio should exceed 11:1 and its overall pressure ratio 60:1, while the geared/variable pitch UltraFan aims for a 15:1 bypass ratio and 70:1 overall pressure ratio.[47]

Advanced Low-Pressure System (ALPS) [ edit ]

After flights test in 2014 of CTi fan blades with a titanium leading edge and carbon casing, they had indoor and outdoor tests in 2017, including crosswind, noise and tip clearance studies, flutter mapping,
performance and icing conditions trials. Rolls-Royce will ground test in 2018 its ALPS demonstrator: a Trent 1000 fitted with composite fan blades and case, including bird strike trials.[48]

Advance [ edit ]

In previous Trents, the HP spool was similar and the engine grew by expanding the intermediate pressure spool work. The Advance reverses this trend and the
load is shifted towards the high pressure spool, with a greater pressure ratio, up to 10 stages compressor compared to 6 on the Trent XWB and a two-stage
turbine against the current single-stage, while the IP compressor will shrink from the 8 stages of today’s XWB to 4 and the IP turbine will be single instead of two
stages.[49]

The Advance3 ground-based demonstrator includes lean burn, run before on a Trent architecture only; ceramic matrix composite (CMC) for turbine high-
temperature capability in the first stage seal segments and cast-bond first stage vanes; hybrid ball bearings with ceramic rollers running on metallic races, required
to manage high load environments inside smaller cores.[50]
Advance
Opened in 2016, R-R’s $30 million CMC facility in California produced its first parts, seals, for the start of their deployment before being used in the static
components of the second-stage HP turbine. The twin fuel-distribution system in the lean-burn combustor adds complexity by doubling the pipework and with a
sophisticated control and switching system but should improve fuel consumption and lower NOx emissions. Hybrid ceramic bearings are newly configured to deal with loading changes and will cope with
higher temperatures.[51]

More variable vanes in one IP and four HP compressor stages will be optimised for constant changes through the flight envelope. An air pipe is produced by additive manufacturing and prototype
components come from new suppliers. The Advance3 will survey bearing load, water ingestion, noise sources and their mitigation, heat and combustor rumble while blade-tip, internal clearances and
adaptive control operation are radiographed in-motion to verify the thermo-mechanical modelling. The Boeing New Midsize Airplane needs falls in its thrust range. Advanced cooled metallic components
and ceramic matrix composite parts will be tested in a late 2018 demonstrator based on a Trent XWB-97 within the high temperature turbine technology (HT3) initiative.[51]

The core will be combined with a Trent XWB-84 fan and a Trent 1000 LP turbine for mid-2017 ground testing.[52] The Advance3 demonstrator was sent from the Bristol production facility to the Derby test
stand in July 2017 to be evaluated till early 2018.[51] The demonstrator began initial runs at Derby in November 2017.[53]

In early 2018, the demonstrator attained 90% core power, reaching a 450 psi (31 bar) P30 pressure at the rear of the HP compressor, while measuring bearing loads, changed by the different compressor
arrangement.[54] The lean burn combustor did not generate any rumble as further tests will cover water ingestion, noise, X-rays of the engine operating, and core-zone and hot-end thermal surveys.[48]

Advanced low-emission combustion system (ALECSys) [ edit ]

A standalone engine will test the ALECSys on ground before an other will be flight tested.[51] Indoor ground tests of the lean-burn combustor were concluded on a modified Trent 1000 in January 2018,
before being sent to Manitoba for cold-weather trials in February 2018, covering start-ups and ice ingestion. Noise testing will follow on an outside rig, then flight tests in the next couple of years after
2018.[48]

UltraFan [ edit ]

The Ultrafan will keep the Advance core but won't be a true 3-shaft design but more a "two-and-a-half" configuration with the fan geared. As the fan will vary pitch
to be optimised for each flight phase, it won't need a thrust reverser. Rolls will use carbon composite fan blades instead of its usual hollow titanium blades, and
along new material adoption will save 750 lb (340 kg) per engine.[49]

The variable pitch fan will facilitate low pressure ratio fan operability.[55] Rolls-Royce will work with Industria de Turbo Propulsores to test IP turbine technologies
that will go into the UltraFan.[56] In Dahlewitz near Berlin, Rolls-Royce has built a power rig simulating loading conditions in flight, sized for 15–80 MW (20,000–
107,000 hp) gear systems; and recruits 200 engineers. The ratio of the initial test gear will approach 4:1 and thrust could be up to 100,000 lbf (440 kN).[57] The
specially constructed test rig is an €84 million ($94 million) investment.[51]

In partnership with Liebherr, the 100,000 hp UltraFan gearbox was first run in October 2016.[58][59] After the initial set of low-speed fan rig tests and the casting of UltraFan
second-generation titanium aluminide IP turbine blades, the initial UltraFan demonstrator concept design should be frozen in 2017.[52] Tests simulated aircraft pitch
and roll on an attitude rig in September 2016 to assess oil flow in the gearbox. The gearbox went through high-power tests in May 2017.[60][61] The UltraFan will be
3 m (118 in) in diameter and its fan blades with titanium leading edges are evaluated under the ALPS programme.[51]

At the September 2017 International Society for Air Breathing Engines (ISABE) conference in Manchester, UK, Rolls-Royce's Chief Technology Officer Paul Stein announced it reached 70,000 hp
(52,000 kW).[62] In early 2018, a third gearbox was tested as testing assessed on endurance and reliability. the first gearbox was disassembled for evaluation, confirming the component's performance
predictions. A complete demonstrator will be built in a few years from 2018.[48] In April 2018, Airbus agreed to provide aircraft integration and its nacelle and for flight testing, co-funded by the European
Union research programme Clean Sky 2.[63]

At the April 2018 ILA Berlin Air Show, flight testing was confirmed on Rolls-Royce's Boeing 747-200. The demonstrator will generate 70,000–80,000 lbf (310–360 kN) of thrust, exploiting current testing on
the Advance 3 and the 70,000 hp gearbox. Its fan diameter could be up to 140 in (356 cm), compared to the Trent XWB's 118 in (300 cm) and the GE9X's 134 in (340 cm).[64]

Higher bypass and lower fan pressure ratio induce low-speed fan instability remedied by variable-pitch blades instead of a variable area jet nozzle. Along with eliminating the thrust reverser, a short slim
nacelle would be lighter and less draggy, but in reverse-thrust the flow would be distorted, having to be turned around the nozzle into the bypass duct, and then partly reversed again into the intermediate
compressor. The large fan could lead to gull-wing airframes.[65]

Applications [ edit ]

Airbus A330
Airbus A340 (-500 and -600 series only)
Airbus A350 (exclusive engine)
Airbus A380
Boeing 777 (-200, -200ER and -300 series only)
Boeing 787 Dreamliner

Specifications [ edit ]

Gas Turbine Engines[66]


Variant Thrust Weight Bypass Pressure Config Fan Cruise TSFC First run Application
300–316 kN 6,160 kg 8 IPC, 6 HPC 97.4 in (247 cm) 0.562 lb/lbf/h
Trent 700[67] 5.0:1[68] 36:1[68] 1990 Airbus A330
67,500–71,100 lbf 13,580 lb 1 HPT, 1 IPT, 4 LPT 26 blades 15.9 g/kN/s
334–415 kN 6,078 kg 8 IPC, 6 HPC 110 in (280 cm) 0.560 lb/lbf/h
Trent 800[69] 6.4:1 33.9-40.7:1 1993 Boeing 777-200/200ER/300
75,000–93,400 lbf 13,400 lb 1 HPT, 1 IPT, 5 LPT 26 blades 15.9 g/kN/s
240–250 kN 4,990 kg 8 IPC, 6 HPC 97.4 in (247 cm) 0.542 lb/lbf/h
Trent 500[70] 7.6:1 36.3:1 1999 Airbus A340-500/600
53,000–56,000 lbf 11,000 lb 1 HPT, 1 IPT, 5 LPT 26 blades 15.4 g/kN/s
280 kN 4,840 kg 8 IPC, 6 HPC 102 in (260 cm) 0.542 lb/lbf/h
Trent 600 41:1 dropped 747-400 developments
63,000 lbf 10,660 lb 1 HPT, 1 IPT, 5 LPT 26 blades 15.4 g/kN/s
334.29–374.09 kN 6,246 kg 8 IPC, 6 HPC 116 in (290 cm) 0.522 lb/lbf/h
Trent 900[23] 8.7–8.5:1 37–39:1 2004 Airbus A380
75,152–84,098 lbf 13,770 lb 1 HPT, 1 IPT, 5 LPT 24 blades 14.8 g/kN/s
285–331 kN 5,936–6,120 kg 8 IPC, 6 HPC 112 in (280 cm) 0.5062 lb/lbf/h
Trent 1000[71] 10:1 50:1 2006 Boeing 787
64,100–74,400 lbf 13,087–13,492 lb 1 HPT, 1 IPT, 6 LPT 20 blades 14.34 g/kN/s
370–430 kN 7,277 kg 8 IPC, 6 HPC 118 in (300 cm) 0.478 lb/lbf/h
Trent XWB[72] 9.6:1 50:1 2010 Airbus A350 XWB
84,000–97,000 lbf 16,043 lb 1 HPT, 2 IPT, 6 LPT 22 blades 13.5 g/kN/s[a]
300–320 kN 7,747 kg 8 IPC, 6 HPC 112 in (280 cm) 0.506 lb/lbf/h
Trent 7000[73] [b]
10:1 50:1 2015 Airbus A330neo
68,000–72,000 lbf 17,080 lb 1 HPT, 1 IPT, 6 LPT 20 blades 14.3 g/kN/s[c]

See also [ edit ]

Related development
Aviation portal
Rolls-Royce RB211 United Kingdom
portal
Rolls-Royce Trent 500
Rolls-Royce Trent 700
Rolls-Royce Trent 800
Rolls-Royce Trent 900
Rolls-Royce Trent 1000
Rolls-Royce MT30

Related lists

List of aircraft engines

Footnotes [ edit ]

Notes [ edit ]
a. ^ 15 per cent fuel consumption advantage over the original Trent engine
b. ^ 3,500 lb (1,588 kg) more than the 6,160 kg (13,580 lb) Trent 700
c. ^ 10% better than Trent 700

1.^ All Nippon Airways, the sole customer of the 787-3, has cancelled its order, leaving the -8 and -9 the only two variants under development.
2.^ Engine interchangeability makes the 787 a more flexible asset to airlines, allowing them to change from one manufacturer's engine to the other's in light of any future engine developments which
conform more closely to their operating profile. The cost of such a change would require a significant operating cost difference between the two engine types to make it economical. A difference that
does not exist with the engines today.[citation needed]
3.^ Singapore Airlines has 58 Trent 800 powered 777s and 5 Trent 500 powered A340-500s; it also has a further 19 Trent 700 powered A330-300s, 19 Trent 900 powered A380-800s and 20 Trent
XWB powered A350 XWB-900s on order. [1] Should it select the Trent 1000 for its order of 20 787-9s, it will become the first airline to operate 6 different versions of the Trent.

References [ edit ]
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Stephens Limited. ISBN 978-1-85260-163-8. 41. ^ Guy Norris (14 July 2014). "Rolls-Royce Details Trent 7000 Plans For A330neo" . aviationweek.com.
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18. ^ "Rolls-Royce Trent 800" . Retrieved 2009-02-15. July 2015.
19. ^ BW Online | 9 August 1999 | How GE Locked Up That Boeing Order 57. ^ Guy Norris (27 May 2015). "Rolls Freezes Design Of First UltraFan Test Gear" . Aviation Week &
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12 July 2014. Rolls-Royce. 24 October 2016.
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Data Sheet" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-10-13. Retrieved 2007-01-26. International News.
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2007-10-17. 62. ^ "Rolls-Royce sets new aerospace record with UltraFan® Power Gearbox" (Press release). Rolls-
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09-27. Retrieved 2007-07-14. 66. ^ "Gas Turbine Engines" (PDF). Aviation Week. 28 January 2008. pp. 137–138.

32. ^ "Trent 1000 completes testbed run" . Flight International. 22 February 2006. Retrieved 2007-02-18. 67. ^ "Type-Certificate Data Sheet RB211 Trent 700 series engines" (PDF). EASA. 14 October 2014.

33. ^ "Rolls-Royce flies Boeing 787's Trent 1000 engine on 747 testbed" . Flight International. 19 June 68. ^ a b "Trent 700 poster" . Rolls-Royce.
2007. Retrieved 2007-06-19. 69. ^ "Trent 800 Type-Certificate Data Sheet" (PDF). EASA.

34. ^ "European and US regulators certify Trent 1000 for Boeing 787" . Flight International. 7 August 2007. 70. ^ "Trent 500 Type-Certificate Data Sheet" (PDF). EASA.

Retrieved 2007-08-07. 71. ^ "Type certificate data sheet" (PDF). EASA. 11 July 2016.
35. ^ "Boeing 787 Dreamliner on track to fly in June" . Reuters. 27 May 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-29. 72. ^ "Type Certificate Data Sheet E.111" (PDF). EASA. 20 April 2016. Archived from the original (PDF)

36. ^ "Airbus and Boeing are head-to-head in the widebody sector" . Flightglobal. 6 Feb 2018. on 25 July 2016.
37. ^ "Enhanced A340 to take on 777" . Flight International. 29 November 2005. 73. ^ "Trent 7000 infographic" (PDF). Rolls-Royce Holdings. Nov 2016.

External links [ edit ]

Rolls-Royce plc Wikimedia Commons has


media related to Rolls-Royce
Trent 500 series
Trent.
Trent 700 series
Trent 800 series
Trent 900 series
Trent 1000 series
Trent XWB
Trent 60
MT30

· · Rolls-Royce Trent aero engine series [show]

· · Rolls-Royce plc aero engines [show]

Categories: High-bypass turbofan engines Rolls-Royce aircraft gas turbine engines Turbofan engines 1990–1999 Three-spool turbofan engines

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