Wil said:If the Saturn 117 has ~2.5 tnf more thurst than the Al-31, this implies the real thrust of Saturn 117 is 16-17 tnf, similar to the trust of F-119.
Wil said:Please look at this picture. Do you really think that this engine is less powerful than the F-119?
http://imageshack.us/a/img89/1340/pakfaatras1.jpg
Best wishes!
Yes, it was a real dog - VABI with FADEC with _full_ hydraulic redundancy that never exceeded 14.4 tons at stand in real life. But I'm sure that given time and money it would become a hot thing.flanker said:By all accounts i have heard Al-41 was a terribly unreliable bastard, and it never achieved designed trust. I remember "15 tons" at max for some reason, unsure where from or if it is correct.
chuck4 said:When I develope the superpower needed to divine engine thrust from photographs, I'll let you know.
Chuck4
..while F-119's fan diameter is over 1000 mm, probably in the region of
1100mm.
PaulMM (Overscan) said:I also note that the F119 could be fitted (with minor mods) in the F-15 engine bay, which mean maximum diameter can't be much larger than F110.
PaulMM (Overscan) said:http://www.f-16.net/f-16_forum_viewtopic-t-12537.html
As already stated, the F135 is much larger than the F100/F110 engines. It is also larger in diameter than the F119. The airflow requirements for the F135 will be much larger too. Without airflow, the F135's thrust would drop dramatically. On a side note, the F119 would not fit into the Viper, but could fit into the Eagle as it's engine bays (with minor production modifications) as they had extra space in them to begin with. (Space has always been a constraint in the Viper) The Eagle's inlets are also much more capable of handling the additional airflow of an advanced engine.
Even though the F135 produces 20% more thrust and weighs 1,500 pounds more than the F119
PaulMM (Overscan) said:F-135 figures from http://www.pw.utc.com/Content/Press_Kits/pdf/me_f135_pCard.pdf
Inlet diameter: 43 inches (1.09m)
Maximum diameter: 46 inches (1.17m)
Maximum afterburning thrust : 43,000lb
Maximum dry thrust: 28,000lb
Even though the F135 produces 20% more thrust and weighs 1,500 pounds more than the F119
43,000lb / 1.2 = 35,833lb
28,000lb / 1.2 = 23,333lb
And Paul Metz said the F-22 will do better than 1600 mph. Good luck getting anybody to believe the words of a pilot though.BDF said:FWIW, Paul "Max" Moga, the first official F-22 demo pilot said the F119s make 37,000lbs each on the discover channel series he did.
sferrin said:And Paul Metz said the F-22 will do better than 1600 mph. Good luck getting anybody to believe the words of a pilot though.BDF said:FWIW, Paul "Max" Moga, the first official F-22 demo pilot said the F119s make 37,000lbs each on the discover channel series he did.
chuck4 said:Wil said:If the Saturn 117 has ~2.5 tnf more thurst than the Al-31, this implies the real thrust of Saturn 117 is 16-17 tnf, similar to the trust of F-119.
That depends on which Al-31. with the right al-31, that implies 15 tnf
sferrin said:And the F135 has produced 50,000lbs+ according to P&W.
What in the world would be the point of running an engine ten seconds from explosion and then announcing it to the world? :Sea Skimmer said:sferrin said:And the F135 has produced 50,000lbs+ according to P&W.
On a bench test it did, they also said the exhaust nozzle on the production engine can only take 43,000lb so the extra thrust is not usable in service. Doubtful that running the engine at utter max thrust does good things to its service lifespan, any jet engine can be tuned for higher thrust if you ignore that issue.
kaiserbill said:Wil, I think you are mistaken about the thrust increase over which AL-31 variant.
It seems that the additional thrust was measured against the standard AL-31 baseline engine, as fitted to the Su-27.
This ties in very neatly to the officially released thrust of the PAK FA's engines of 33 000lb.
We should take this figure as this is what was officially released.
sferrin said:What in the world would be the point of running an engine ten seconds from explosion and then announcing it to the world? :Sea Skimmer said:sferrin said:And the F135 has produced 50,000lbs+ according to P&W.
On a bench test it did, they also said the exhaust nozzle on the production engine can only take 43,000lb so the extra thrust is not usable in service. Doubtful that running the engine at utter max thrust does good things to its service lifespan, any jet engine can be tuned for higher thrust if you ignore that issue.
Sea Skimmer said:About the same points all destructive testing and corporate propaganda have.
LowObservable said:Several likely reasons. The rating may not be compatible with design lifetime. It may involve a huge degree of A/B boost (beyond the normal 70 per cent realm for turbofans). It may be available only at static, with installed thrust and temperature limits cutting in at higher speeds, where the thrust is useful.
If that was a US engine, I'd say it was clearly showing a mix of technologies demonstrated on the LOAN (Low Observable Axisymmetric Nozzle) and AVEN (Axisymmetric Vectoring Exhaust Nozzle) testbeds.Su-57's new engine Izdeliye 30
It can also means simple bypass ratio change. e.g from 0.7 to 0.8. As larger engine means larger diameter and that allows for increasing bypass ratio.Well, I read somewhere that izd 20 has already variable bypass (like YF-120).
But it was heavy - for large plane, and using old technology.
So I assume also izd 30 will have such. There are such information :
https://www.aviaport.ru/digest/2020/03/20/631483.html
"Важной особенностью конструкции, обеспечивающей получение новых возможностей, является изменение степени двухконтурности."
"An important design feature that provides new opportunities is the change in the degree of bypass."
Misinformation.Well, I read somewhere that izd 20 has already variable bypass (like YF-120).
«… У АЛ-41Ф был регулируемый смеситель. Этого недостаточно для эффективного управления двухконтурностью, это был первый шаг. Кстати, в процессе испытаний до него не добрались, он на всех 28 машинах стоял на упоре (не работал).
А недостаточно этого было вот почему. Просто грубо затыкать дырку на выходе второго контура не требует перераспределения работы газогенератора между турбиной вентилятора и турбиной компрессора. Этим и занимаются регулируемые НА ТНД (Направляющий Аппарат Турбины Низкого Давления). Поворачиваясь на закрытие, они увеличивают перепад давления на ТНД, а соответственно и работу на ней. Увеличение располагаемой работы приводит к увеличению расхода воздуха. При этом желательно ещё регулировать и входные сечения обоих контуров после вентилятора. В общем, нужна развитая механизация проточной части, а это вес, надёжность, да и электроника в те времена хреновая (плохая) ещё была. Вкратце так. »
«… У АЛ-41Ф был регулируемый смеситель. Этого недостаточно для эффективного управления двухконтурностью, это был первый шаг. Кстати, в процессе испытаний до него не добрались, он на всех 28 машинах стоял на упоре (не работал).
А недостаточно этого было вот почему. Просто грубо затыкать дырку на выходе второго контура не требует перераспределения работы газогенератора между турбиной вентилятора и турбиной компрессора. Этим и занимаются регулируемые НА ТНД (Направляющий Аппарат Турбины Низкого Давления). Поворачиваясь на закрытие, они увеличивают перепад давления на ТНД, а соответственно и работу на ней. Увеличение располагаемой работы приводит к увеличению расхода воздуха. При этом желательно ещё регулировать и входные сечения обоих контуров после вентилятора. В общем, нужна развитая механизация проточной части, а это вес, надёжность, да и электроника в те времена хреновая (плохая) ещё была. Вкратце так. »
I mean, yeah? That was well known for anyone who has followed the program decently and knows about Al-41F1 beyond the meme of iT iS jUsT a SoUpEd uP Al-31F. It has supposedly very different characteristics at altitude (aka for "supercruise") for example and 80% of the parts are all new. Back when T-50-1 first flew and RuAF higher ups were so optimistic they claimed there would be 50 serial T-50's by 2020, all powered by Al-41F1.It appears that the AL-41F1 (izdeliye 117) is not quite as "interim" as many have believed; while I think there was always a longer term goal of equipping the aircraft with new engines, it appears that the plan has always been for the PAK FA to enter production and serve in combat units with the AL-41F1, and this was decided as far back as 2004. In fact, it appears that Sukhoi's T-50 submission for the PAK FA had the AL-41F1 from the very beginning. This is an interesting contrast with the Su-27, where the T-10 prototypes used the AL-21, but the revised T-10S and the production aircraft were equipped with the AL-31 from the beginning.