8/1/2007 - EAST HARTFORD, CT. – The Pratt & Whitney
F135 engine exceeded 8,000 system design and development (SDD)
ground test hours this week. This achievement, in addition to
the 3,600 test hours accumulated during the F-35 concept demonstration
program, puts total engine test program hours logged at more
than 11,000.
“This testing milestone, combined with the successful
F-35 flight test program, demonstrates the maturity, flexibility
and reliability of Pratt & Whitney’s F135 propulsion
system,” said Bill Gostic, vice president, Pratt &
Whitney F135 engine program. “We remain focused on exceeding
our customers’ expectations by assuring the flawless performance
of the F135.”
Achieving 8,000 SDD ground test hours is one of a series of
milestones for the F135 propulsion system development program.
Pratt & Whitney’s F135 powered the F-35 Lightning
II’s first flight in December 2006, and continues to power
the flight test program with 19 flight tests to date and more
than 20 flight test hours.
Pratt & Whitney’s F135 engine is an evolution of
the F119 engine for the F-22 Raptor. Together the F135 and F119
will have logged more than 600,000 hours before the F-35’s
introduction into operational service in 2012. Rated at more
than 40,000 pounds of thrust, the F135 is the most powerful
fighter engine ever built.
Pratt & Whitney is a world leader in the design, manufacture
and service of aircraft engines, space propulsion systems and
industrial gas turbines. United Technologies, based in Hartford,
Conn., is a diversified company providing high technology products
and services to the global aerospace and building industries.
Source: Pratt & Whitney Press Release