Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pratt & Whitney is an American aerospace manufacturer with global service operations. It produces aircraft engines, gas turbines, and power generation systems. See its history from 1925 to present, its products, and its logo.
The PW4000 is a family of high-bypass turbofan engines for wide-body aircraft, developed from the JT9D. It has various thrust levels, from 50,000 to 99,040 lbf, and powers the Airbus A300, A310, A330, Boeing 747-400, 767, 777, and MD-11.
The F119 is a turbofan engine developed by Pratt & Whitney for the F-22 Raptor and the F-35 Lightning II. It features afterburning, thrust vectoring, and supercruise capabilities, and has a bypass ratio of 0.30 and a maximum thrust of 35,000 lbf.
The J58 is an American afterburning turbojet engine that powered the Lockheed A-12, YF-12 and SR-71 aircraft. It had a unique compressor bleed to the afterburner that increased thrust at high speeds, and was redesigned to operate at Mach 3.2.
The Pratt & Whitney PW2000, also known by the military designation F117 and initially referred to as the JT10D, is a series of high-bypass turbofan aircraft engines with a thrust range from 37,000 to 43,000 lbf (160 to 190 kN).
The Pratt & Whitney R-1340 Wasp is an aircraft engine of the reciprocating type that was widely used in American aircraft from the 1920s onward. It was the Pratt & Whitney aircraft company's first engine, and the first of the famed Wasp series .
The Pratt & Whitney XA101 is an American adaptive cycle engine demonstrator being developed by Pratt & Whitney for the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II and form the technological foundation for the company's XA103 propulsion system for the United States Air Force's sixth generation fighter program, the Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD).
The JT8D is a low-bypass turbofan engine developed by Pratt & Whitney for early narrowbody jetliners. It has eight models with thrust ranging from 12,250 to 21,000 pounds-force and is also used in military and re-engined aircraft.