Pratt & Whitney Canada still is not ready at this NBAA to name a customer for its newest engine, the PW800. But the Montreal-based engine maker is ready to provide new technical details and update the progress of developing the 10,000-20,000lb thrust-class engine.

P&WC launched the PW800 in 2008 after Cessna selected the engine to power the Citation Columbus, but the programme was canceled the following year.

Since 2009, P&WC has been running several demonstrators of the core technology, which is derived from the PurePower PW1000G geared turbofan family for the commercial market, says Michael Perodeau, P&WC’s vice-president of corporation aviation and military engines.

Although the PW800 is in the same thrust class as the PW1200G that powers the Mitsubishi Regional Jet, it includes several key differences – most notably the lack of the fan drive gear system that decouples the rotation speeds of the low pressure turbine and the inlet fan in the PW1200G.

“The core [of the PW800] would remain the same and there would be a new low-spool turbine, a new fan and ducting, of course,” ­Perodeau says. The core comprises the compressor section, the combustor and the turbine stages.

“Typically, when you’re going for a long-range business jet, you optimize around relatively high altitude cruise versus regional and other commercial turbofan engines, which are optimized for ­take-off climb and lower altitudes and lower speeds,” ­Perodeau adds.

If selected by an aircraft manufacturer, the PW800 would compete in the same power class as the GE Aviation Passport 20, Rolls-Royce BR725 and Snecma Silvercrest engines.

“I think given the technologies available and the technologies we have chosen, we think that overall we’re going to have a competitive edge over them,” Perodeau says. “But I wouldn’t put numbers to it at this point.”

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Source: Flight Daily News

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