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<i>FARNBOROUGH, England -- A vast amount of thrust will be available to the Pentagon's new Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, according to Rolls-Royce data that could upset the competition to build engines for the plane.
The engine being developed by Rolls-Royce, in cooperation with General Electric, is 40 percent more powerful than expected, according to figures provided by the British company.
"Here is the F136 engine, which pumps out a whopping 56,000 pounds of thrust," said Colin Green, the head of Rolls-Royce's defense aerospace business. If the Rolls-Royce figure is accurate, it well exceeds the 40,000 pounds claimed earlier by GE and its military customers.
It would also have ramifications for the impending competition to build power plants for the F-35, since customers prefer a more powerful engine.
The GE-Rolls team and the Pratt & Whitney unit of United Technologies will build competing engines for the F-35, which is expected to become the largest combat-aircraft program in history when it enters production in a few years.
Industry executives expect the contract to be worth $30 billion, plus much more in supporting the engines through decades of service life.
Green, attending the Farnborough air show in Britain, said the F136 would have the advantage of lower running costs because, being so powerful, it could deliver adequate thrust without being pushed to its limits.
A spokesman for GE, which is responsible for about 60 percent of the project, said only that the engine would deliver about 40,000 pounds of thrust.
Ed O'Donnell, project manager for Pratt & Whitney's rival engine, said their version would deliver a similar amount of thrust.
Regardless of who wins the engine contract, the plane has its detractors. Competitors point out that the F-35's large size make it best suited to ground-attack missions, arguing that it will lack the maneuverability to be a superior dogfighter.
Engineers who doubted the Rolls figures pointed out that the engine had to fit into the same space in the F-35 as Pratt's F135 engine, which would be difficult for a much more powerful engine to do. As one put it: "Physics is physics."
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