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Pratt & Whitney, From The F100 turbofan That Powered The F-15 To The F-22 Raptor Engine. PART 2 

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The history of Pratt & Whitney PART 2, from the F100 afterburning turbofan that powered the F-15 Eagle to the F119 augmented turbofan Lockheed Martin powering the F-22 Raptor.
PART 1: • Pratt & Whitney, From ...
The video covers 40 years, from the mid-50s to the end of the 90s, some of the most remarkable times of this U.S.-based company.
Pratt & Whitney is an American aerospace manufacturer with global service operations. It is a subsidiary of RTX Corporation (formerly Raytheon Technologies). Pratt & Whitney's aircraft engines are widely used in both civil aviation (especially airlines) and military aviation. Its headquarters are in East Hartford, Connecticut. The company is the world's second-largest commercial aircraft engine manufacturer, with a 35% market share as of 2020. In addition to aircraft engines, Pratt & Whitney manufactures gas turbine engines for industrial use, marine propulsion, and power generation. In 2017, the company reported that it supported more than 11,000 customers in 180 countries worldwide.
In April 1925, Frederick Rentschler, an Ohio native and former executive at Wright Aeronautical, was determined to start an aviation-related business of his own. His social network included Edward Deeds, another prominent Ohioan of the early aviation industry, and Frederick's brother Gordon Rentschler, both of whom were on the board of Niles Bement Pond, then one of the largest machine tool corporations in the world. Frederick Rentschler approached these men as he sought capital and assets for his new venture. Deeds and G. Rentschler persuaded the board of Niles Bement Pond that their Pratt & Whitney Machine Tool (P&WMT) subsidiary of Hartford, Connecticut, should provide the funding and location to build a new aircraft engine being developed by Rentschler, George J. Mead, and colleagues, all formerly of Wright Aeronautical. Conceived and designed by Mead, the new engine would be a large, air-cooled, radial design. Pratt & Whitney Machine Tool was going through a period of self-revision at the time to prepare itself for the post-World War I era, discontinuing old product lines and incubating new ones. World War I had been profitable to P&WMT, but the peace brought a predictable glut to the machine tool market, as contracts with governments were canceled and the market in used, recently built tools competed against new ones. P&WMT's future growth would depend on innovation. Having idle factory space and capital available at this historical moment, to be invested wherever good return seemed available, P&WMT saw the post-war aviation industry, both military and civil (commercial, private), as one with some of the greatest growth and development potential available anywhere for the next few decades. It lent Rentschler US$250,000, the use of the Pratt & Whitney name, and space in their building. This was the beginning of the Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Company. Pratt & Whitney Aircraft's first engine, the 425 horsepower (317 kW) R-1340 Wasp, was completed on Christmas Eve 1925. On its third test run it easily passed the U.S. Navy qualification test in March 1926; by October 1926, the U.S. Navy had ordered 200. The Wasp exhibited performance and reliability that revolutionized American aviation. The R-1340 powered the aircraft of Wiley Post, Amelia Earhart, and many other record flights.
The R-1340 was followed by another very successful engine, the R-985 Wasp Junior. Eventually, a whole Wasp series was developed. Both engines are still in use in agricultural aircraft around the world and produce more power than their original design criteria.
George Mead soon led the next step in the field of large, state-of-the-art, air-cooled, radial aircraft engines (which the Wasp dominated) when Pratt & Whitney released its R-1690 Hornet. It was basically "a bigger Wasp".
In 1929, Rentschler ended his association with Pratt & Whitney Machine Tool and merged Pratt & Whitney Aircraft with Boeing and other companies to form the United Aircraft and Transport Corporation (UATC). His agreement allowed him to carry the Pratt & Whitney name with him to his new corporation. Only five years later, in 1934, the federal government of the U.S. banned common ownership of airplane manufacturers and airlines. Pratt & Whitney was merged with UATC's other manufacturing interests east of the Mississippi River as United Aircraft Corporation, with Rentschler as president. In 1975, United Aircraft Corporation became United Technologies.
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25 мар 2024

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Комментарии : 19   
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 3 месяца назад
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@wesjones3356
@wesjones3356 2 месяца назад
Just accepted a position at one of PW's factories. Never been this excited to start a job. This is quite the legacy and the F135 engine is shaping up to be another F100. If the AF is smart, PW will get the contract for the SR-72. Only fitting considering they powered the SR-71.
@Roboseal2
@Roboseal2 2 месяца назад
The f22 was designed that early and is still the best!
@brucefrye8799
@brucefrye8799 3 месяца назад
i can proudly say i worked on the jsf program
@steve-real
@steve-real 3 месяца назад
Super interesting documentaries. I never knew they existed.
@petebravo7180
@petebravo7180 3 месяца назад
Lived next to PW in east hartford growing up still remember the sounds of testing going on back in the 80s and 90s
@Roboseal2
@Roboseal2 2 месяца назад
I am 17 and I live right over there too. Crazy how you can hear them testing somewhat even with noise suppression 😅
@abhisheksingh2328
@abhisheksingh2328 3 месяца назад
Thanks for considering my request ❤
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 3 месяца назад
No problem 😊
@tedzehnder961
@tedzehnder961 3 месяца назад
PW and GE are both great companies and competition is great also but sometimes the two eat each other up.Hopefully the government is smart enough to keep all the engineering and production talent of both.
@mattheide2775
@mattheide2775 3 месяца назад
Thank you for the video❤ It sounds like the PBS voice guy from the turn of the century 😊
@jason1440
@jason1440 3 месяца назад
Boeing could take a lesson from 1980s P&W.
@jmulnick
@jmulnick 3 месяца назад
Their shareholders would likely take umbrage with your statement. But yes, yes they really could. Alas… they have irrevocably besmirched Boeing’s legacy.
@johnpatty7489
@johnpatty7489 3 месяца назад
Back when the smart guys were in charge
@ThomasDonnelly-dt8mq
@ThomasDonnelly-dt8mq 2 месяца назад
I just watched the video about the A-10 warthog and having been a tanker in the marines and trained with these aircraft I love these planes on my side and can testify also to how terrifying seeing one coming straight at you and basically looking the pilot in the eye can be. Anyone wanting to phase out the A-10 is a damb fool.
@gibson617ajg
@gibson617ajg 3 месяца назад
Are these the lasers that started the fires in Hawaii and Tenerife?
@christophercunningham963
@christophercunningham963 3 месяца назад
Who is the narrator on these??
@captainsledge7554
@captainsledge7554 Месяц назад
I feel like the 80s and 90s were peak america. Since then we been in decline thanks to our politicians. Everything was cut throat competition... which is what bred our major leaps forward. Once that ended... things started to decline. As much as it might suck for some ppl... the best way for man to succeed is by merit.
@Ralfi_PoELA
@Ralfi_PoELA 9 дней назад
It started to decline when they tried to incorporate more foreign defense corporations with ours for NATO "solidarity" but they should have just ended NATO after the collapse of Russia and allowed European nations and Russia to build themselves up together. We had way better jet propulsion competition when we were somewhat in a friendly competition with Russia as well as pretty much partnering for the Space race.
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