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    Tinker Celebrates 75 Years: CFM International CFM56 (F108) engine profile

    CFM56/F108 jet engine

    Courtesy Photo | A CFM56/F108 high-bypass jet engine shown on a maintenance stand to illustrate the...... read more read more

    OKLAHOMA CITY, OK, UNITED STATES

    11.28.2017

    Story by Greg L. Davis 

    72nd Air Base Wing

    The CFM International CFM56 engine is a high-bypass, two-shaft turbofan produced by an international consortium made-up of General Electric in the United States and Safran Aircraft Engines in France. The CFM56 is the worlds’ most widely used turbofan in commercial aviation.

    The CFM56 powers entire lines of commercial jets made by Airbus and Boeing to include the A3XX series and B737 family of aircraft with operators worldwide. The military derivative is designated F108 and powers U.S. military aircraft such as the KC-135R Stratotanker, RC-135 family of reconnaissance aircraft and the Navy’s E-6B Mercury.

    The CFM family of engines feature a large diameter fan at the front, low and high-pressure sections in 12 stages followed by a combustion chamber, a single high-pressure turbine for reduction of the hot gasses across four following low-pressure fan sections. The air moving across the final five sections drive disks of blades connected to an internal shaft which helps drive the front fan blade. After moving through the low-pressure fan sections the air is expelled as exhaust gas. Only about 20 percent of the air flowing through the engine is compressed through the various stages while the remaining percent is directed around the engine core within the cowling, thus the high-bypass name.

    The Oklahoma City Air Logistics Center at Tinker AFB assumed responsibility for the F108 engine program in June 1980 in the initial planning stages for the re-engining of the KC-135. The first KC-135s were re-engined in 1984 and are also used on RC-135 reconnaissance aircraft for the Air Force and E-6Bs for the Navy. The Air Force Life-Cycle Management Center currently manages 1,920 engines with 1,845 belonging to the Air Force and 75 for the Navy. The AFLCMC has 8.7 billion worth of engines with 622 million spent annually through 120 programmed overhauls. The proposed retirement date for this engine is 2046.

    The F108 engine has added reliability and sustainability to a fleet of aging aircraft while lowering the overall operating costs and increase capability to the warfighter. At any given point in time there are assuredly dozens of CFM56 or military variants in the F108 engine series airborne around the world.

    Manufacturer: CFM International
    Engine type: High-bypass, two-shaft turbofan
    Nickname: CFM56
    Maximum thrust: 18,500-34,000 depending on the version
    In-service dates: 1984-present
    Number produced: 30,000+
    Tinker connection: Life-cycle management office, maintenance, repair and overhaul

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.28.2017
    Date Posted: 11.28.2017 12:24
    Story ID: 256649
    Location: OKLAHOMA CITY, OK, US

    Web Views: 216
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN