Engineering:Guizhou WS-13

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Short description: Chinese turbofan aircraft engine
WS-13
Type Turbofan
National origin China
Manufacturer Guizhou Aircraft Industry Corporation
First run 2006
Major applications CAC/PAC JF-17 Thunder
Shenyang FC-31

The WS-13 (Chinese: 涡扇-13), codename Taishan, is a turbofan engine designed and manufactured by Guizhou Aircraft Industry Corporation to power the CAC/PAC JF-17 Thunder lightweight multirole fighter jointly developed by China and Pakistan, and in the near future the Shenyang FC-31 fifth-generation stealth fighter currently under development.

Design and development

China began development of the Taishan in 2000 to replace the Klimov RD-93 turbofan, which had been selected in the 1990s to power the JF-17 lightweight fighter. It is designed to have a life span of 2,200 hours and an improved version, providing around 100 kN (22,450 lb) of thrust with afterburner, is under development.[1]

The WS-13 Taishan was certified in 2007 and serial production began in 2009.[citation needed] The 18 March 2010 edition of the HKB Report stated that a JF-17 equipped with the WS-13 completed its first successful runway taxi test.[2]

Officials at the Farnborough International Airshow in August 2010 stated that a JF-17 was being test flown with a Chinese engine, likely the WS-13.[3] In November 2012, Aviation Week & Space Technology reported that flight testing on the JF-17 was underway in China.[4] It was reported at the 2015 Paris Air Show that testing was continuing.[5]

Variants

  • WS-13 – 86 kilonewtons (19,000 lbf) thrust with afterburner[1]
  • WS-13A – high bypass[6]
  • WS-13E – 100 kilonewtons (22,000 lbf) thrust with afterburner

Specifications (WS-13)

[7]

General characteristics

  • Type: afterburning turbofan
  • Length: 4.14 m (163 in)
  • Diameter: 1.02 m (40 in)
  • Dry weight: 1,135 kg (2,502 lb)

Components

  • Compressor: axial, 4-stage low pressure, 8-stage high pressure compressor
  • Combustors: annular
  • Turbine: counter-rotating 1-stage high pressure, 1-stage low pressure

Performance

See also

Comparable engines

Related lists

References

External links