Cfm 56 T 64 T 58 J 93 J 73 J 47 General Electric Jet Engines & Components Parts

(Page 7) End item NSN parts page 7 of 20
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
1C4991G01 Locating Bar
010416689
1C4991G02 Locating Bar
010416689
1C5075 Spanner Wrench
008813111
1C5075P01 Spanner Wrench
008813111
1C5237G1 Driver
009535551
1C5558G1 Inspection Gage Set
009892066
20-5D55 Torque Motor
008885086
200-374 Bearing Seal
008702746
2000T73P01 Aircraft Gas Turbine Heat Shield
009072633
2001T84P01 Machine Thread Plug
009431583
2001T95P01 Anti-rotation Pin
007565732
2006T07P01 Coated Washer
009373060
2007T16P01 Gasket Retainer
001140083
2192-004-1 Air Breat Air Duct Hose Assembly
002319388
2192004-1 Air Breat Air Duct Hose Assembly
002319388
21C1031G003 Bearing Puller Kit
008694390
21C1109G001 Bearing Puller
007535302
21C1197G001 Puller
008670032
21C1208P010 Wrench
006910006
21C1394G001 Compressor Adapter
009312620
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General Electric Jet Engines & Components, J 47, J 73, J 93, T 58, T 64, Cfm 56

Picture of Cfm 56  T 64  T 58  J 93  J 73  J 47 General Electric Jet Engines & Components

The General Electric J47 turbojet (GE company designation TG-190) was developed by General Electric from its earlier J35. It first flew in May 1948. The J47 was the first axial-flow turbojet approved for commercial use in the United States. It was used in many types of aircraft, and more than 30,000 were manufactured before production ceased in 1956. It saw continued service in the US military until 1978. Packard built 3,025 of the engines under license.

The J47 design used experience from the TG-180/J35 engine which was described by Flight magazine in 1948 as the most widely used American-conceived turbojet.

Overhaul life for the J47 ranged from 15 hours (in 1948) to a theoretical 1,200 hours (625 achievable in practice) in 1956. For example, the J47-GE-23 was rated to run 225 hours time between overhauls. As installed on the F-86F, it experienced one in-flight shutdown every 33,000 hours in 1955 and 1956.

Ground-based vehicles that used the engine include:

In the 1950s, interest in the development of nuclear-powered aircraft led GE to experiment with two nuclear-powered gas turbine designs, one based on the J47, and another new and much larger engine called the X211.

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