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Orville Wright is at the controls in this flight from Kill Devil Hill,
Kitty Hawk, N.C., on December 17, 1903.
Aircraft power is power of a special kind--a fact that Wilbur and Orville Wright
discovered when they built the plane that made the first successful powered Ulght
in December, 1903. They needed a compact, dependable, light-weight engine for
their flimsy craft, and they were forced to build it themselves. From that day on-
ward, the building of aircraft engines has been a job for speCialists.
The Wright brothers bullt their own engines until about the time of World War I,
when the Wright Company and the Glenn L. Martin interest were temporarily merged
to form the Wright-Martin Aircraft Company in New Brunswick, which built thou-
sands of engines for allied warplanes. Alter the Armistice the company split to
form Wright Aeronautical and the Glenn L. Martin Company of Baltimore.
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In the decade following the founding of Wright Aeronautical, aviation began to
grow up. Trailblazers such as Lindbergh, Byrd, Chamberlin, and Kingsford-Smith,
flying planes powered by the new Wright Whirlwind engines, explored the Crontiers
of the sky in nights that will stand forever as milestones in aviation progress.
The 1930's, despite aworldwidedepression, were the years when the air trans-
port industry established itseU as an important part of the world's commerce. The
introduction of the famous Curtiss-Wright Cyclone series during this time made
possible the operation of aircraft such as the Douglas DC-3, which became the
standard equipment for almost every airUne. The "G100" nine-cylinder Cyclone
that powered a majority of theDe-3's of this period was the first aircraft engine to
produce 1000 horsepower.
The Cyclone 14 made its appearance during the 1930' s and was installed in the
Boeing 314 clippers of Pan American Airways. These planes, considered giants in
those days, established the first regularly scheduled transatlantic and transpacific
passenger service and played an important part in intercontinental military trans-
port during World Wa:r n.
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As the 1930's drew to a close, Wright Aeronautical engineers, working under
close military security, designed and made preliminary tests of a new engine which
later overshadowed anything yet attempted in aircraft power plants. This new en-
gine made possible long-range strategic bombing during World War II. The engine
developed into the Cyclone 18, with its present basic configuration of two rows of
nine cylinders each. The Air Force believed the engine so promising that it ordered
Wright to put its development program on a round-the-clock schedule . After flight
time had been accumulated on the Consolidated Flying Boat and the Douglas B-19,
the Cyclone 18 became the power for the famous B-29, first of the big bombers.
Gen. H. H. Arnold, later referred to the B-17, the "big" bomber of the early war
years, as "the last of the small bombers".
By the time World War II began, Wright engineers had raised the horsepower
of the Cyclone 18 from its original 1700 to nearly 2000. Although it was not yet
ready for production, other models were. Late-model Whirlwind, Cyclone 9 and
Cyclone 14 engines were in ever-increasing production for the fighting aircraft of
the French, British, and United states Air Forces, such as the B-17 "Flying For-
tress", A-20 Havoc, 8-25 Mitchell, FM-2 Wildcat, SB2C Helldiver and SBD Daunt-
less.
The highest priority was assigned the Wood-Ridge plant which turned out 750
Cyclone 18 engines per month.
With the return to peace, Wright Aeronautical Lmmediately began a broad pro-
gram of development and test on gas turbines, ram jets, and the Turbo Compound
engine. At the same time, development of reciprocating engines for commercial
and military craft was continued at a high pace.
This broad engineering program was adopted with recognition of the long-term
needs of all types of aviation. The war had proved the dependability and usefulness
of the reciprocating engine, but it had also demonstrated that new types of power-
plants such as the turbo jet and ram jet were to have lmportant military missions.
The airlines of the world began a period of great expansion immediately after
the war. Their equipment, which had seen extremely hard usage during the con-
flict, needed extensive replacements. One transport plane developed for the mili-
tary (the Lockheed Constellation) promised new speed and efficiency for handling
the millions of passengers and tons of freight which the lines were being called on
to carry.
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By the end of World War ll, Wright Aeronautical had increased the rating of
its CIS engine to 2500 horsepower, which meant proportionately larger airframes
became practical. Lockheed came up with a new series of Constellations -- the
L-649 and L-749 -- which set new highs of luxury for transcontinental and inter-
continental flight.
Today the Curtiss-Wright Turbo Compound, rated 3700 horsepower for mili-
tary operations and at 3400 horsepower for commercial operations, has been selected
to power fleets of Super Constellations and Douglas DC-7's of 36 of the world's
leading airlines. The Turbo Compound continues to be foremost in commercial air
transportation with orders for Turbo Compound powered aircraft booked through
1958.
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Douglas DC-7C "Seven Seas" transport powered by four
Curtiss-Wright Turbo Compound engines.
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Curtiss- Wright Turbo Compound Engine Assembly Line
Because of its unmatched dependability and long range, the Turbo Compound
has been chosen by the Air Force and Navy to power their early warning and anti-
submarine patrol aircraft.
The first installation of the new Turbo Compound was in the Lockheed P2VNep-
tune patrol bomber of the U. S. Navy, a long range anti-submarine plane which is
also now in use by Australian and British coastal patrol groups. In addition it is
installed in the Martin P5M Marlin patrol flying boat, and Lockheed RC-121 and
R7V-l, and the Fairchild C-119 transports of the Air Force.
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Lockheed P2V-7 "Neptune" patrol bomber powered by two
Curtiss-Wright R3350-32W engines.
The Wright Engineering Department was also busy during this time with de-
velopment of ram jet engines for guided missiles. This program, which has been
shrouded in secrecy since its beginning, has been one of the most successful ever
undertaken here. The world's first controlled supersonic flight of a ram jet on
May 7. 1952 is credited to Curtiss-Wright. The largest privately-operated high
altitude. supersonic ram jet laboratory, capable of simulating speeds up to 3500
miles per hour and altitudes above 18 miles has been constructed at the Wood-Ridge
plant. The new $7.7 million plant stands next to an earlier ram jet lab constructed
in 1949.
The ram jet is essentially a supersonic powerplant which functions most ef-
fiCiently at speeds from Mach 2 to Mach 5 and 100.000 feet altitude, It is basically
a simple engine; no mOving parts are required in the actual generation of thrust,
but it requires highly compact and accurate mechanisms to control its flight. Be-
cause it depends on high speed for the compression of air, the ram jet must get an
assist before it can start. either by drop from a fast-fiying plane or by rocket
boosters.
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Within three years of the end of the war, Wright Aeronautical had a turboprop
engine flying in its experimental test plane.
The economy and power of the turboprop engine has reawakened interest in
this type power plant for military and commercial application. Recent test flights
of the Curtiss-Wright T-49 turboprop engine on the XB-47D has also stimulated an
awareness of turboprop potentialities. Alurboleclric propeller for turboprop engines
has been developed by the Propeller Division, Curtlss-Wright Corporation, at
Caldwell. Indications are that extremely efficient turboprop operations at speeds up
to 1000 miles per hour is posslble in the near future. The Curtiss- Wright De-Rated
Turboprop, which uses only two-thirds of the engine's maximum output, represents
the Urst time in aviation history that an engine offers surplus power for commercial
airline use. Prior to the De-Rated Turboprop, aircraft designers have been obliged
to use the maximum output of every new engine to fuUm the requirements for larger
and faster planes.
At the outbreak of the Korean war in 1950 Wright Aeronautical began to expand
to meet a sizable backlog of peacetime military and commercial orders.
In the autumn of that year, the company announced that it had signed a long term
engineering production agreement with Armstrong-Siddeley Motors of Great Britain
for manufacture of the Sapphire turbojet engine in this country. Shortly afterwar<4
WrighlAeronautical and BristolAeroplaneCompany announced a similar agreement
but the designation of the engines involved was kept secret.
The Air Force quickly placed a large order (or the Sapphire, which was de-
Signated J65, and Wright Aeronautical engineers and production men took up the
mammoth task of redesigning the engine (or American standards and procuring and
setting up the machinery to build it. One of the first steps in this program was the
redrawing of 1200 blueprints to convert them to American practice.
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At the same time, Wright Aeronautical was lining up 3000 subcontractors in aU
parts of the country to help carry the load of J65 production. Production of piston
engines, which was to have been turned over to licensees earlier, remained in the
Wright shop for months after the scheduled "Phase Out" while the licensees were
getting into production. The subcontract that Wright held for making major com-
ponents of the General Electric J47 engine remained active at the Air Force's in-
sistence, and occupied much of the maChinery, space, and labor scheduled for con-
centration on the J65 program.
Despite these factors, the first pilot models of the J65 were delivered in
less than a year and the first production model of the engine was accepted and shipped
within 16 months of the Air Force production order. This was by far the fastest time
that any jet engine has been brought from blueprint to production in the United States.
While the company was setting records for production of the J65, engineers
concentrated on improvements in the engine which raised its output to 7800 pounds
thrust, from the origInal 7200. Because the J65 has good growth characteristics,
its power is still being increased.
A Douglas A4D "Skyhawk", powered by the J65, set a world's closed course
speed record of 695 . 163 miles per hour in October, 1955 at Edwards Air Force
Base in CalUornia. Other records set by J65-powered military aircrafl include:
Republic F-84F Thunderslreak set faslest time ever when it won the Bendix Trophy
in 1954; three Thunderstreaks set a non-stop record from Los Angeles to New York
of 3 hours, 46 minutes, 33.6 seconds; 12 Thunderstreaks set a non-stop record
from England to Austin, Texas, of 10 hours, 48 minutes; six North American F J3
Furies accomplished the unprecedented mark of 703 hours flyIng time in four weeks
at Patuxent Naval Air Station, Maryland.
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Douglas A4D-l "Skyhawk", holder of the SOD-kilometer closed-course speed
record, is powered by a Curtiss-Wright J65-W-4 turbojet engine .
The J65 powers seven high-speed operational military aircraft. They are Re-
public F-84F Thunderstreak, RF-84F Thundernash, Martin B-57B Canberra,
Douglas A4D Skyhawk, North American F J3 and F J4 Furies and the Grumman
Fll-F-l Tiger .
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Curtiss-Wright J65-W-6 Turbojet EngIne with Afterburner
With engines such as the J65 and the Turbo Compound in production, Wright
Aeronautical Division is forging ahead in ultimates of aircraft power plant develop-
ment. The ground-breaking at Curtiss-Wright' s new Research and Development
Center at Quehanna, Pa., late in 1955, provided Wright Aeronautical Division with
facilities for developing and testing jet engtnes in the 100,000 pound thrust class.
With a history behind it that is synonomous with the history of aviation, Wright
Aeronautical Division today is looking forward to even greater achievements in air
power.
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CURTISS- lIRIGHT CORPORATION
wright Aeronautical DiVision
It operates its OWl machine shop, its own 8.fIsembly and test facilities, its
own financial. and administrative controls, all in acid.J. ticn to the design and
development ACtivities normally associated with engineering . Engineering has
its own contracts with commercial and military customere. These include the
Product I!lprov81lent Contracts which supply fWlds for the conhnued development
ot production engines and the Rese3rCh and Development Contracts for the develop.
ment or new engines . tomorroW" 5 production 18 truly dependent upon Engineering' 8
ability to improve today' s engines and to develop new engines to lIleet changing
customer requirements .
There are over four thousand people performing jobs in Engineering} e~ch
contributing special talent toward tultlllaent of the over all objective. Over
800 engineers are engaged in all phases of engine deslgn and developmentJ some
600 eaployees fabricate experimental parts as the configurations are taken trom
the drawing boards ot the )00 draftSiAen. 'nlree hundred are engaged in scb.eduling
and procuring parts ; 1,0 write operation sheets and design tools Others, skilled
in Tarioue technical occupations such as metallurgy, engine test1ng g and engineering
order writing proTide 1rAportant services that complement the 'WOrk of the design
engineer.
1bere were 170 active engines during the year . these were run on twenty-one
tull- scale fac111t7 installations, and OTer eighty additional test facilities were
utilized to bandl.e rig and component. testing . Il.JIost eight adllion gallons of
aviation gasoline and jet fuel were used, and. 900, 000 equare yarde of blueprint
paper vas used.
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Development of a new engine model takes alruost five years from the time the
idea is born. In the beginning, specifications of engine characteristics and
perfonnance must be written and coordinated with the military or the C.. A.. A.. _
depending upon 1 ts ul taste use.. Once established. they become the target to
which all engine development is directed.. '5
each specification requirement is
met through performance test1ng~ the engine moves closer to the day it car; ">e
released to production.. 'lhis span ot time for an engine development program can
be broken into rather distinct phases as shown by the first chart attached ..
Development 'WOrk extends over a period ot some four or f:l. va years and takes
many dollars and test hours t.o accomplish . Th.e four major phases of engine
developl'llent are:
10 Design and Initial Development
2. Qualification and Substantiation
3.. Product Improvement and Prod\\clbility
4.. Service Fix ald Refinement
During the later development life of an engine model, certain model changes
are also developed for specific airplane needs, to increase the engine ratings, or
provide growth.. Ul functional groups ot the Ingineering organization are geared
to this development process at the appropriate times ~ The reC81.pt o£ a contract
initiates a chain o£ activity which spans specification writing and coordination
with customers, engine and component design, release and procurement of experimental
engines, component, full=scal.e 3ld flight testing , release of the Production Bill of
Katerial, and necessary re=engineering as indicated by production and service engine
experience. The bottom of the first chart shows a typical engine development program
relating current WAD developmEnt and service engine programs to the four development
ph8B8S just described... It is important to have engines in all stages of the develop_
ment cycle to assure the continuing avalleblllty- of salable production eng1nes~
The second chart shows the Engineering organization through the Division level
and shows the full range of functions carried out and thel.r interrelation. Those
groups which perform technical 'WOrk or "engineering" of the engine and its components
report to the Chief Technical Engineer and Chief' Development frlgineer. The Adminis-
trator provides the physical services, hardware, facilities and administrative
controls necessary to accomplish the technical pr'"ogram... The Engineering Controller
1s responsible for the funding and financial control of the entire departmental
operationo
'nle \tlole Engineering organization effort below the department level is set up
on a product basis with specialized. services supporting the product, or project
groups.
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'Jhe Project Icgineering groups call upon various technical and service groups
within Engineering tor assistance. Brold Pierce, the aasistant chief engineer of
Preliminary Design j Don Clark, the assistant chief engineer of Component Develop-
ment and Gus Constantino, the assistant chief engineer of Technical Data are
responsible tor generating and analyzing data pertaining to engine components,
tor matching these components il tor developing model specifications and studying
prel1m1n~ and adT8nced design problems in aero and the~odynam1cs and combustion
_.. in general preparing an engine tor the development stage and aiding the project
engineer in his specialized. development problems . Advanced Manufacturing Methods,
\Ulder Hem Hmink studies and proposes new manufacturing techniques keeping the
project engineer abreast of the latest processing techniques and materials .s pec! ..
fications . Norton Jamieson, Experimental Facilities, coordinates facilities
requirements for teeting with the project groups and other affected organizatione.
Problems in design, stress l! and vibrations are investigated by the assistant chief
engineer - Design, under VincEIlt Moore . Final drawings are detailed from layouts
by this organization. Metallurgyil uncler Andy Slachta, 'With its laborator, facilities
and technical persomel ll provides vital data on I1aterlals il processes and part con...
figuration8 used in experimental and production eng1neso
Once the project has moved fro. tID idea to the hardware stage}) Engineering
Works Manager~ Bob Llebendorter g pt"OrtJies the parts and .facilities tor testing ~
Under his cognizance are the procurements! fabricatioD, as sembling and t esting
operations. Experimental Quality, under Chuck Holopi gl an, maintains surveillance
over the entire operation to assure adequate qual! ty 11'1 maintained during the
procurement }) fabrication and testing cyelel!l o As developlient continues , problems
associated with installation and operation in air craft are investigated in flight
operations conducted at Edwards Air Force Ba se, Cal1.!om ia. Frank Lary is the
J.aaistant Chief Engineer for Yllght Operations q
lhen the engine is tin ally r~leaeed to Production» the responsibility for
continued development and improvement is Tested with Product Engineering under
Bill Elcbberg o This group continuea the developmEilt of service engine models and
provides liaison with other departments during the production and service life of
the angine .
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