Rolls-Royce/MAN Turbo RB193

RB.193
Rotating nozzle detail of the RB.193
Type Vectored thrust turbofan
Manufacturer Rolls-Royce Limited/MAN Turbo/Bristol Siddeley
First run December 1967
Major applications VFW VAK 191B
Program cost £8,000,000 (1966)


The Rolls-Royce/MAN Turbo RB.193 was a vectored thrust turbofan engine designed and manufactured by Rolls-Royce and MAN Turbo in the mid-1960s. The engine test flew in its sole application, the VFW VAK 191B VTOL fighter aircraft but production did not follow after cancellation of the associated aircraft project.

Design and development

The RB.193 was a joint development project by Rolls-Royce/MAN Turbo originally designed to meet a requirement for the VFW VAK 191B project, design work commenced after a contract from the Federal German Ministry of Defence was signed in December 1965. Bristol Siddeley (from 1966 part of Rolls-Royce) were sub-contracted to manufacture components for the engine.[1]

The design was similar in concept and closely related to the earlier Bristol Siddeley Pegasus, employing the same layout of 'hot' and 'cold' pairs of rotating thrust nozzles, internal airflow was the same as the Spey. The engine first ran at Derby in December 1967 with flight testing of the VFW VAK 191B commencing in 1971 with the first free hovering flight taking place at Bremen on the 10th September. The aircraft later successfully transitioned from hovering to forward flight at Manching in October 1972.[2][3] By the end of the test programme in 1975 the RB.193 had accumulated 12 hours of flight time and 91 flights.[4]

Applications

Engines on display

A VFW VAK 191B aircraft fitted with an RB.193-12 is on display at the Deutsches Museum Flugwerft Schleissheim, panels have been removed to allow viewing of the rotating nozzle and mechanisms.

Specifications (RB.193-12)

Data from Gunston[5]

General characteristics

Components

Performance

See also

Related development
Comparable engines
Related lists

References

Notes
Bibliography
  • Gunston, Bill. World Encyclopedia of Aero Engines. Cambridge, England. Patrick Stephens Limited, 1989. ISBN 1-85260-163-9

External links

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