The Rolls Royce RB.211 family is a family of high-bypass turbofan aircraft engines made by Rolls-Royce capable of generating 37,400 to 60,600 pounds-force (166 to 270 kilonewtons) thrust. RB stands for "Rolls Barnoldswick", a major facility of Rolls-Royce plc.
Rolls-Royce engines had traditionally had numeric names while in testing and then were assigned the name of a British river on delivery. The use of river names is intended to reflect the nature of jet engines...a steady flow of power rather than the pulses of a piston engine. This did not happen with the RB.211, however when a new series evolved out of the RB.211 line it would be known as the Rolls-Royce Trent.
Both designs also turned to new engine designs to offer the maximum possible fuel economy. Rolls-Royce jumped at the chance to build such a design, combining features of several engines then under development. Rolls had been working on an engine of the required 45,000 lbf (200 kN) thrust class for an abortive attempt to introduce an updated Hawker-Siddeley Trident as the RB.178. This work was later developed for the 47,500 lbf (211 kN) thrust RB.207 to be used on the Airbus A300, before it was cancelled in favour of the RB.211 programme.
To this they added one totally new piece of technology, a fan stage built of the new carbon fibre materials developed at Farnborough. The weight savings were considerable over a similar fan made of steel, and would have resulted in the RB.211 outperforming anything in the air in terms of power-to-weight ratio.
Combining the three-spool layout of the RB.203, with the size and power of the RB.178, and the new carbon fibre fan stage resulted in the new and highly advanced RB.211. Lockheed jumped at the chance to work with the new engine, which they felt would offer a distinct advantage over the otherwise similar DC-10 product.
However the RB.211's complexity required a lengthy testing period. Things went further astray when the new fan stage, after passing every other test, shattered into pieces when a chicken was fired into it at high speed. A short-term solution, replacing the fan blading with titanium, also turned out to be problematical, with the discovery that only one side of the titanium billet was of the right metallurgical quality for blade fabrication.
At the time the bailout loans, and the use of nationalisation by a Conservative administration, were a matter of serious public debate, but the matter soon slipped from attention. The RB.211 series has since matured into one of the most reliable engines in history. Although originally designed for the L.1011 and similar aircraft, improvements in quality and power have allowed it to meet a number of mission profiles and performance needs, powering at least some versions of almost every large passenger plane since the 1970s.
An improved version, -524G rated at 58,000 pounds-force (258 kN) and -524H rated at 60,600 pounds-force (270 kN), featuring FADEC, was offered with Boeing 747-400 and Boeing 767. It is ETOPS 180-minutes rated for the 767. The -524G and H is the first to feature the wide-chord fan, which increases efficiency, reduces noise and gives added protection against foreign object damage. This was later adopted by GE and Pratt and Whitney for their engines.
Further improvements led to the -524G/H-T fitted to the 747-400 which is essentially remanufactured -524G and -524H fitted with the core turbomachinery of Rolls-Royce Trent, benefitting from Trent's improved performance.
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