The Williams FJ33 is an American family of turbofan jet engines intended for use in very light jet aircraft. The FJ33 is a scaled-down version of the FJ44 engine. The FJ33-5A is the latest version certified in June 2016.[2]
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FJ33 | |
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Type | Turbofan |
National origin | United States |
Manufacturer | Williams International |
First run | 1998 [1] |
Major applications | Cirrus Vision SF50 Diamond D-Jet |
Developed from | Williams FJ44 |
Engine configuration is a single stage fan, with booster stage, driven by a two-stage LP turbine, supercharging a centrifugal HP compressor, driven by a single stage HP turbine.[3] An annular combustor is featured.
The FJ33 has a dry weight of less than 300 lb (140 kg), overall diameter of 18.36 in (466 mm), 38.43 in (976 mm) overall length, and produces between 1,000 lbf (4,400 N) and 1,800 lbf (8,000 N) static thrust. Specific fuel consumption at 1,200 lbf (5,300 N) thrust (SLS, ISA) is understood to be 0.486 lb/(lbf⋅h) (13.8 g/(kN⋅s)).
Iranian Reverse engineered variant serving as high endurance UAV powerplant.[4][5]
Related development
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Williams FJ33. |
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Turbofans |