Flight International – 11 June 2019

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AIR TRANSPORT


14 | Flight International | 11-17 June 2019 flightglobal.com

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olls-Royce is “confident” that
issues with premature blade
deterioration on the Trent 1000
are confined to that engine and
will not be replicated on any of
its other powerplants.
The UK manufacturer has been
dealing with durability issues on
the engine since 2016. These
have caused severe disruption to
operators of the Boeing 787
equipped with the Trent 1000.
Problems initially surfaced on
the Package B model but were
later also detected on the Package
C and TEN variants. But, speaking
to journalists on 30 May, R-R chief
customer officer Dominic Hor-
wood stressed the issue was relat-
ed to the specific geometry and
design of the Trent 1000.
“We are confident that what we
are dealing with on the Trent 1000
are design issues that are unique
to that product and they are relat-
ed to the specific configuration,
the specific design of that engine
at a component level,” he says.
While R-R continuously tests
that assumption, “we are confi-

SCHEDULE
Withdrawal from NMA competition was ‘responsible’ decision

Pulling out of the race to power
Boeing’s proposed New Mid-
market Airplane (NMA) was the
right decision for both parties
given the tight timeframe being
presented, Rolls-Royce insists.
In February, the UK manufac-
turer announced it was withdraw-
ing from the competition on the
grounds that Boeing’s entry-into-
service target did not align with
the development schedule for its
own proposed UltraFan engine.
Dominic Horwood, chief cus-
tomer officer, says R-R aims to
have the new geared-fan engine
ready for deployment during the
second half of the 2020s, whereas
Boeing maintains that the NMA, if
launched, would arrive earlier.
“The timing that they wanted,
which we know is mid-next dec-

ade, just didn’t align with our
view of the UltraFan pro-
gramme,” says Horwood.
Pulling out was a “difficult
decision” but also a “responsi-
ble” one, given the time required
to develop a certifiable and ma-
ture engine “that customers can
rely on”, he argues.
R-R’s move leaves propulsion
for the NMA a two-way contest
between CFM International and
Pratt & Whitney.
While declining to be drawn
on potential future applications
for UltraFan, Horwood is confi-
dent that more will present
themselves. “If your timescale is
the period from 2025 onwards in
the way that we think, we cer-
tainly shouldn’t say that NMA is
the only opportunity and we

shouldn’t necessarily say it’s the
best opportunity.
“It was an opportunity that
came very early in that window
where we have been driving to
go beyond the Trent.”
In parallel with UltraFan
development work, conversa-
tions continue with both the big
two airframers on future
programmes. “We will be ready
for when the aircraft manufactur-
ers decide they are ready for
new technology.”
Horwood points out that
although the benefits of a
geared-fan architecture are
greater on a widebody engine,
UltraFan and the new technolo-
gies in its core are equally appli-
cable to any future single-aisle. ■
See Feature P

Trent 1000-powered 787s are still
“significant” and “totally unac-
ceptable”.
R-R remains hopeful that it
will achieve a “significantly
lower level of fleet disruption” by
year-end, citing “good progress”
made on technical fixes for the
intermediate-pressure compres-
sor on Package C engines. That
adds to the rectification of earlier
problems with the intermediate-
pressure turbine blades and fan
seal on the Package B model.
Assisting airlines with recov-
ery from the disruption remains
the “single most important issue
for us to manage for our custom-
ers today”, he says.
Although its decision was not
directly related to the issues,
Trent 1000 operator Air New Zea-
land recently selected the rival
GE Aviation GEnx engine for its
incoming fleet of 787-10s.
While noting that R-R will con-
tinue to power the majority of the
airline’s Dreamliners, Horwood
says he “respects” Air New Zea-
land’s decision. R-R will, howev-
er, “continue to fight for every
787 opportunity”, he says.
R-R points out that this year it
has won two contests on the 787,
with Air Premia and Lufthansa
both selecting Trent 1000 engines
for their on-order Dreamliners. ■

Rolls-Royce

UK manufacturer’s
turbofan is option
for Dreamliner

PROPULSION DOMINIC PERRY DERBY

Blade crack issue ‘unique’ to Trent 1000


Durability problems affecting engines on certain 787s are specific to that powerplant’s geometry, Rolls-Royce insists

dent that is the case and that is
what we have shared with all cus-
tomers”, he says. “That is being
proven out in service with the per-
formance of the Trent XWB and
the sampling we have been doing
of that fleet,” he adds; no “carry-
over” of the issues has been seen.
“I know that’s easy to say, but
it does come down to the detailed

geometry, the detailed design of
this particular engine.”
The Trent XWB exclusively
powers the Airbus A350, while
the A330neo is equipped with
the Trent 7000 – a derivative of
the Trent 1000 which entered ser-
vice late last year.
Horwood admits that levels of
disruption seen by operators of
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