Aircraft F-404 (f/a-18 A-d) Engine Parts

(Page 7) End item NSN parts page 7 of 9
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
10172983 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
011227900
10172985 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
011542855
10172986 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
011663275
10173024 Angular Electrical Accelerometer
012132614
10370840 Calibrated Flow Valve
013428404
1062-41 Special Screw
001552731
106310-060 Screw Thread Insert
013117053
106423-18 Metallic Hose Assembly
011428737
106444 Metallic Hose Assembly
011318566
106C7539P01 Adapter Roller
007823806
108596 Calibrated Flow Valve
013446043
108917 Special Washer
013119151
109432 Calibrated Flow Valve
013428404
109746 Plain Bearing Unit
013356622
11087 Thrust Washer Bearing
011294540
112089 Fluid Filter Body
013428416
1121-545 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
009317273
117-507 Retaining Strap
010819741
119-11648 O-ring
011948662
1220-QF-25K Force-weight Load Cell
012616265
Page: 7

Engine, Aircraft F-404 (f/a-18 A-d)

Picture of Aircraft F-404 (f/a-18 A-d) Engine

The General Electric F404 and F412 are a family of afterburning turbofan engines in the 10,500–19,000 lbf (47–85 kN) class (static thrust). The series are produced by GE Aviation. Partners include Volvo Aero, which builds the RM12 variant. The F404 was developed into the larger F414 turbofan, as well as the experimental GE36 civil propfan.

GE developed the F404 for the F/A-18 Hornet, shortly after losing the competition for the F-15 Eagle's engine to Pratt & Whitney, and losing the Lightweight Fighter (LWF) competition to the Pratt & Whitney F100 powered YF-16. For the F/A-18, GE based the F404 on the YJ101 engine they had developed for the Northrop YF-17, enlarging the bypass ratio from .20 to .34 to enable higher fuel economy. The engine was designed with a higher priority on reliability than performance. Cost was the main goal in the design of the engine.

GE also analyzed "throttle profiles" and found that pilots were changing throttle settings far more often than engineers previously expected; putting undue stress on the engines. GE also sought with the F404 a design that would avoid compressor stalls and other engine failures, and would respond quickly to control inputs; a common complaint of pilots converting from propeller planes to jets were that early turbojets were not responsive to changes in thrust input. GE executives Frederick A. Larson and Paul Setts also set the goal that the new engine would be smaller than the F-4's GE J79, but provide at least as much thrust, and cost half as much as the P&W F100 engine for the F-16.

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