General Electric T58
de Havilland Gnome
General Electric
T58
In 1953 the U.S. Navy asked for a helicopter turboshaft to weigh 400 lbs
and deliver 800 hp. GE's prototype T58 first ran in 1955 weighing 250 lbs
and delivered 1,050 hp. Two T58s powered the first jet helicopter in the
U.S., a modified HSS-1, in 1957. In 1959, the civil CT58 was the first jet
helicopter engine certified by the FAA.
Production ended in 1984 but not before the T58 became the basis for the
LM100 gas generator and was license built by de Havilland (now
Rolls-Royce) as the Gnome, Alfa Romeo and IHI.
models
- CT58-GE-8: 1,250 hp (932 kW)
- T58-GE-10: 1,400 hp (1044 kW)
- Gnome Mk 110: 1,350 hp (1007 kW)
specifications
- Turboshaft
- Compressor: 10-stage axial
- Four variable stators
- Turbine: 2-stage LP/2-stage HP
- Mass flow: 12 - 14 lbs/sec
- Pressure ratio: 8
used by
- Sikorsky SH-3 Sea King
- Sikorsky HH-52 Seaguard
- Westland Wessex
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