Safran Aircraft Engines
Safran Aircraft Engines is a French aerospace engine manufacturer headquartered in Courcouronnes, France. It designs, makes and maintains engines for commercial and military aircraft as well as rocket engines for launch vehicles and satellites.
Some of its notable past developments, alone or in partnership, include the M88 for the Rafale, Olympus 593 for Concorde, CFM56/CFM-LEAP for single-aisle airliners, and the Vulcain engines for the Ariane 5.
It has 15,700 employees working at 35 production sites, offices, and MRO facilities worldwide. It files an average of nearly 500 patents each year. Safran Aircraft Engines is a subsidiary of Safran.
Major Programmes
In terms of volume, the most impactful commercial aero engine produced by Safran Aircraft Engines is the CFM International CFM56 turbofan powerplant. This engine is both developed and manufactured via a 50-50 joint venture company, CFM International, which Safran splits the ownership of with the American industrial conglomerate General Electric. Established during the 1970s, the CFM56 was not an early success; by April 1979, the joint venture had not received a single order in five years and was allegedly two weeks away from being dissolved. The program was saved when Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, and Flying Tigers chose the CFM56 to re-engine their DC-8s; shortly thereafter, it was also selected to re-engine the KC-135 Stratotanker fleet of the United States Air Force, this operating being the engine's biggest customer. Following this turn of fortune, tens of thousands of engines have since been produced over the decades. A total of 30,000 CFM56s have been completed by July 2016.Safran Aircraft Engines is also the main partner for several other engines coproduced with GE, including the CF6-80 and GE90. Safran Aircraft Engines is also involved in the Engine Alliance, which manufactures the GP7000 high-thrust turbofan engine, one of the only two powerplants certified to power the twin-decker Airbus A380. During the 2010s, Safran started manufacturing its portion of the LEAP engine via the CFM International joint venture; Safran and GE each assemble half of the annual volume. To cope with high demand for the LEAP engine, CFM has duplicated supply sources for 80% of parts and as well as subdivided assembly sites.
Safran Aircraft Engines is also involved PowerJet, a joint venture business with Russian aero engine specialist NPO Saturn; this company produces SaM146 turbofan engine, which is used to power the Sukhoi Superjet 100 regional jet. During 2005, a new production plant was founded in Rybinsk, VolgAero, to manufacture components of the SaM146; additionally, parts and assemblies of other engines produced by PowerJet's two parent companies are also produced on this site.
In terms of military engines, Safran Aircraft Engines produces the Snecma M88 turbofan. This engine was developed to power the Dassault Rafale fighter aircraft. It fulfills numerous stringent performance criteria, including a high thrust-to-weight ratio, low fuel consumption across all flight regimes, and a long engine life. Additional considerations were afforded to both the M88's maintainability and upgrade potential. Qualification of the M88-2 engine was completed during 1996 while the first production engine was delivered by the end of that year. It is of a modular design for ease of construction and maintenance, as well as to enable older engines to be retrofitted with improved subsections upon availability, such as existing M88-2s being upgraded to M88-4E standard. In May 2010, a Rafale flew for the first time with the M88-4E engine, an upgraded variant with greater thrust and lower maintenance requirements than the preceding M88-2.
engine on static display at the Paris Air Show, 2017
In 2002, the Europrop International consortium was set up by four aero engine manufacturers, Safran Aircraft Engines, Germany's MTU Aero Engines, Britain's Rolls-Royce Holdings and Spain's Industria de Turbo Propulsores. EPI GmbH is tasked with designing, developing, marketing, manufacturing and providing support for the TP400-D6 turboprop engine to power the Airbus A400M Atlas, a military airlifter manufactured by Airbus Defence and Space. The TP400 is the most powerful turboprop in the world currently in production.
During 2008, the European Commission launched an open rotor demonstration led by Safran within the Clean Sky program with 65 million euros funding over eight years : a demonstrator was assembled in 2015, and ground tested in May 2017 on its open-air test rig in Istres, aiming to reduce fuel consumption and associated CO2 emissions by 30% compared with current CFM56 turbofans.
With its 30:1 bypass ratio, it should deliver a 15% improvement over the CFM International LEAP already at 11:1; but Airbus is more interested in the more conventional Ultra High Bypass Ratio turbofan at 15:1, which could be introduced from 2025, offering 5% to 10% better efficiency than the LEAP and to be tested from 2020. Built around the M88's core, the fan blades are slower than the 1980s GE36 due to the reduction gear, lowering noise and the fan can be mounted at the engine front for under-wing configurations. The gearbox and the blade variable-pitch technologies were validated in 100 cycles and 70 hours of tests, including 25% at takeoff thrusts of, reverse thrust, and rotor imbalance with a blade weight. Afterwards, it was disassembled in April 2018 to examine each part and refine expected wear predictions. GE Aviation was involved through its Italian subsidiary Avio Aero, providing the gearbox and the low-pressure turbine. To be certified, a blade-out event have to be extremely improbable, less than once every billion flight hours as its RTM carbon fiber fan blades will be supported by the in-service LEAP experience.
During December 2019, Safran and MTU announced an agreement to found a 50/50 joint venture to manage the development, production, and after-sales support activities of the new military aero engine intended to power the Future Combat Air System.
Timeline
- 1945: Snecma was formed when the French aircraft engine manufacturer Gnome & Rhône was nationalised. The name 'Snecma' was an acronym for Société nationale d'études et de construction de moteurs d'aviation.
- 1946 or 1947, the nationalized Établissments Regnier Motor Company was absorbed into Snecma and continued to produce the SNECMA Régnier 4L.
- 1961: Snecma and Bristol Siddeley formed a joint venture to produce a high-performance jet engine for the Concorde. The main body of the engine came from the Bristol Olympus, which was further improved with several refinements including the addition of the variable intakes necessary for supersonic flight.
- 1968: Snecma acquired Hispano-Suiza, Socata and Bugatti.
- 1970: Messier and Snecma agreed to merge their landing gear business. The following year, Messier-Hispano was formed, which was fully acquired by Snecma in 1973. Snecma's landing gear business was further consolidated by the creation of Messier-Hispano-Bugatti in 1977.
- 1974: Snecma and General Electric created a joint venture named CFM International, beginning a long term cooperation to produce the CFM56 series of turbofan engines.
- 1990: Snecma announced its partnership with General Electric to build and produce the General Electric GE90 engine.
- 1994: Messier-Dowty was formed following the merger of the landing gear businesses of Snecma and the British TI Group.
- 1997: Snecma fully acquired the Société européenne de propulsion.
- 1998: Snecma took full control of Messier-Dowty.
- 1999: Snecma Services was created to consolidate all maintenance, repair and overhaul operations.
- 2000: Snecma acquired Labinal, along with its Turbomeca and Microturbo subsidiaries.
- 2001: Hurel-Hispano was created to consolidate the group's engine nacelle and thrust reverser business.
- 2005: Snecma merged with Sagem to form Safran. Snecma was divided into two divisions of the new group.
- 2010: Snecma and GE formed CFM Materials as a 50/50 joint venture.
- 2016: Snecma was renamed Safran Aircraft Engines as the main subsidiary of Safran.
Products
Aircraft
- SNECMA Coleoptere
Commercial engines
- CFM International CFM56
- CFM International LEAP
- PowerJet SaM146
- General Electric GE90
- General Electric CF6
- Engine Alliance GP7000
- Safran Silvercrest
- 5,000 shp turboprop for 70–90 seater regional airliners
Military engines
- SNECMA Atar
- SNECMA M53
- SNECMA M88
- EuroProp TP400-D6
- SNECMA Turbomeca Larzac
Space engines
- Viking
- HM7B
- PPS-1350
- Vinci
- Vulcain
Sites
- Courcouronnes: Headquarters
- Évry-Corbeil
- Gennevilliers
- Istres
- Guiana Space Centre
- Le Creusot
- Vernon
- Melun Villaroche Aerodrome
- Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines
- Châtellerault
Citations