General Electric H80


The General Electric H80 is a turboprop aircraft engine produced by GE BGA Turboprops. The H80 is an updated derivative of the Walter M601.

Development

The H80 was launched in 2009 based on the M601: GE added a new compressor, blisks, blades and new stators to enhance power by 3% and boost efficiency by 10%.
It reaches from the M601-F's, and improves hot and high performance.
The H80 was certificated by EASA at 13 December 2011, followed by the FAA at 13 March 2012. Its Russian type certificate was received in October 2012, and the engine also approved by Brazilian Civil Aviation agency and the Argentine Administración Nacional de Aviación Civil.
Its Electronic Engine and Propeller Control system received EASA type certification in late 2016.
The Diamond Dart 550 military trainer is due to fly it in early 2018 and it will be certified on the Thrush 510G crop duster in this year.

Design

The two-shaft, reverse flow design is derived from the Walter M601: its core features a two-stage axial and single-stage centrifugal compressor, an annular combustor and a single turbine stage, and its propulsion section is powered by a single-stage turbine driving a two-stage planetary gearbox.
GE redesigned the compressor with 3D aero to improve its pressure ratio and upgraded the hot section and turbine stages with modern metal alloys for higher temperatures with the same durability.
The H75-100 weighs more than the equivalent PT6 but pioneers single lever electronic propeller and engine control in general aviation, for an initial TBO of 4,000 hr which could be increased with experience.
It promises 10% better fuel burn, 10% longer overhaul and lower maintenance costs than the PT6A-135 for the Nextant G90XT.

Variants

;H80: formerly the M601H-80
;H75: new 750 shp derivative
;H85: new 850 shp derivative

Applications