It looks increasingly likely that next
Boeing will launch the NMA - or MoM, or 797, or whatever you want to call it.
One of the most interesting questions is
the engine choice(s) that Boeing will make:
First of all, will the customer have an
engine choice? Here the questions are:
- does Boeing want to give
the customers a choice
and
- how large the engine OEM think the market for
the new aircraft will be
If Boeing does not want to give a choice
of engines, then we can see CFM as the most likely “winner”. Why? First of all,
of course, because their good relationship with Boeing in general. The also because
CFM would lose market share when the NMA is launched: the NMA would certainly
take some sales from the B737MAX-9, 10 and the A321neo/LR and therefore
business away from their LEAP-1A/B ( and from PW’s PW1100G as well). So if CFM
would not be the sole engine provider for the NMA, CFM would lose business.
Hard to see that CFM would not use their whole financial, technical and market
power to defend their market share.
Now, if Boeing does want to give their
customers a choice the question is if the engine OEM’s think they can build a
good business case around getting half of the NMA market. Boeing officially
claims that there is a market
for around 4000 of even 5000
airplanes in this category. Others are not so sure…
If now Boeing selects two engine OEM for
the NMA and one of the thinks the market is not large enough for two, we could
see a sole source even if Boeing wants to have two engines. GE
seems to be a bit skeptical about too many engine options – although they
later revised their tone, reportedly they initially persisted on a sole source
solution.
Now what kind of engine would we see for
the NMA?
If EIS is in 2025 we should not expect
something radically new. With an engine choice in early 2019 and a certification
of the engine in needed 2024 for a one year flight test, there are five years
between the real start of the development program and certification. This is
about the same time that was available for P&W and CFM to develop their PW1100G
and LEAP-1A. The GTF was tested in flight from both P&W and Airbus before
(not the later PW1100G but a development engine based on the PW6000 core). The
technologies for the LEAP engine were developed starting around 2008, about the
same time P&W started building their GTF demonstrator.
So for the NMA engine there is less time
to get an engine developed and certified than for the A320neo and the B737MAX.
We should therefore expect engines based
on the PW1100G and the LEAP engine family – no geared turbofan (or how they
would name it) from CFM. 2025 would just come too early…
And RR – they are working on their version
of the geared turbo fan, called UltraFan, since
at least 2012. The
first flight test is scheduled for 2021. Potentially, they could be ready
by 2025, if the flight test would not reveal any major problems. But detailed
design would have to be in full swing by then and the first engine development test
for the NMA should be in 2022.
So would
Boeing take the risk? Since the days of the B787 Boeing seems to be “risk
averse”, and with good reason!
The more likely RR engine that Boeing
would consider would be a 3 shaft engine based on the Advance 3 core – the same
core that would then later be used for the Ultra Fan - maybe for the Airbus
answer to the Boeing NMA?
So the most likely engine types for NMA
would be
- an advanced version of the PW1100G from P&W
- an advanced version of the LEAP-1A/-B from CFM
- a 3 shaft engine based on the Advance 3 core from RR
Will the RR advance not be better than any Leap or PW engines? Also, they're been working on the UltraFan for a while now according to their website and will potentially be available by 2025. I don't think Boeing will pass on that choice even if they have to wait one more year or so. Perhaps Boeing can offer the first engine option on the plane, Let's say "enhanced Leap" engine by 2025 and then the RR UltraFan a year later. It surely makes for an interesting debate for the next few years.
ReplyDelete