Unlike the Germans… lmao
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Yet the first operational jet, the F-80 Shooting Star was equipped with Whittle's turbojet...The Americans had decided, as early as 1943, to invest in the Halford (rather than the Whittle) engine. Vide RG 107, NACP.
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This is kind of an over simplification. Both engines were several generations removed from the original Whittle engines and aside from a centrifugal compressor in front, burner cans in the middle and a turbine out the back (Whittle engines folded the burner cans around and the turbine was much closer to the compressor) didn't share much.Yet the first operational jet, the F-80 Shooting Star was equipped with Whittle's turbojet...
It ended up fighting MiG15s in Korea in the 50s, which were oddly equipped with the same engine but were vastly superior to the U.S. plane, leading the U.S. to send their first axial turbojet aircraft to the conflict, like the F-86
You are right, it is oversimplified, but, especially in the early stages, things evolve quite rapidly, especially when rather than being an almost pennyless inventor, you have the resources to do so. Perhaps that is why G.E. is so grateful to him to this day, which is quite surprising, considering he was not American, and more than 80 years went by since he was shipped to the U.S. together with his engine.This is kind of an over simplification. Both engines were several generations removed from the original Whittle engines and aside from a centrifugal compressor in front, burner cans in the middle and a turbine out the back (Whittle engines folded the burner cans around and the turbine was much closer to the compressor) didn't share much.
GE followed their own development path through a series of "I" engines and RR followed their own path through the Derwent and then the Nene.
I would note that some of the early axial turbojet fighters were not the answer for air to air combat either. Like the F-84 with the Allison J-35 engines.
I don't.Do you know anything about his work on early afterburner concepts?