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Steeled for Action: The Ultra-Hardy GE9X Has Begun Rolling Off the Production Line

The GE9X, built for Boeing’s 777X, is the world’s largest jet engine—delivering record thrust, advanced efficiency, and unrivaled durability through rigorous testing.

  www.geaerospace.com
Steeled for Action: The Ultra-Hardy GE9X Has Begun Rolling Off the Production Line

The GE9X engine is a marvel of modern engineering. The fan diameter of the high-bypass turbofan engine is a whopping 134 inches (3.4 meters), a full foot taller than a regulation NBA basketball rim. While certified for 105,000 pounds of thrust, it is in fact capable of generating a record-breaking 134,000 pounds of thrust, whipping up a miniature Category 5 hurricane in its wake. To date, the superlative engine has mainly forged its reputation with thousands of hours of both ground and on-wing testing.

Now the engine is set to fulfill its purpose as the pride of the skies. The GE9X is expected to enter service next year on the wings of Boeing’s 777X family, aka the world’s largest twin-engine passenger jet. And GE Aerospace is ready for takeoff: GE9X engines are currently rolling off the production line and being loaded onto trucks for an epic cross-country haul, first to Ohio for rigorous testing and then onward to Boeing’s factory in the Pacific Northwest.

Cristina Seda-Hoelle, who heads up GE Aerospace’s GE9X program, explains how plant activity in Durham will mirror that of Everett, Washington, where final assembly of the twin-engine 777X is underway in the world’s largest factory. “We’ve started building,” she says. “And we’ll be aligning production with Boeing’s production of the 777X.”

King of the Desert

A grueling boot camp awaits each assembled GE9X in Peebles, Ohio. The engine has undergone the most rigorous testing program of any GE Aerospace commercial engine to date. Seda-Hoelle says that the GE9X has now passed through 27,000 cycles and 17,000 hours of testing. That includes a total of 1,600 cycles of dust ingestion tests to ensure the engine’s durability and performance in the more arid regions of the world where the Boeing 777X may operate.


Steeled for Action: The Ultra-Hardy GE9X Has Begun Rolling Off the Production Line
The GE9X has now undergone the equivalent of nearly two years of 24/7 testing.


“We’ve run the heck out of the engine, and customers have been really impressed by the dust test data coming back, which is the equivalent of almost three years of normal use on the engine,” says Tyler-Blair Sheppard, who heads up marketing for the GE9X. After 1,500 cycles, borescope inspections showed that the engine — especially the hot section, the high-temperature segment housing the combustion, turbine, and exhaust components — looked great and was in serviceable condition, which allowed for an extra 100 test cycles. “It will all result in a more durable engine in harsh environments,” adds Sheppard.

Of course, the quest to maintain durability standards won’t stop there. GE Aerospace has completed thousands more cycles of ground testing to obtain Extended Operations (ETOPS) approval for the engine later this year. “Around June or July, we’re going to lay out our disassembled ETOPS engine and data for our customers to see,” says Sheppard. Engineers have also taken full advantage of an extended testing period to validate the sustainability gains from the GE9X engine, such as NOx emissions that are 55% lower than regulatory limits and nearly half those of any competing engine in its class.

A Ready Support Network
GE Aerospace is also beefing up its maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) capabilities to support its GE9X customers. Over the next four years, it will invest over $1 billion to increase capacity, enhance training, and add advanced tooling in its MRO shops worldwide. Whether GE9X customers are in Europe, Asia, the United States, or the Middle East, they will receive the full suite of services extended to all of GE Aerospace’s popular engines, including overhaul, component repair, and advanced diagnostics.


Steeled for Action: The Ultra-Hardy GE9X Has Begun Rolling Off the Production Line
The first production engine leaving GE Aerospace’s Peebles, Ohio, test facility in July 2024, on its way to Boeing’s factory in Everett, Washington.

The production ramp-up will also manufacture engines for GE Aerospace’s comprehensive lease pool program, which is designed to provide airlines and operators with flexible and immediate access to spare engines. “When issues occur, we’ll be fully set up to support our customers and get them flying again as soon as possible,” says Sheppard.

At this stage, the GE9X engine has undergone more hours of endurance and flight tests than any other GE Aerospace commercial aircraft engine before entry into service. After so many cycles of iteration and analysis, the team has made improvements that will help ensure reliability right out of the gate. When the GE9X enters into service on Boeing’s 777X, it will mark a pivotal moment for the two companies — a culmination of years of shared innovation, rigorous testing, and successful collaboration.

“The GE9X engine is an absolute beast of modern engineering,” says Seda-Hoelle. “This isn’t just cool — it’s a game changer that pushes the boundaries of technology. The GE9X is the epitome of power, precision, and innovation, making it the ultimate aviation showstopper.”

www.geaerospace.com

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