Engines Technology

GE Aviation’s Catalyst turboprop engine soars with Beechcraft King Air in the first successful flight

The Catalyst engine is an original turboprop design to deliver a step change in performance and is the first turboprop in the aviation history made with 3D printed components.
The Catalyst engine is expected to achieve as much as 20 percent lower fuel burn and 10 per cent higher cruise power as compared to its competitors.

This engine has seen its launch customer in Textron Aviation along with plenty of other applications in drones and trainers.

2 October 2021: GE Aviation’s latest, clean-sheet Catalyst turboprop engine recently completed its first flight on a Beechcraft King Air Flying Test Bed. The flight lasted for one hour and 40 minutes and took off and landed at Berlin Airport. Officially launched in 2015, the first run of the engine on the Flying Test Bed began in December 2020.  Side-by-side GE Aviation Turboprop delivered its first flightworthy engine to the launch customer, Textron Aviation for the single-engine turboprop Beechcraft Denali. To date, 16 test engines have accumulated more than 2,600 hours of operation in ground tests and completed four certification tests.

Riccardo Procacci, CEO & general manager of Avio Aero and GE Aviation Turboprop Engines said, “We are very pleased by this successful first flight and proud of our team of outstanding professionals and specialists from all over Europe. The Catalyst first flight opens a world of opportunities in the business and general aviation market with our launch customer at Textron Aviation, but also in the defense space for applications like drones and trainers. It can be, in addition, a super-efficient core that can pave our way towards hybridization of flight.”

Paul Corkery, general manager of GE Aviation Turboprops said, “This is a tremendous moment for the Catalyst engine. It is the result of huge efforts by our brilliant team to bring this engine out of the test cell and onto the King Air Flying Test Bed. We’re very encouraged by preliminary data from the first flight, and we’re looking forward to continued flight testing on this revolutionary turboprop engine, alongside our launch customer, Textron, that is heading the same way with their Beechcraft Denali prototype.”

Pierfederico Scarpa, VP Marketing & Sales of Avio Aero said, “As the first turboprop ever fully designed, developed and built in Europe in the last half-century, the Catalyst engine is an ITAR-free product also available for military applications. In this scope, Catalyst has not only technological maturity, but also outstanding performances being confirmed by an ongoing validation and certification process.”

The Catalyst engine went through the most extensive certification testing ever for a turboprop engine in the business and general aviation segment. The engine is GE’s first modern Full Authority Digital Engine Control (FADEC) controlled turboprop, aimed to service the 850 -1600 SHP range. The FADEC is able to deliver a jet-like, single-lever power and propeller control and reduces pilot workload while providing a greater level of control and responsiveness.

Sigismond Monnet, Chief Test Pilot said, “The first flight was very successful. I must say, everything went flawlessly. We actually flew longer than planned, and the engine performed as we expected. I look forward to proceeding with the flight test campaign and expanding the Catalyst’s flight envelope.”

The Catalyst engine is an original turboprop design to deliver a step change in performance and is the first turboprop in aviation history made with 3D printed components. The engine features an industry-best 16:1 overall pressure ratio, enabling the engine to achieve as much as 20 percent lower fuel burn and 10 percent higher cruise power compared to competitors in the same size class.