قائمة محركات الطائرات الصينية
Aircraft engines produced by the People's Republic of China. Most of the engines listed are produced by the Aero Engine Corporation of China (AECC).
| WJ | 涡桨 | Wō Jiăng | Turboprop |
|---|---|---|---|
| WP | 涡喷 | Wō Pēn | Turbojet |
| WS | 涡扇 | Wō Shàn | Turbofan |
| WZ | 涡轴 | Wō Zhóu | Turboshaft |
Piston engines
| Designation | Thrust | Used by | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| HS-5 | Nanchang Y-5 | A version of the Shvetsov ASh-62, which itself was a modified version of the Wright R-1820. Built by the Zhuzhou Aeroengine Factory (ZEF), which is now the South Motive Power and Machinery Complex (SMPMC).[1] | |
| HS-6 | Nanchang CJ-6, Harbin Y-11 | Licensed copy of the Soviet Ivchenko AI-14R engine. Built by the Zhuzhou Aeroengine Factory (ZEF). Chinese development resulted in many variants (-6A, -6B, -6C, -6D, -6E, -6K). | |
| HS-7 | 1،268 kW (1،700 hp) | Harbin Z-5 | Licensed copy of the Soviet Shvetsov ASh-82V engine, which originated in the Wright R-1820. Built by Dongan Engine Manufacturing Company (aka Harbin Engine Factory). |
| HS-8 | 1،380 kW (1،850 hp) | A modified version of the Dongan HS-7 which "combined the main body and supercharger of the HS-7 with the reduction gear and propeller drive of the Shvetsov ASh-82T". Built by Dongan Engine Manufacturing Company (aka Harbin Engine Factory). |
Turboprop engines
| Designation | Thrust | Used by | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| WJ-5 | 2،162 kW (2،899 shp) | Xian Y-7 | A Turboprop engine based on the Ivchenko AI-24, built by the Dongan Engine Manufacturing Company (Harbin Engine Factory) in several variants.[بحاجة لمصدر] |
| WJ-6 | 3،170 kW (4،250 shp) | Shaanxi Y-8, AVIC AG600 | Turboprop engine; a license-built copy of the Ivchenko AI-20.[بحاجة لمصدر] |
| WJ-9 | turboprop derived from the Turbomeca Arriel and WZ-8 turboshaft engines[بحاجة لمصدر] | ||
| AEP-20 | ≈240 kW[2]
(≈320 shp)[3] |
Turboprop engine prototype. Developed as a low-cost alternative to piston engines.[2][3] |
Turboshaft engines
| Designation | Thrust | Used by | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| WZ-5 | Harbin/CHDRI Z-6 (cancelled) | Turboshaft version of the WJ-5, cancelled. | |
| WZ-6 | Harbin Z-8 | License-built copy of the Turbomeca Turmo. | |
| WZ-8 | Harbin Z-9, Harbin Z-19 | Originally license-built copies of the Turbomeca Arriel turboshaft, many modified variants of this engine were made. | |
| WZ-9 | 1،000 kW (1،300 shp) | CAIC Z-10 | Turboshaft engine for the Z-10 helicopter. |
| WZ-9C | 1،200 kW (1،600 shp)[4] | CAIC Z-10 | Upgraded turboshaft engine for the Z-10 helicopter. |
| WZ-10 | 1،600 kW (2،100 shp)[5][6] 1،800 kW (2،400 shp)[7] |
Harbin Z-20 | Turboshaft engine. |
| WZ-16 | 1،243 kW (1،667 shp) take-off 1،137 kW (1،525 shp) continuous 1،500 kW (2،000 shp) maximum |
CAIC Z-10, Avicopter AC352 | New turboshaft engine under development for the Z-10 and Z-15 helicopter based on Turbomeca Ardidan 3.[8][9] |
Turbojet engines
| Designation | Thrust | Used by | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| PF-1 | Shenyang JJ-1 (cancelled) | A small turbojet engine based on the WP-5, which was a copy of the Soviet Klimov VK-1F. | |
| WP-5 | Shenyang J-5, Harbin H-5 | A licensed copy of Soviet Klimov VK-1 turbojet, which was derived from the Rolls-Royce Nene engine. Built at the Shenyang Liming Aircraft Engine Company. | |
| WP-5D | 26.5 kN | Shenyang JJ-5 trainer | Produced by Xi'an (XAE) |
| WP-6 | Shenyang J-6, Nanchang Q-5 | Based on the Soviet Tumansky R-9BF-811 jet engine | |
| WP-6A | 29.42/36.78 kN | Shenyang J-6 I, Nanchang Q-5 | Improved WP-6 |
| WP-6Z | Nanchang J-12 (cancelled) | ||
| WP-7 | 43.15 kN | Based on the Soviet Tumansky R-11-300 afterburning turbojet. Many upgrades and new variants have been developed from the basic engine. | |
| WP-8 | 93.2 kN | Xian H-6 | Based on the Mikulin AM-3M-500 turbojet.[10] |
| WP-9 | Shanghai Y-10 (cancelled) | Based on the Pratt & Whitney JT3C, cancelled | |
| WP-10 | |||
| WP-11 | Beijing WZ-5, HY-4 anti-ship missile | Small turbojet engine made by China National Aero-Engine Corporation (CAREC). Similar to the Turboméca Marboré. | |
| WP-12 | |||
| WP-13 | 39.9/63.7 kN | Chengdu J-7 | A Chinese engine based on the Tumansky R-13-300 turbojet. Several variants were made. |
| WP-13A | 44.1/66.7 kN | ||
| WP-13A-II | 42.7/65.9 kN [1][2] | Shenyang J-8II | Produced by Liming Aircraft Engine Company |
| WP-13F | 44.1/66.7 kN | Chengdu J-7, JL-9 | Produced by CHINA NATIONAL AERO TECHNOLOGY IMPORT AND EXPORT CORPORATION |
| WP-14 Kunlun |
~75 kN with afterburn | Shenyang J-8III | Indigenous Chinese turbojet engine developed by Shenyang Aeroengine Research Institute. |
| WP-14C Kunlun-3 |
Chengdu J-7, Shenyang J-8T, Guizhou JL-9 | Improved WP-14 | |
| WP-15 | 81.4 kN/122.58 kN[11] | Shenyang J-13 (cancelled) | Based on the Soviet Tumansky R-29-300 turbojet engine. |
Turbofan engines
| Designation | Thrust | Used by | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| WS-5 | 35 kN (7،900 lbf) | Harbin H-5 (testbed) | Cancelled; turbofan modification of WP-6 |
| WS-6 | 122.2 kN (27،500 lbf) | Chengdu J-9, Shenyang J-13, Nanchang Q-6 | Cancelled |
| WS-6A | 101.69 kN (22،860 lbf) | Cancelled | |
| WS-8 | 80 kN (18،000 lbf) | Shanghai Y-10 (cancelled) | Cancelled |
| WS-9 Qinling | 91.2 kN (20،500 lbf) | Xian JH-7, JH-7A | Licensed version of Rolls-Royce Spey RB.168 Mk 202 |
| WS-9A Qinling | 97 kN (22،000 lbf) | Improved WS-9; comparable to the French SNECMA M53-P2 | |
| WS-10A Taihang | 120–140 kN (27،000–31،000 lbf) | Chengdu J-10, Shenyang J-11 | Indigenous Thrust/Weight: 7.5 replacement for Saturn AL-31 and AL-31F. |
| WS-10G Taihang | 152 kN (34،000 lbf) | Modified Taihang with Thrust/Weight: 9.[12] Never been used. | |
| WS-11 | 16.87 kN (3،790 lbf) | Hongdu L-11 | Licensed version of the AI-25TLK |
| WS-12 Tianshan | 85.3 kN (19،200 lbf) | Not in use. | Cancelled |
| WS-13 Taishan | 86.37 kN (19،420 lbf) | CAC/PAC JF-17, Hongdu GJ-11, CASC CH-7 | 9 ton thrust. Indigenous Thrust/Weight: 7.8 upgrade for RD-93 |
| WS-15 Emei | 156 kN (35،000 lbf)[13] | Chengdu J-20 | Described by Russian sources as the "16-ton" thrust, T/W: 9-10 project.[14] Under development for use by Chengdu J-20. |
| WS-17 Minshan | 39–49 kN (8،800–11،000 lbf) | Hongdu L-15 | Medium Thrust-Turbofan |
| WS-19 Huangshan | 98.1 kN (22،100 lbf) | J-35 | 10 ton thrust.[15] Under development for use by J-35 fighters. |
| WS-21 | 93.2 kN (21،000 lbf)[16] | J-35 | Upgrade of the WS-13, currently used as interim powerplant for J-35 fighters.[17] |
| Jiuzhai | 9.8 kN (2،200 lbf) | Medium Thrust-Turbofan[18] |
Turbofan engines (High bypass)
| Designation | Thrust | Used by | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| WS-13A Taishan | 100 kN (22،000 lbf) | Not in use | High-bypass turbofan.[19] Designed to be used by the Comac C909. |
| WS-18 | 120 kN (27،000 lbf)[20] | Derivative[20] or copy of Soloviev D-30KP-2[21] for Xian H-6K and Xian Y-20.[20] May be superseded by WS-20.[21] | |
| WS-20 | 147–156 kN (33،000–35،000 lbf) | Xian Y-20,[22] Il-76 test bed[23] | A high-bypass turbofan based on the core of the low-bypass turbofan WS-10A. Undergoing flight test on Y-20 and Il-76. Designed to be used by Comac C919 and Comac C929 but still currently in testing.[24] |
| SF-A | 132 kN (30،000 lbf) | Not in use. | A high-bypass turbofan derived from the WS-10 core.[25] Designed to be used by the Comac C919. |
| CJ-1000A | 132–147 kN (30،000–33،000 lbf) | Not in use. | A high-bypass turbofan derived from the WS-20. Designed to be used by the Comac C919. |
| CJ-2000 | 347–372 kN (78،000–84،000 lbf) | Not in use. | A high-bypass turbofan. Designed to be used by the Chengdu P80, Comac C929. |
| CJ-500 | 80–98 kN (18،000–22،000 lbf) | Not in use. | Medium Thrust-Turbofan[26] Designed to be used by the Comac C909. |
See also
References
- ^ "Lisunov Li-2". DC-3/Dakota Historical Society, Inc. Archived from the original on 23 February 2010. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
- ^ أ ب 王丹宁. "New type of turboprop engine for aircraft set to make debut next year". global.chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 2025-12-02.
- ^ أ ب Pope, Stephen (2025-11-28). "China's AEP20 turboprop aims to offer low-cost alternative to piston engines - AeroTime". www.aerotime.aero (in الإنجليزية الأمريكية). Retrieved 2025-12-02.
- ^ "PLA arming Z-10 with new rocket pods". Janes. 8 November 2023.
- ^ "WZ-10". Deagel.
- ^ "WZ-10". Airframer.
- ^ Waldron, Greg (3 November 2020). "New images of Z-20 helicopter variants highlight China's ASW efforts". FlightGlobal.
- ^ "Safran and AECC introduce the WZ16, the first jointly-developed aero engine to be certified in China". Safran.
- ^ "Safran and AECC receive certification for the WZ10 turboshaft". www.airmedandrescue.com. 11 October 2019. Retrieved 17 Jul 2022.
- ^ Kopp, Carlo (7 July 2007). "The PLA-AF's Aerial Refuelling Programs". Air Power Australia. p. 1. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
- ^ 歼击-13 型飞机 (in الصينية). Afwing.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-09. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
- ^ "International Assessment and Strategy Center > Research > October Surprises in Chinese Aerospace". Archived from the original on 2015-08-13. Retrieved 2010-03-31.
- ^ Akhil Kadidal, Prasobh Narayanan (2023-04-07). "Chinese WS-15 engine prepared for mass production" (in الإنجليزية). Janes. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
- ^ "International Assessment and Strategy Center > Research > October Surprises in Chinese Aerospace". Archived from the original on 2015-08-13. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ 曾品潔 (2023-02-09). "中國渦輪-19發動機進度提前! 航發總師曝 : 未來殲-35會比殲-20更早換裝" (in الصينية التقليدية). Newtalk新闻. Retrieved 2023-02-26.
- ^ Waldron, Greg (1 August 2023). "Future Asia Pacific carrier air wings come into focus". FlightGlobal. Archived from the original on 6 August 2023.
- ^ Joseph Trevithick (2022-07-22). "Our Best Look Yet At China's J-35 Carrier-Capable Stealth Fighter" (in الإنجليزية). The Drive. Retrieved 2023-02-26.
- ^ Lei, Zhao (15 November 2012). "Aviation industry flies into future|Economy|chinadaily.com.cn". europe.chinadaily.com.cn. China Daily Information Co. China Daily Europe. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
- ^ "WS13". Archived from the original on 2016-04-19. Retrieved 2015-10-18.
- ^ أ ب ت Fisher, Richard (27 May 2015). "ANALYSIS: Can China break the military aircraft engine bottleneck?". FlightGlobal. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
- ^ أ ب Wood, Peter; Wahlstrom, Alden; Cliff, Roger (March 2020). China's Aeroengine Industry (PDF). United States Air Force Air University China Aerospace Studies Institute. p. 32. ISBN 9798637786664.
- ^ "Chinese WS20 engine likely entering operational service". Janes.com (in الإنجليزية). Retrieved 2023-03-24.
- ^ Donald, David. "China Flies First Large Turbofan". Aviation International News (in الإنجليزية). Retrieved 2023-03-24.
- ^ "Indigenous engines for Y-20 proceeding well: aircraft designer".
- ^ "China Flies First Large Turbofan".
- ^ "中國商用發動機公司曝中國正研窄體飛機ARJ-21發動機及未來發動機計劃". Retrieved 7 December 2018.
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تصنيفات:
- CS1 الإنجليزية الأمريكية-language sources (en-us)
- CS1 uses الصينية-language script (zh)
- CS1 الصينية-language sources (zh)
- CS1 الصينية التقليدية-language sources (zh-hant)
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Articles with unsourced statements from November 2025
- المقالات needing additional references from August 2022
- كل المقالات needing additional references
- Aviation in China
- Lists of aircraft engines
- Chinese aviation-related lists