Image of the Air Force wings with the museum name underneath

Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. seven days a week
FREE Admission & Parking

General Electric YF120

General Electric developed the prototype YF120 engine in the 1980s under a demonstration contract for the Advanced Tactical Fighter (ATF). The General Electric YF120 competed against the Pratt & Whitney YF119 engine. The engine on display was one of two YF120 engines installed on the YF-23.

To save weight, the YF120 did not use full thrust-vectoring. Instead, it used a two-dimensional vectoring exhaust nozzle that could open or close to regulate the thrust exiting the engine. The YF120 used advanced materials to reduce weight and featured a variable-cycle, counter-rotating turbine. The YF120 could operate as a conventional turbojet at supersonic speeds, while keeping the fuel-efficient characteristics of a turbofan at subsonic speeds. It produced thrust in the 35,000-pound range.

Two prototype YF-22s and two YF-23s were built, and one of each flew with either the YF120 or the YF119. Following extensive flight testing, the USAF announced in 1991 that the Lockheed YF-22 had won the airframe competition and that the Pratt & Whitney YF119 had won the engine competition.

Click here to return to the Research & Development Gallery.

Find Out More
Line
Related Fact Sheets
Lockheed Martin F-22A Raptor
Northrop-McDonnell Douglas YF-23A Black Widow II
Pratt & Whitney YF119-PW-100L Augmented Turbofan Engine
Line