Trent 800
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Technical Specifications
- Thrust
- 416.0 kN (93400 lbf)
- Bypass Ratio
- 6.4:1
- Fan Diameter
- 2.794 m
- Pressure Ratio
- 40.0:1
- SFC
- 0.3200 lb/lbf·h
- Dry Weight
- 6078 kg
- Length
- 4.370 m
- First Run
- 1993
- In Service
- 1996
Overview
The Rolls-Royce Trent 800 was the first Trent engine to be fitted to a Boeing aircraft, representing a significant commercial milestone for the British manufacturer. Developed for the Boeing 777, it offered the three-spool architecture that distinguishes all Trent engines — a design choice that provides better part-speed efficiency than the two-spool configuration used by competitors. The Trent 800's high-pressure core spins at its optimal speed independently of the fan and intermediate-pressure spool.
With a maximum thrust of 416 kN (93,400 lbf), the Trent 800 is one of the most powerful engines in the Trent family at the time of its introduction, competing against the Pratt & Whitney PW4090 and General Electric GE90 on the 777. Operators including British Airways, Cathay Pacific, and Thai Airways International selected the Trent 800 for their 777 fleets.
Technical Specifications
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Thrust (max) | 416 kN / 93,400 lbf |
| Bypass ratio | 6.4:1 |
| Fan diameter | 2.794 m (110.0 in) |
| Overall pressure ratio | 40:1 |
| Dry weight | 6,078 kg |
| Length | 4.370 m |
| SFC (cruise) | 0.3200 lb/(lbf·h) |
| First run | 1993 |
| In service | 1996 |
Variants
- Trent 877: Entry-level variant at 77,000 lbf for lighter 777-200 configurations.
- Trent 884/892: Mid-range thrust variants for the 777-200ER, covering the broadest range of airline applications.
- Trent 895: Highest-thrust variant at 95,000 lbf, used on the 777-300 for maximum payload at long ranges.
Aircraft Applications
Development History
The Trent 800 programme launched in the early 1990s as Rolls-Royce sought a share of the lucrative 777 engine market. First engine run occurred in 1993, with FAA certification following in 1995. Entry into service came in 1996 with Thai Airways International. The programme was notable for being Rolls-Royce's first opportunity to supply engines to Boeing's flagship new wide-body, reversing a historical pattern where Pratt & Whitney and General Electric dominated Boeing programmes. The Trent 800 lineage fed directly into subsequent Trent developments, establishing the core and compression architecture used in the Trent 1000 and Trent XWB.