Rolls-Royce

T56 / 501-D

Turboprop In Production

Technical Specifications

Dry Weight
830 kg
Length
2.920 m
First Run
1954
In Service
1956

Rolls-Royce T56 / 501-D

The T56 (military) and 501-D (civil) are among the longest-produced turbine engines in history, with over 20,000 units built since the mid-1950s. Rated at 4,910 shaft horsepower (SHP), this Allison-designed (now Rolls-Royce) powerplant entered service in 1956 and continues to fly on platforms including the C-130 Hercules, P-3 Orion maritime patrol aircraft, E-2 Hawkeye carrier-based early warning aircraft, and the Lockheed L-188 Electra civil turboprop. Its production and service longevity is virtually unmatched in the turbine engine world.

技術仕様

パラメータ
軸出力4,910 SHP
乾燥重量830 kg (1,830 lb)
全長2.920 m (114.96 in)
初回運転1954
就航年1956
生産数20,000+
状態In Production (overhaul/support)

設計とアーキテクチャ

The T56 is a single-shaft, axial-flow turboprop with a 14-stage axial compressor and a 4-stage turbine. Unlike the free-turbine configuration of many contemporary turboprops, the T56's single-shaft design couples the compressor and power turbine directly. This gives it exceptional proven reliability but constrains part-throttle efficiency compared to free-turbine alternatives. The reduction gearbox steps the turbine shaft speed down to a usable propeller speed.

Early C-130 variants used three-bladed aluminum propellers; later upgrades introduced four-bladed and, on the C-130J, six-bladed composite propellers. The basic engine architecture, however, has remained remarkably stable across seven decades, testament to the soundness of the original Allison design.

遺産と継続的サポート

The T56's longevity reflects the extraordinary service life of the C-130 Hercules airframe itself, which has been in continuous production since 1955. Thousands of T56-powered aircraft remain in service with air forces worldwide, creating a sustained requirement for overhauls, spare parts, and upgrade kits. Rolls-Royce continues to support the T56 with the T56 Series 3.5 upgrade program, which introduces improved compressor and turbine components to extend time on wing and reduce fuel consumption for existing operators — ensuring the engine will remain in service well into the 2040s.

The civil 501-D designation powers the Lockheed L-188 Electra, of which several examples remain in freight service. The fundamental T56/501-D design thus straddles seven decades of continuous operation — a record unlikely to be challenged by any turbine engine program.