CFE Company

The CFE Company is a joint venture established by GE Aviation and the Garrett Engine Division of Allied Signal (now Honeywell Aerospace) in June 1987.[1] The company produces the CFE738, a small turbofan engine used on the Dassault Falcon 2000.[2] "CFE" stands for "Commercial Fan Engines".

Products

gollark: They can cause "too long without yielding" though, no?
gollark: And some bizarre combinations of features lead to issues.
gollark: This is likely because I have to expose a *lot* of mildly unsafe APIs to maintain CC compatibility though.
gollark: PotatOS's sandbox is several hundred lines of code plus some extra bits in the BIOS, and I have to update it to deal with holes often.
gollark: Do you actually know how to do that securely?

References

  1. Model 738 page. GE Aviation.
  2. "CFE Company CFE738". Jane's Aero-engines. Jane's Information Group, 2010. (subscription article dated 31 March 2010).
  • Gunston, Bill (2006). World Encyclopedia of Aero Engines, 5th Edition. Phoenix Mill, Gloucestershire, England, UK: Sutton Publishing Limited. ISBN 0-7509-4479-X.
  • Leyes II, Richard A.; William A. Fleming (1999). The History of North American Small Gas Turbine Aircraft Engines. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. ISBN 1-56347-332-1.
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