Homeward Bound: The Queen of the Skies flies into retirement
GE Aviation’s original Queen of the Skies, the Boeing 747-100 Flying Test Bed, flew to its new home, the Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson, Arizona.
From Top Gun dreams to Chief Test Pilot: The journey that led to a dream job
Jon Ohman, GE Aviation’s Chief Test Pilot and Marine Corps Veteran, fell in love with aviation as a young boy.
We’ve Got Your Back: GE Aviation's Commitment to Digital
By John Mansfield, Chief Digital Officer and President of Digital Solutions for GE Aviation
3 Keys to Meeting Record Engine Demand
The LEAP engine program of CFM International isn’t just a history-maker in commercial aviation because of its record sales. Additive manufacturing and digital tools that make factories smarter are helping GE Aviation meet record orders placed for the LEAP engine.
GE’s Affinity launches new era of efficient supersonic flight
At a press conference with Aerion Corporation today, GE Aviation announced that it has completed the initial design of the first supersonic engine purpose-built for business jets.
GE Aviation's Quick Six with Dale Hughes
In our next installation of Quick Six, The Bike Shop sat down with Dale Hughes, an Assembly & Test Technician, who is helping to drive customer deliveries of the
Get the Facts: Why Single-Spool is Superior for ITEP
By Tony Mathis, CEO and President of GE Aviation’s Military Systems business
Manufacturing Milestone: 30,000 Additive Fuel Nozzles
GE Aviation’s manufacturing plant in Auburn, Alabama, celebrates its 30,000th 3D-printed fuel nozzle tip for the LEAP engine.
Float Like A Butterfly, Sting Like A Hornet: The US Air Force Picks the T-X For A New Trainer Jet
The U.S. Air Force has announced an agreement with Boeing to purchase more than 350 T-X trainer jets, all of them powered by the F404 engine.
3D Dreamers: Meet the Aviation Design Engineers Who are Thinking Differently
Additive technology has radically changed the way the world thinks about design, materials, processes and manufacturing — and GE is leading the way. GE Additive’s machines build parts layer-by-layer, enabling geometric freedom and previously unheard-of design possibilities.