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De Havilland Goblin

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Cutaway Goblin II
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Cutaway Goblin II

A cutaway diagram of the internal workings of the de Havilland Goblin, as fitted to the Vampire.
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A cutaway diagram of the internal workings of the de Havilland Goblin, as fitted to the Vampire.

The Goblin, originally the Halford H-1, was an early turbojet engine designed by Frank Halford and built by de Havilland. It was the second British engine to fly, and the first to pass tests and receive a "Gas Turbine" class type rating. It was the primary engine of the de Havilland Vampire, and was to have been the engine for the F-80 Shooting Star (as the Allis-Chalmers J36) before that design switched engines due to production delays. The Goblin also powered the Saab 21R, Fiat G.80 and de Havilland Swallow. The Goblin was later expanded into the larger de Havilland Ghost, with the model numbers continuing from the last marks of the Goblin.

Design of the engine was carried out by Frank Halford at his London consulting firm starting in April 1941. It was based on the basic design pioneered by Frank Whittle, using a centrifugal compressor providing compressed air to sixteen individual flame cans, from which the exhaust powered a single-stage axial turbine. Compared to Whittle designs, the H-1 was "cleaned up" in that it used a single-sided compressor with the inlet at the front, and a "straight through" layout with the flame cans exhausting straight onto the turbine. Whittle's designs used a "reverse flow" layout that piped the hot air back to the middle of the engine, in order to "fold" it and reduce its length. Halford's changes made his engine somewhat simpler than Whittle's designs, notably allowing one of the main bearings to be removed. Nevertheless it was a fairly compact design, even without the Whittle-style "folding".

The H-1 first ran on 13 April 1942, and quickly matured to produce its full design thrust within two months. It first flew on 5 March, 1943 on the Gloster Meteor, and on 20 September on the de Havilland Vampire. It was around this time that de Havilland purchased Halford's company and set him up as the de Havilland Engine Company', with the name changing from H-1 to "Goblin", while the new H-2 became the "Ghost".

In July 1943 an H-1 was sent to the United States, where it was selected to become the primary engine of the F-80. This engine was fitted to the prototype and first flew on 8 January, 1944. The engine was later accidentially destroyed in testing, and replaced by another H-1 from the prototype Vampire. Allis-Chalmers was selected to produce the engine in the US as the J36, but ran into lengthy delays. Instead General Electric was forced to give the I-40, their greatly improved 4,000 lbf version of the Rolls-Royce Derwent to Allison Engine, becoming the Allison J33.

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Lists of Aircraft | Aircraft manufacturers | Aircraft engines | Aircraft engine manufacturers

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