Rolls-Royce began development of the XG-40 technology demonstrator engine in 1984. Development costs were met by the British government and Rolls-Royce. On 2 August 1985, Italy, West Germany and the UK agreed to go ahead with the Eurofighter. The announcement of this agreement confirmed that France had chosen not to proceed as a member of the project. One issue was French insistence that the aircraft be powered by the SNECMA M88, in development at the same time as the XG-40.
Eurojet EJ200
The Eurojet consortium was formed in 1986 to co-ordinate and manage the project largely based on XG-40 technology. In common with the XG-40, the EJ200 has a three-stage fan with a high pressure ratio, five-stage low-aspect-ratio high-pressure compressor, a combustor using advanced cooling and thermal protection, and single-stage HP and LP turbines with powder metallurgy discs and single crystal blades. A reheat system provides thrust augmentation. The variable area final nozzle is a convergent-divergent design. In December 2006, Eurojet completed deliveries of the 363 EJ200s for the Tranche 1 Eurofighters. Tranche 2 aircraft require 519 EJ200s., Eurojet was contracted to produce a total of 1,400 engines for the Eurofighter project.
In 2009, Eurojet entered a bid, in competition with General Electric's F414, to supply a thrust vectoring variant of the EJ200 to power the HAL Tejas. After evaluation and acceptance of the technical offer provided by both Eurojet and GE Aviation, the commercial quotes were compared in detail and GE Aviation was declared as the lower bidder.
Turkey's indigenous Jet training aircraft Hürjet will use "Typhoon"s EJ200 engine.A Letter of Intent was signed between Turkish Aerospace Industries and Eurojet at the Le Bourget Aviation Show in Paris, France. TAI CEO Dr. Temel Kotil and Eurojet Ceo Clemens Linden on behalf of Eurojet consortium signed the letter. The Eufighter Typhoon aircraft is equipped with two engine engines but Hürjet will have one.The EJ200 has over 1 million hours of flight experience with two engines. Some minor changes will take place for the use of a single engine and it will be called a prototype until the engine is certified for single use.
An EJ200 engine, together with a rocket engine, will power the Bloodhound LSR for an attempt at the land speed record. The target speed is at least 1000 mph.
Variants
EJ2x0
Stage 1:
The EJ2x0 with 20% growth compared to the original EJ200. The EJ2x0 engine will have dry thrust increasing to some 72 kN with a reheated output of around 103 kN.
Stage 2:
The new engine plan to increase the output 30% more power compared to the original EJ200. The engine will have dry thrust of around 78 kN with a reheated output of around 120 kN.