Geoff Wilde

Geoffrey Light Wilde OBE (21 May 1917 – 18 August 2007) was a British engineer and the designer of the Rolls-Royce RB211.[1]

Early life

He was born in Warwickshire.

He was first educated in France, where his father, Alfred, was working. His father died when he was 12. He moved to Leamington, and attended Warwick Grammar School. He was then apprenticed to the Daimler Company in Coventry. He gained an HNC in Mechanical Engineering from Coventry Technical College.

Career

Rolls-Royce

Rolls-Royce Avon; he designed the innovative multi-stage compressor

He did much of the design work for R-R's compressors. In 1938 he joined Rolls-Royce Limited in Derby. While working on test beds for the Merlin engines, he proposed a variable-speed supercharger, to increase the performance at altitude. He helped to design and develop the Merlin two-stage supercharger.

Early jet engines were being developed at Lutterworth in Leicestershire, which were having problems with surging. He tested the centrifugal compressor at Derby, and found a solution to the difficulties of surging.

In 1943 he was put in charge of the supercharger and compressor department at Derby.

In 1947 he was put in charge of the design and development of the AJ65 Avon axial-flow jet engine. It had had difficulties with compressor blades breaking. He produced solutions for the design for the multi-stage compressor of the Avon, one of R-R's most successful jet engines.

He later oversaw the development of the compressor for the Conway, the world's first turbofan (by-pass) engine.

In 1956 he set up the Advanced Projects Design Office. Work from this department produced the Medway (cancelled) and Spey engines.

In 1960 he formed a new department to investigate new projects. He chose a new three-shaft design, which was launched as the RB-211. He proposed its wide chord fan blade to obtain maximum aerodynamic efficiency. He was not responsible for all of the project, and when Hyfil carbon-fibre (developed at the RAE) was chosen for the fan blade, he said that this material would not be strong enough in the case of a bird strike. This was found to be experimentally true, at great cost to the project and to Rolls-Royce.

He made great improvements to the design of the high-pressure (HP) turbine blade, and this design is still in R-R's engines today, and other manufacturers. He had set up the High Temperature Demonstrator Unit (HTDU) in 1972 to investigate cooling of turbine blades and thermal fatigue. All airliners today carry this technology.

Personal life

He retired from Rolls-Royce in 1978. He was appointed OBE in 1969. From the Royal Society he received the Mullard Award in 1979 for his work on the RB211. He died in August 2007 aged 90.

For most of his life he lived at Turnditch in Derbyshire. In 1996 he had been awarded an honorary DTech degree by Loughborough University.[2]

References

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