Pratt & Whitney F119 Engine Surpasses One Million Flight Hours Powering the F-22 Raptor
Pratt & Whitney has announced that its F119 engine — the world's first fifth-generation fighter engine — has surpassed one million flight hours powering the U.S. Air Force's Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor. Having entered service more than 20 years ago, the F119 continues to deliver supercruise, stealth, and thrust-vectoring capabilities. The engine reached the 500,000-hour mark in June 2017 and has now doubled that figure, reinforcing its legacy as a pioneering propulsion system.

Highlights
- The Pratt & Whitney F119 engine has surpassed one million cumulative flight hours powering the U.S. Air Force's F-22 Raptor, doubling the 500,000-hour milestone it set in June 2017.
- The F119 is the world's first fifth-generation fighter engine and has been in continuous service for more than 20 years, delivering supercruise, stealth, and thrust-vectoring capabilities.
- The U.S. Congress has prohibited F-22 Raptor retirement before Fiscal Year 2032, extending the operational lifespan of the F119 engine amid delays to the next-generation fighter program.
- The U.S. Air Force stopped procuring new F119 engines in 2013, but Pratt & Whitney continues engineering development, including FADEC software upgrades and Usage-Based Lifing sustainment tools.
- The F119's counter-rotating core architecture, single-crystal superalloy turbine blades, and advanced cooling technology enable it to withstand extreme combat stress while maintaining high reliability.
Pratt & Whitney F119 Engine Surpasses One Million Flight Hours Powering the F-22 Raptor
Pratt & Whitney has announced that its F119 engine — which powers the U.S. Air Force's Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor — has officially surpassed one million cumulative engine flight hours.
The F119 is the world's first fifth-generation fighter engine and has powered the F-22 for more than two decades. Notably, the engine reached the 500,000-flight-hour milestone in June 2017; doubling that figure now further cements its place in aviation history as the pioneer of fifth-generation propulsion. The F119 continues to deliver the stealth, supercruise, and thrust-vectoring capabilities the U.S. Air Force requires to maintain its top-tier air dominance.
Jill Albertelli, President of Pratt & Whitney Military Engines, said: "The F119 engine plays a critical role in maintaining the U.S. Air Force's air superiority and enabling the F-22 to carry out its missions."
She added: "Over more than 20 years of F-22 Raptor service, this engine has consistently demonstrated unmatched capability, safety, and readiness. This milestone is a testament to Pratt & Whitney's commitment to our customers."
Advanced Performance
With the transition to a sixth-generation fighter stalled by delays and uncertainty, the U.S. Congress has prohibited the retirement of the F-22 Raptor before Fiscal Year 2032, keeping this premier air-superiority platform on the front line.
That extended service requirement places the burden of modern aerial deterrence squarely on the F-22's F119 engines.
The F119 achieves its exceptional performance and durability through a highly efficient counter-rotating core architecture. Internally, it features a three-stage integrally bladed fan paired with a single-stage low-pressure turbine, as well as a compact six-stage high-pressure compressor incorporating advanced aerodynamics and an integrated rotor disk.
To withstand extreme combat stress, the engine integrates state-of-the-art cooling technology and employs the latest single-crystal superalloy blades in its single-stage high-pressure turbine.
The F-22 Raptor is equipped with a pair of F119 engines to deliver its legendary air-dominance performance. Among the aircraft's most formidable attributes is supercruise — the ability to sustain supersonic flight without the use of afterburners.
Most fighter aircraft must activate their afterburners to break the sound barrier. This process injects fuel directly into the exhaust stream: effective, but it burns fuel at a prodigious rate while generating a heat signature as conspicuous as a flare to enemy infrared sensors. The F119 eliminates this trade-off entirely, allowing the F-22 to cruise supersonically on dry thrust alone, conserving fuel while maintaining a top-tier stealth profile.
The engine also combines advanced stealth design with distinctive nozzle technology. The nozzles can deflect the exhaust stream up and down, giving the aircraft exceptional maneuverability. These systems work in concert to provide pilots with an optimum blend of raw speed, precise control, and tactical situational awareness on the battlefield.
Pratt & Whitney stated: "The F119 engine represents a generational leap in performance and reliability, giving warfighters the confidence that it will be ready whenever the mission demands."
Future Sustainment
Although the U.S. Air Force ceased procurement of new F119 engines in 2013, engineering development work has never stopped.
Engineers continue to roll out major software updates to the fleet's Full Authority Digital Engine Control (FADEC) system and are leveraging advanced data tools such as Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) and Usage-Based Lifing (UBL) to monitor the microscopic health of every turbine blade.
This process tracks the precise wear status of individual components using actual flight telemetry data rather than simple flight-hour counts.
Combined with ongoing hardware upgrades, these high-tech sustainment strategies are effectively extending component service life, ensuring the Raptor retains real-world combat deterrence capability for decades to come.
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