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  2. General Electric GE36 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Electric_GE36

    GE had also predicted a cruise SFC of 0.49 for the demonstrator engine; however, the cruise SFC would drop to 0.40-0.41 with a new gas generator design called "Supercore," [63] compared with 0.56 for existing turbofans. [64] The two-spool core of the gas generator would have a pressure ratio of about 36.

  3. GE Appliances - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GE_Appliances

    From 2010 to late 2014, GE Appliances & Lighting was a sub-business under GE Home & Business Solutions. [ 12 ] On September 8, 2014, General Electric agreed to sell the company to Electrolux , a Swedish appliance manufacturer and the second-largest consumer appliance manufacturer after Whirlpool Corporation , for US$3.3 billion in cash.

  4. GE 57-ton gas–electric boxcab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GE_57-ton_gas–electric...

    Before diesel engines had been developed for locomotive power in the 1920s and 1930s, many companies chose to use the gasoline engine for rail motive power. The first GE Locomotive was a series of four-axle boxcab gasoline–electric machines closely related to the "doodlebugs", self-propelled passenger cars built in the early Twentieth Century.

  5. Magic Chef - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Chef

    Ad for a Magic Chef gas range (1948) Magic Chef, Inc. (formerly the American Stove Company ) is an appliance brand currently owned by CNA International Inc. St. Louis origins

  6. List of turbofan manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_turbofan_manufacturers

    GE Aviation, part of the General Electric conglomerate, currently has the largest share of the turbofan engine market. Some of their engine models include the CF6 (available on the Boeing 767, Boeing 747, Airbus A330 and more), GE90 (only the Boeing 777) and GEnx (developed for the Boeing 747-8 & Boeing 787 Dreamliner and proposed for the Airbus A350) engines.

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