English: In response to an Air Force request in 1952 for a 500- to 700-horsepower turboprop engine, Lycoming produced two designs, both of which could be converted to
turboshafts to power helicopters by removing the propeller gearbox. Lycoming was awarded a contract to develop a free-turbine turboshaft engine, designated LTC1 (military designation T53-L-1). It was military qualified in 1958, and the first production engine was delivered in 1959.
The front-drive, concentric-shaft design became a widely accepted U.S. standard for turboshaft engines. The T53 gave Lycoming its start in the aircraft gas turbine business and played a key role in the expansion of the Army’s airmobile role during the Vietnam War. The T53 was used on the Bell UH-1 Iroquois (Huey) and AH-1 HueyCobra helicopters and the Grumman OV-1 Mohawk airplane. Picture taken at the National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia, USA.
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