- The B-52J Commercial Engine Replacement Program completed its Critical Design Review at Tinker AFB, clearing the way for Boeing to begin aircraft modifications in San Antonio.
- The first B-52H is scheduled to arrive at Boeing's San Antonio facility later in 2026 for conversion to B-52J configuration with Rolls-Royce F130 engines.
The B-52 bomber is getting new engines, and the program just cleared the last major technical hurdle before physical modification work begins on the first aircraft.
The B-52J Commercial Engine Replacement Program held its Critical Design Review at Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma, a milestone that clears the path for Boeing to begin modifying the first two B-52H aircraft into the B-52J configuration at its facility in San Antonio, Texas. The first bomber is scheduled to arrive in San Antonio for modification later this year, according to the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center’s announcement. The review was conducted by independent experts from the Air Force, Boeing, and Rolls-Royce, who assessed the complete system design against all warfighter and technical requirements before major hardware work begins.
“This CERP critical design review is the culmination of an enormous amount of engineering and integration work from Boeing, Rolls Royce, and the Air Force that will enable the B-52J to remain in the fight for future generations,” said Lt. Col. Tim Cleaver, CERP Program Manager at the Bombers Directorate. Cleaver described what the CDR represents in the program’s trajectory with unusual clarity. “It’s that point that you go from having a concept turned into a design, to then turning that design into something physical — something that we will test and field for Air Force Global Strike Command,” he said.
The engine at the center of the replacement is the Rolls-Royce F130, a modern turbofan that replaces the TF33 engines currently powering the B-52 fleet. Those TF33s are 1960s-era powerplants that have been maintained and kept operational across six decades of service, an achievement of sustained logistics effort that nonetheless comes with the limitations inherent in aging technology — fuel efficiency, parts availability, and the growing difficulty of maintaining engines that predate most of the people working on them. The F130 addresses the fuel efficiency gap directly, and the modernization also includes new generators for each engine that will significantly increase the aircraft’s electrical power capacity, a capability expansion that matters for every future system the Air Force might want to integrate onto the platform.
That electrical power increase deserves attention beyond the engine story itself. Modern military aircraft are increasingly defined by their electronic and sensor capabilities, and power capacity is the enabling resource that determines what can actually be added to a platform over its remaining service life. A B-52 with substantially more electrical generation capacity is a B-52 that can host electronic warfare systems, advanced sensors, directed-energy experiments, and communications suites that its current power architecture cannot support. The engine replacement is therefore not just a reliability and efficiency upgrade — it is an investment in the platform’s ability to absorb future capability insertions through 2050 and beyond.
The B-52 program is managed by the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center’s Bombers Directorate with support from the Propulsion Directorate, both operating out of Tinker AFB. Boeing serves as the prime contractor for integration. The CDR process, according to Cleaver, involved extensive preparation including a series of dry runs between the Air Force and its industry partners to surface and resolve issues before the formal review. That approach, running collaborative rehearsals rather than presenting a design cold to independent reviewers, reflects a program management philosophy oriented toward avoiding the kind of late-stage surprises that have cost other major defense programs years and billions in rework.
The two modified B-52J test aircraft, once Boeing completes modification work in San Antonio, will undergo extensive testing at Edwards Air Force Base in California to validate the new systems before the program moves toward modifying the remainder of the B-52H fleet. The transition from two test aircraft to full fleet modification represents the larger programmatic and industrial commitment ahead, with the entire active B-52 fleet eventually receiving the F130 engine under the CERP program.
The B-52 Stratofortress entered service in 1955. The airframes currently flying were built in the early 1960s. By the time the CERP modification is complete and the re-engined fleet reaches the end of its projected service life in 2050 and beyond, the B-52 will have been in continuous operational service for nearly a century, operated by aircrew whose grandparents were not yet born when the first production aircraft rolled off the Boeing line. No other combat aircraft in history has come close to that arc.

