In 1939, Northrop Aircraft undertook company-funded preliminary design of a turboprop engine. A joint Army-Navy contract was awarded in 1941 for detailed design and analysis of a 2,500 shp (1,864 kW) engine and fabrication of a compressor for it. A contract amendment later added construction of two complete 3,800 shp (2,834 kW) engines.
Having little time or space for fabricating parts, Northrop joined with the Joshua Hendy Iron Works in 1944 to form the Northrop-Hendy Company. The engine did not reach its design performance due largely to low compressor and turbine efficiencies, and a compressor failure destroyed the first engine and terminated testing. Following the 1945 cancellation of the Navy contract, the Army continued with the testing of this second engine until it also partially failed. Development was then discontinued.
Although potential high efficiency encouraged Northrop to continue turboprop engine development, possibly as a backup for the Boeing XB-52 bomber, the later XT37 endeavor was similarly unsuccessful.
This object is not on display at the National Air and Space Museum. It is either on loan or in storage.