MiG-21 Perhaps the most dramatic WEP feature was found in the
MiG-21bis fighter jet. This late variant of the standard Soviet light fighter plane was built as a stopgap measure to counter the newer and more powerful American
F-16 and
F/A-18 fighters until the next-generation
MiG-29 could be introduced to service. The MiG-21bis received the upgraded
Tumansky R-25 engine, which retained the standard normal and
afterburner power settings of earlier R-13 powerplants, but with emergency thrust boost from an overspeed to 106% and increased afterburner fuel from a second afterburner fuel pump. Use of this boost feature provided of thrust for 2 minutes maximum in wartime. It gave the MiG-21bis slightly better than 1:1
thrust-to-weight ratio and a climb rate of , equalling F-16 capabilities in a dogfight. In air combat practice with the MiG-21bis, use of WEP thrust was limited to one minute, to reduce the impact on the engine 800 hours time between overhaul, since every second of WEP was equivalent to several minutes of running without it. When WEP was selected, the R-25 produced a long blowtorch exhaust - the six or seven brightly glowing rhomboid "
shock diamonds" visible inside the flames gave the emergency-power setting its "diamond regime" name.
F-15 The Vmax switch on the
F-15 fighter jet allows the engines to burn 22 degrees hotter and about 2% more
revolutions per minute, as well as boosting engine and afterburner fuel flow by around 4%. It is safety-wired shut. During combat, pulling the Vmax switch would provide the pilot with more thrust. However, Vmax usage is limited to a maximum of six minutes, and the engines would then need to be serviced and rebuilt.
Concorde The concept of WEP found its way into civilian designs as well. The
Concorde supersonic airliner was powered by four
Rolls-Royce/Snecma Olympus 593 afterburning turbojets, which possessed the ability to operate in a mode termed "Contingency Power". This was to be utilized in the event of an engine failure on takeoff and would be selected by moving the
afterburner selector switches an additional notch upward. Able to be engaged for no more than two and a half minutes at a time, Contingency Power provided an extra 1.1% more revolutions per minute over takeoff power, as well as simultaneously increasing fuel flow to the afterburners. When this mode was selected, an orange indicator light would illuminate over the engine RPM gauges. Each use was to be recorded by the crew, as it reduced the life of the engines. == WEP in surface vehicles ==