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Old December 9th 06, 11:23 PM posted to sci.space.policy
Henry Spencer
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Posts: 2,170
Default Sacraficial tanks

In article . com,
Totorkon wrote:
The shuttle's SRBs hit the ocean at about 85 mph. Would it be
practical to have a liquid booster with a 'crushable' upper tank to
absorb the force of that kind of impact to protect its engine? Some
kind of air bags could cushion and serve as floats when the upside down
booster falls on its side.


As JRF has noted, there are some problems with this in a tail-heavy
booster. That said, schemes along those lines have been proposed many
times. It's not impossible, although there are a number of practical
difficulties. As with the SRBs, though, refurbishing rocket hardware
after it's been soaked in seawater is tedious and manpower-intensive, and
when all is said and done, there is a high payoff for "flyback" schemes
which recover the boosters onto land.
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