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Dyna-Soar on a Atlas-Centaur:
http://renax.club.fr/sharkit/altlas-...as-centaur.htm Krafft Ehricke would've approved: http://www.geocities.com/atlas_missi...r_missions.htm Pat |
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Pat Flannery wrote in
: Dyna-Soar on a Atlas-Centaur: http://renax.club.fr/sharkit/altlas-...as-centaur.htm Article states the Centaur would burn LOX and "SF-1"; what the heck would that have been? Seems like an obscure way to refer to LH2. --Damon |
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Damon Hill wrote:
Pat Flannery wrote in : Dyna-Soar on a Atlas-Centaur: http://renax.club.fr/sharkit/altlas-...as-centaur.htm Article states the Centaur would burn LOX and "SF-1"; what the heck would that have been? Seems like an obscure way to refer to LH2. Indeed. The designation "SF-1" was a code name for a specification for liquid hydrogen fuel that had been developed by Wright Field in the 1950's. The specification was apparently used to guide industrial firms bidding on the development of LH2 facilities for the USAF. -- Dave Michelson |
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On Apr 21, 10:44 pm, Dave Michelson wrote:
Damon Hill wrote: Pat Flannery wrote in : Dyna-Soar on a Atlas-Centaur: http://renax.club.fr/sharkit/altlas-...as-centaur.htm Article states the Centaur would burn LOX and "SF-1"; what the heck would that have been? Seems like an obscure way to refer to LH2. Indeed. The designation "SF-1" was a code name for a specification for liquid hydrogen fuel that had been developed by Wright Field in the 1950's. The specification was apparently used to guide industrial firms bidding on the development of LH2 facilities for the USAF. SF-1 also appears in a series of Convair preliminary designs for hydrogen-fueled ASW and bomber aircraft. The unbuilt Convair P6Y was studied with "SF-1" fueled variants: http://www.up-ship.com/drawndoc/drawndocair.htm |
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"Dyna-Soar on a Atlas-Centaur"?
Hmmmmm, I had only seen the Titan IIIC version. Thanks for the thread. But I have a question. As I recall Gemini used ejection seats for early aborts because the Titan II catastrophically failed in such a way that seats were feasible (slower, smaller fireball), whereas Mecury and Apollo catastrophically failed in such a way that seats were out of the question. How was a crew supposed to get away from the Atlas Centaur in a hurry? IIRC, an escape tower was not fitted to Dyna-Soar and since Atlas would not permit the use of a seat in Mercury, it would seem the same would be the case for Dyna-Soar. AND . . . how was a Dyna-Soar (or MOL) crew supposed to get away from a Titan IIIC? SRBs can fail very quickly and with TONS of nasty debris (recall the Delta at the Cape a few years ago or the Titan III/ IV loss at Vandenburg in the mid 1980's. Also remember the first launch attempt of Ariane V, the SRBs were not the root cause, but the rupture of the solids was spectacular) Thanks and take care . . . John |
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John wrote in news:1177520192.861750.75140
@t38g2000prd.googlegroups.com: AND . . . how was a Dyna-Soar (or MOL) crew supposed to get away from a Titan IIIC? SRBs can fail very quickly and with TONS of nasty debris (recall the Delta at the Cape a few years ago or the Titan III/ IV loss at Vandenburg in the mid 1980's. The SRBs would have had thrust termination capability. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
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Jorge R. Frank wrote:
John wrote in news:1177520192.861750.75140 @t38g2000prd.googlegroups.com: AND . . . how was a Dyna-Soar (or MOL) crew supposed to get away from a Titan IIIC? SRBs can fail very quickly and with TONS of nasty debris (recall the Delta at the Cape a few years ago or the Titan III/ IV loss at Vandenburg in the mid 1980's. The SRBs would have had thrust termination capability. I guess higher order detonation of an SRB could be described as thrust termination also. |
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![]() scottlowtherATixDOTnetcomDOTcom wrote: SF-1 also appears in a series of Convair preliminary designs for hydrogen-fueled ASW and bomber aircraft. The unbuilt Convair P6Y was studied with "SF-1" fueled variants: http://www.up-ship.com/drawndoc/drawndocair.htm Does anyone else think the propellant tankage on this proto-Centaur second stage is a bit on the small size?: http://www.geocities.com/atlas_missi...tal_System.gif Pat |
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![]() John wrote: "Dyna-Soar on a Atlas-Centaur"? Hmmmmm, I had only seen the Titan IIIC version. Thanks for the thread. But I have a question. As I recall Gemini used ejection seats for early aborts because the Titan II catastrophically failed in such a way that seats were feasible (slower, smaller fireball), whereas Mecury and Apollo catastrophically failed in such a way that seats were out of the question. How was a crew supposed to get away from the Atlas Centaur in a hurry? IIRC, an escape tower was not fitted to Dyna-Soar and since Atlas would not permit the use of a seat in Mercury, it would seem the same would be the case for Dyna-Soar. Dyna-Soar reincorporated a high-thrust solid motor in the interstage between it and the launch vehicle. In case of a launch problem it would use that to blast itself free; that's what's firing in this drawing: http://www.aero.org/publications/cro...ages/01_02.jpg AND . . . how was a Dyna-Soar (or MOL) crew supposed to get away from a Titan IIIC? SRBs can fail very quickly and with TONS of nasty debris (recall the Delta at the Cape a few years ago or the Titan III/ IV loss at Vandenburg in the mid 1980's. Also remember the first launch attempt of Ariane V, the SRBs were not the root cause, but the rupture of the solids was spectacular) The Titan III was originally going to incorporate blow-off panels on the SRB nosecones that would vent them in case of a problem; it was found that the abrupt decrease in pressure in the fuel grain from venting it would cause combustion to cease. Originally the Shuttle was going to have these also, but the ET appeared to be too fragile to take the blast from the panels firing, and the fire exiting from them would envelope the orbiter, with probably fatal effects on it as well. In MOL, you'd shut everything down and then either eject, or at higher altitudes separate the Gemini RV from the stack via salvoing its five retro motors (it had five, unlike the standard Gemini's four). Pat |
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On Apr 25, 5:56 pm, John wrote:
IIRC, an escape tower was not fitted to Dyna-Soar and since Atlas would not permit the use of a seat in Mercury, it would seem the same would be the case for Dyna-Soar. Early on (e.g. a pad abort) they'd use the Dyna-Soar's solid rocket to get away from the booster, and then glide back to land. It seemed quite an optimistic plan, but Neil Armstrong did some tests using a jet that had been modified to fly like the Dyna-Soar and proved that it could be done. I'm not sure what they'd have done later in the launch when they couldn't return to KSC... presumably they'd have to ditch and hope to get picked up. Assuming they didn't lose a wing due to aerodynamic stress in a Challenger-style accident anyway. NTRS has at least one document about Armstrong's pad abort test flights, I'm not sure if they have others about Dyna-Soar aborts. Mark |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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