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Source: http://www.spacedaily.com/news/rocketscience-03j.html
"Named the Baikal, the first stage of a new two-stage Russian rocket called Angara, the Russian flyback booster will rocket to about 38 miles (60 kilometers) before a second stage with payload separates for the final lift to orbit. After separation the main booster deploys a pair of wings and a jet engine fires up to return the flyback booster (s) to a runway landing... Beal Aerospace, a small rocket upstart from 1996-2000, intended on developing a reusable first stage for its own line of rockets. More recently SpaceX, a launch company started by entrepreneur Elon Musk, aims to develop a two-stage launch vehicle consisting of a reusable first stage. Starcraft Boosters Corporation has been advocating reusable first stage boosters for the past few years. In 2002, the company received funding from the Air Force to proceed with the development of a small reusable technology demonstrator based on the company's designs." __________________________________________________ __________________ Source: http://www.spacer.com/news/launcher-russia-01j.html "NASA says it can save up to half a billion dollars a year by using reusable boosters." |
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The rocket cluster is a cluster of novel, pressure fed rockets which
have relatively large expansion ratio (about 25) and therefore respectable specific impulse (about 330 seconds). It has less than 100 moving parts, so it is very simple and cheap. Like most other pressure fed designs it is sturdy enough to survive splashdown. The rocket cluster and its engine (called engine cluster) are NOT protected by patents. Their description is posted at: http://www.islandone.org/LEOBiblio/S...engine_cluster and http://www.medianet.pl/~andrew/SPBI1...engine_cluster |
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Andrew Nowicki wrote in message ...
The rocket cluster is a cluster of novel, pressure fed rockets which have relatively large expansion ratio (about 25) and therefore respectable specific impulse (about 330 seconds). It has less than 100 moving parts, so it is very simple and cheap. Like most other pressure fed designs it is sturdy enough to survive splashdown. The rocket cluster and its engine (called engine cluster) are NOT protected by patents. Their description is posted at: http://www.islandone.org/LEOBiblio/S...engine_cluster and http://www.medianet.pl/~andrew/SPBI1...engine_cluster Huh? First stage doesnt have to be re-useable. In fact, making it re-useable probably costs more money than throwing it away. Its only function is to get the rest of the rocket to a reasonable altitude and speed. All the smarts are in the second (or third) stage. First stage should just be a big dumb throw away shell with cheapo tanks and pumps. |
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![]() "pat bahn" wrote in message m... (Parallax) wrote in message . com... Huh? First stage doesnt have to be re-useable. In fact, making it re-useable probably costs more money than throwing it away. Its only function is to get the rest of the rocket to a reasonable altitude and speed. All the smarts are in the second (or third) stage. First stage should just be a big dumb throw away shell with cheapo tanks and pumps. The only question is over the life=cycle of the system, does a reusable first stage result in lower life cycle costs then an expendable first stage. The reusable first stage has a low operating cost at a reasonable flight rate, now if you don't believe in high flight rates, well, what can I say. I don't understand the economic logic in that. High flight rates mean that expendibles will be rolling off the assembly line, and that means that unit costs can, with experience, become low. Reuseables will not be manufactured in quantity anytime soon, even with high flight rates. Certainly the shuttle program would have had much lower costs per launch if the flight rate had been 5x as high. But we would have probably blown up 10 of them by now at that flight rate. |
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On Sat, 19 Jun 2004 06:11:05 +0000, Perplexed in Peoria wrote:
The reusable first stage has a low operating cost at a reasonable flight rate, now if you don't believe in high flight rates, well, what can I say. I don't understand the economic logic in that. High flight rates mean that expendibles will be rolling off the assembly line, and that means that unit costs can, with experience, become low. Reuseables will not be manufactured in quantity anytime soon, even with high flight rates. Isn't that the point? At the lowest non-zero flight rate of "only one flight ever", reusables have no conceivable advantage over expendables, because you're still not going to reuse either. At higher rates, expendable per-flight costs should go down because you can amortize the costs of R&D and tools over more flights, but reusable per-flight costs should go down even faster because you can amortize the costs of R&D, tools, and vehicle construction. Note that "tools" are still included in that list - reducing the per-flight cost of your manufacturing doesn't require you to spread those costs out over more vehicles, just over more flights. --- Roy Stogner |
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"Perplexed in Peoria" wrote in message ...
Certainly the shuttle program would have had much lower costs per launch if the flight rate had been 5x as high. But we would have probably blown up 10 of them by now at that flight rate. Note that the expendable Soyuz is as safe (deaths per flight) as the reusable Shuttle; and the reliability is not significantly worse (vehicles lost per flight). Also, one of the good things about expendables is that it is slightly easier to redesign the vehicle- you just build it differently next time. With the Shuttle you have to modify all the vehicles you already have, which is likely to be more expensive. In addition the Shuttle has potential issues with ageing, the reusables don't have that. |
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Parallax wrote:
Huh? First stage doesnt have to be re-useable. Would you rather buy a reusable car, or the one that falls apart after the first ride? __________________________________________________ __________ Ian Woollard wrote: Note that the expendable Soyuz is as safe (deaths per flight) as the reusable Shuttle; and the reliability is not significantly worse (vehicles lost per flight). The Space Shuttle is salvageable rather than reusable. Reusable third (last) stages do not exist because the temperature and heat load during reentry ablate all materials that are known to rocket engineers. Regenerative cooling (plumbing circulating cold propellant) is too heavy. The new Shuttle-like third stage proposals (Lockheed Martin's Orbital Space Plane, russian Clipper, german Colibri, and japanese Hyflex) are not reusable but salvageable. The first stage of a rocket launcher is not exposed to the extreme temperature and heat load during reentry, so a perfectly reusable (no maintenance except cleaning) first stage is feasible. Note the great difference between the Baikal and the engine cluster. Baikal is an expensive rocket-plane, while the engine cluster is as simple, robust, and cheap as a barge. It is strong enough to survive splash down. If the Russians had an ocean east to their launch site, they would make a reusable pressure-fed first stage instead of the expensive Baikal. The high reliability of russian rocket launchers is not related to the fact that they are expendable. French rocket launchers are just as expendable, but much less reliable. |
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