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Nasa chooses Orion heat shield



 
 
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  #1  
Old April 10th 09, 03:40 AM posted to sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,rec.aviation.military,sci.military.naval
Steve Hix
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Posts: 64
Default Nasa chooses Orion heat shield

In article ,
(Joseph Nebus) wrote:

Jack Linthicum writes:

On Apr 8, 6:56=A0pm, Pat Flannery wrote:


They did use a ablative heatshield on the X-23A Prime unmanned lifting
body RV with good results:
http://www.astronautix.com/craft/prime.htm

One in three flights could be considered successful, ie not a lost
aircraft. Not a standard to convince someone to crawl into one of
those.


But it doesn't appear, from a very quick reading of this, that
the failures were particularly related to the ablative heat shield.
That doesn't speak well for the X-23A as something I'd want to ride,


Both failures were related to parachute faulty deployment or disconnect,
rather than any controllability problem, so I don't see a problem, at
least in principle.

but it does offer evidence that an ablative heat shield on flight-
controlling surfaces isn't by itself a bad idea.

  #2  
Old April 10th 09, 10:59 AM posted to sci.space.history,sci.space.policy,rec.aviation.military,sci.military.naval
Jack Linthicum
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Posts: 290
Default Nasa chooses Orion heat shield

On Apr 9, 10:40*pm, Steve Hix
wrote:
In article ,
(Joseph Nebus) wrote:

Jack Linthicum writes:


On Apr 8, 6:56=A0pm, Pat Flannery wrote:


They did use a ablative heatshield on the X-23A Prime unmanned lifting
body RV with good results:http://www.astronautix.com/craft/prime.htm


One in three flights could be considered successful, ie not a lost
aircraft. Not a standard to convince someone to crawl into one of
those.


* *But it doesn't appear, from a very quick reading of this, that
the failures were particularly related to the ablative heat shield. *
That doesn't speak well for the X-23A as something I'd want to ride,


Both failures were related to parachute faulty deployment or disconnect,
rather than any controllability problem, so I don't see a problem, at
least in principle.

but it does offer evidence that an ablative heat shield on flight-
controlling surfaces isn't by itself a bad idea.


Read the account on Komarov in Soyuz 1, where the parachutes were
given different treatment because it was a first manned flight.

http://www.svengrahn.pp.se/histind/S...d/Soyanaly.htm

http://www.russianspaceweb.com/soyuz1.html
 




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