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So you've all probably read that the latest Mach10 flight was
successful. The statements from NASA's O'Keefe seem to indicate that this technology will be used to advance commercial flight, as well as cheaper access to space. So in light of these post-Nov16 statements from NASA, will there be a future for scram? Some of you have said it's easier to get into space with a rocket, but some of the news coverage I was reading said scram could at least be used for a lower-stage booster. Could scram be suitable for heavy payloads in particular? |
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sanman wrote:
So in light of these post-Nov16 statements from NASA, will there be a future for scram? Yes, but not for launchers. Paul |
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In article ,
sanman wrote: So you've all probably read that the latest Mach10 flight was successful. The statements from NASA's O'Keefe seem to indicate that this technology will be used to advance commercial flight, as well as cheaper access to space. Those are standard fantasies, but both fairly unlikely. Commercial flight simply does not see substantial payoffs between about Mach 5 and near-orbital speeds. Mach 5 cruise gets you anywhere on the planet in four hours, assuming a direct route. Beyond that, incremental benefits fall off sharply as preflight/takeoff/landing/postflight time overheads swamp the further time savings, and costs rise sharply as the aircraft and their maintenance get more expensive, new fuel infrastructure becomes necessary, and traffic-control problems multiply. And the idea that it makes sense for launchers to trade simple, cheap, lightweight, well-understood LOX tanks for complex, technically problematic, heavy, and poorly developed scramjets is utterly ludicrous. It would be difficult to find a *stupider* design change. So in light of these post-Nov16 statements from NASA, will there be a future for scram? For military applications, perhaps. They're the only real customers. Hint: the detailed design of the X-43 scramjet is classified. Some of you have said it's easier to get into space with a rocket, but some of the news coverage I was reading said scram could at least be used for a lower-stage booster. If somebody else builds a large scramjet aircraft for some other purpose, using it to carry an air-launched rocket up to speed and altitude would be interesting. There's no way that *developing* it could possibly be justified as part of a launcher project. Could scram be suitable for heavy payloads in particular? Contrariwise: almost any air-launch scheme will have quite limited payload because of the limitations of the launch aircraft. For getting big payloads into orbit, brute force using rockets is far superior: they scale much better. -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
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On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 19:32:48 -0600, Damon Hill
wrote: Some sort of air-augmented combined cycle rocket engine might have some possibilities (think of a rocket engine firing into a ramjet duct, with a variable fuel/oxidizer ratio). But when you look at the complexities involved, the basic simple rocket still makes a lot more sense. And it's off-the-shelf. --Damon Yeah. Went though all of this in scrapping scram. I have noted many people seem doubtful if much is saved by using the oxygen in the atmosphere. My stand was to wait for more solid experimental data as I find that theoretical models often miss crucial points. Remember that 15 years ago bumble bees couldn't fly in our aerodynamic models. It has been pointed out that a rocket needs to accelerate continuously and that a scram-jet for atmosphere usage only need to maintain constant speed and that these are different problems. As I said I need a optimal scamjet tranjectory and a optimal rocket tranjectory to get the numbers. I would also want to allow for advances in both scram-jets and rockets. Remember that another exciting NASA project is testing out a revolutionary Russian rocket engine developed for the scrapped Russian moon program. As far as I understood (no I am not a rocket scientist) used a turbine to power the fuel pumps and feed it into the thrust of the engine developing 20-30% more thrust for the same amount of fuel. Exciting times! I am a bit disappointed that we have not yet seen a successful single stage to orbit rocket this decade. But I am hopeful that we will see one in the next. We are so close.. -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
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On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 16:30:21 GMT, Rand Simberg
wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 14:26:52 +0100, in a place far, far away, "John Thingstad" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: I am a bit disappointed that we have not yet seen a successful single stage to orbit rocket this decade. But I am hopeful that we will see one in the next. We are so close.. Actually, it's not clear that we're close at all. Fortunately, SSTO is not necessary to make access to space affordable. Well you probably know more about this than I do. Perhaps I am a bit over optimistic. Still it would be great.. -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
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On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 16:30:21 GMT, Rand Simberg
wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 14:26:52 +0100, in a place far, far away, "John Thingstad" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: I am a bit disappointed that we have not yet seen a successful single stage to orbit rocket this decade. But I am hopeful that we will see one in the next. We are so close.. Actually, it's not clear that we're close at all. Fortunately, SSTO is not necessary to make access to space affordable. I looked over the web site at Venture Star, but I never figured out why the program was scrapped. Were there fundemental problems or just that they lagged behind scedule? -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
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On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 17:11:41 GMT, Rand Simberg
wrote: On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 14:37:36 +0100, in a place far, far away, "John Thingstad" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Actually, it's not clear that we're close at all. Fortunately, SSTO is not necessary to make access to space affordable. I looked over the web site at Venture Star, but I never figured out why the program was scrapped. I'm sure that that site would be quite uninformative. The answer is too embarrassing to put it in an official site. Were there fundemental problems or just that they lagged behind scedule? There were fundamental problems, too numerous to mention right now, but suffice it to say that they attempted to combine too many risky and unnecessary technologies in a single test vehicle. It was a tremendous boondoggle, but NASA didn't figure that out until they'd wasted a billion dollars of taxpayer money on it. The program was based on a false premises. Building the X-33 was neither a necessary, or sufficient condition to building an SSTO, and SSTO is neither necessary or sufficient to getting cheap launch. yeah.. Put that way I can see what you mean. I have said before that the focus should be on cutting pre launch checks and assembly. Even if it requires more fuel perhaps giving the specs a bit of leniency so you don't need to check every not and cranny might pay off. -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
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In article ,
John Thingstad wrote: Remember that 15 years ago bumble bees couldn't fly in our aerodynamic models. No, that's an old myth. The analysis that said the bumblebee couldn't fly started by assuming that it was a fixed-wing aircraft, and the whole point was to demonstrate that fixed and moving wings follow different rules. As I said I need a optimal scamjet [trajectory]... Once again, the Goddess of Fortuitous Typos strikes! ...Remember that another exciting NASA project is testing out a revolutionary Russian rocket engine developed for the scrapped Russian moon program. That's a bit muddled... The NK-33, developed for the Russian lunar program, was tested by Aerojet. The one on the NASA test stands was the RD-180, which is a new engine -- derived from the RD-170 developed for the Zenit launcher -- and is not related to the old lunar program. As far as I understood... used a turbine to power the fuel pumps and feed it into the thrust of the engine developing 20-30% more thrust for the same amount of fuel. Same principle used by the SSME, developed in the US in the 1970s. Mind you, the Russians did have some interesting variations on the idea, and they were first -- they'd been doing it since the early 1960s -- but "revolutionary" it's not. I am a bit disappointed that we have not yet seen a successful single stage to orbit rocket this decade. Me too. But as Rand notes, a successful *cheap* launcher is the important thing -- how many stages it has is a secondary issue, and there are some differences of opinion :-) about the best number. -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
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