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This article describes the plan to sell the orbiters minus engines
for $42 million: For sale: Used space shuttles. Asking price: $42 million apiece By John Matson Dec 18, 2008 04:00 PM in Space http://www.scientificamerican.com/bl...ing-2008-12-18 It is currently intended only to be sold to educational institutions, or governmental agencies. The Air Force is looking for designs for reusable first stage boosters for two-stage-to-orbit (TSTO) systems. Then it might be able to be used for this purpose. Most likely you would use kerosene fuel for this since dense fuels are more suitable for first stages. The payload bay would be converted to a fuel tank, and the second stage of the TSTO would be carried on top or below the orbiter. High performance kerosene engines such as the Russian NK-33, with a near legendary thrust/weight ratio of 136.66 to 1 at a weight of 1,222 kg, could be used for propulsion: NK-33. http://www.astronautix.com/engines/nk33.htm The orbiter without the SSME engines masses around 68,600 kg: Atlantis. http://www.astronautix.com/craft/atlantis.htm Its payload bay is around 300 cubic meters that could be used for propellant. Using the densities of kerosene and lox given he Lox/Kerosene. http://www.astronautix.com/props/loxosene.htm and the oxidizer to fuel ratio of the NK-33 of 2.8 to 1 we can calculate the propellant load that can be carried as about 300,000 kg. You would need at least 3 of the NK-33's to lift this fuel load, orbiter and second stage. The tank weight of kerosene/lox is typically around 1/100th of the propellant weight so around, 3,000 kg. Then the empty weight of the reconfigured orbiter would be 68,600kg + 3*1,222kg + 3,000kg = 75,266kg. And the fully fueled weight of this stage would be 375,266kg. For this first stage alone without a second stage, this would be a mass ratio of about 5. Using an average Isp of the NK-33 of 315 you could get a delta-V of 315*9.8*ln(5) = 4,970 m/s, about Mach 15. A total delta-V this high raises the possibility it could be used for suborbital space tourism or point-to-point hypersonic transport, if sale to commercial organizations were to be allowed. Bob Clark |
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Robert Clark writes:
The payload bay would be converted to a fuel tank, and the second stage of the TSTO would be carried on top or below the orbiter. With that top or bottom mounted 2nd stage using cryogenic fuels? Ooops, here we go again.... Unless, double hulled? Dave |
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David Spain wrote:
Robert Clark writes: The payload bay would be converted to a fuel tank, and the second stage of the TSTO would be carried on top or below the orbiter. With that top or bottom mounted 2nd stage using cryogenic fuels? Ooops, here we go again.... Unless, double hulled? I can't for the life of me figure out why Robert Clark is constantly coming up with ideas for so radically modifying something that already exists that it effectively becomes a entirely different spacecraft, but without the advantages that a whole new design would offer. Pat |
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On Jan 6, 3:02*am, Pat Flannery wrote:
.... I can't for the life of me figure out why Robert Clark is constantly coming up with ideas for so radically modifying something that already exists that it effectively becomes a entirely different spacecraft, but without the advantages that a whole new design would offer. Pat The $42 million costs for the basic spacecraft is significantly less than the $150 million development cost of the Whiteknight2 and SpaceShipTwo: Sales are rocketing at Virgin Galactic. http://www.virgingalactic.org/2008/0...are-rocke.html and the result would be a vehicle that could do significantly more than the Virgin Galactic system. It could act as a suborbital space tourism vehicle, but it also could act as a very high speed point-to- point transport system. Imagine a cross-Atlantic trip instead of taking 6 hours only took 1/2 hour. Or a cross country trip instead of taking 5 hours only took 20 minutes. Moreover, it could also serve as the reusable first stage of a TSTO. I'm arguing it could be used to reduce the costs to space if used as a reusable first stage booster for a TSTO system. The Air Force for instance believes such a TSTO could cut launch costs by 50%. The Russian engines that would need to be added would be relatively low cost. According to this page, in the mid 90's Aerojet purchased 36 of them from the Russians for only $1.1 million each(!): NK-33. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NK-33#History Installation of the lox/kerosene tanks and modifications to strengthen the body frame to carry the extra loads would also be relatively low cost. The 68,600 kg empty weight of the orbiter sans engines could probably be reduced also. The main system that could probably be removed would be the Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS). This is used for final orbital insertion of the shuttle and changes of its orbit. This wouldn't be needed for a first stage vehicle or a suborbital vehicle. I don't trust the value given for the OMS weight however on the Atlantis Astronautix page. It says this: Main Engine: OME. Main Engine: 14,912 kg (32,875 lb). Main Engine Thrust: 53.367 kN (11,997 lbf). Main Engine Propellants: N2O4/MMH. Main Engine Propellants: 12,412 kg (27,363 lb). Main Engine Isp: 316 sec. Spacecraft delta v: 700 m/s (2,290 ft/sec). The OME refers to the OMS engine. The engine does not weigh 14,912 kg. Perhaps they are referring to the entire OMS system, both pods. That seems unlikely as well, unless they are including the propellant weight. In any case it's this OMS system weight that I'm trying to find out to subtract off. Bob Clark |
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On Jan 6, 8:56*am, Robert Clark wrote:
On Jan 6, 3:02*am, Pat Flannery wrote: ... I can't for the life of me figure out why Robert Clark is constantly coming up with ideas for so radically modifying something that already exists that it effectively becomes a entirely different spacecraft, but without the advantages that a whole new design would offer. Pat *The $42 million costs for the basic spacecraft is significantly less than the $150 million development cost of the Whiteknight2 and SpaceShipTwo: *Installation of the lox/kerosene tanks and modifications to strengthen the body frame to carry the extra loads would also be relatively low cost. This is just more BS from Clark. When his non viable ideas are nixed on one forum, he goes and posts the same crap on another forum. The 42 million costs for the basic spacecraft is a drop in the bucket compared to the costs of all the mods. Also you don't even consider the mods for ground operations. The orbiter has no structural interface with the launch pad, it just hangs on the ET, so how do you propose to sit the orbiter on its tail The mods to carry the propellant tanks would not be "low cost", it would require an extensive mod to the vehicle, which would be basically a rebuild. Clark, face it, you don't know what you are talking about and your ideas are not workable. |
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Me wrote:
Clark, face it, you don't know what you are talking about and your ideas are not workable. You know, it would be possible to convert a 747 into a earth-boring machine at fairly low cost also. All we have to do is make the wings jettisonable...add a LOX-kerosene rocket engine to its tail... Pat |
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On Jan 6, 11:12*am, Me wrote:
... This is just more BS from Clark. *When his non viable ideas are nixed on one forum, he goes and posts the same crap on another forum. .. Actually I post them all at the same time. ;-) Bob Clark |
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On Jan 6, 8:56*am, Robert Clark wrote:
... *Moreover, it could also serve as the reusable first stage of a TSTO. I'm arguing it could be used to reduce the costs to space if used as a reusable first stage booster for a TSTO system. The Air Force for instance believes such a TSTO could cut launch costs by 50%. *The Russian engines that would need to be added would be relatively low cost. According to this page, in the mid 90's Aerojet purchased 36 of them from the Russians for only $1.1 million each(!): NK-33.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NK-33#History *Installation of the lox/kerosene tanks and modifications to strengthen the body frame to carry the extra loads would also be relatively low cost. *The 68,600 kg empty weight of the orbiter sans engines could probably be reduced also. The main system that could probably be removed would be the Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS). This is used for final orbital insertion of the shuttle and changes of its orbit. This wouldn't be needed for a first stage vehicle or a suborbital vehicle. I don't trust the value given for the OMS weight however on the Atlantis Astronautix page. It says this: Main Engine: OME. Main Engine: 14,912 kg (32,875 lb). Main Engine Thrust: 53.367 kN (11,997 lbf). Main Engine Propellants: N2O4/MMH. Main Engine Propellants: 12,412 kg (27,363 lb). Main Engine Isp: 316 sec. Spacecraft delta v: 700 m/s (2,290 ft/sec). *The OME refers to the OMS engine. The engine does not weigh 14,912 kg. Perhaps they are referring to the entire OMS system, both pods. That seems unlikely as well, unless they are including the propellant weight. *In any case it's this OMS system weight that I'm trying to find out to subtract off. Used alone without a second stage it could achieve high hypersonic speeds. The hypersonic, subsonic, and reentry characteristics of the orbiter are well understood. Once used as a first stage, it might lead trade studies to be done to see if a vehicle of similar dimensions but made of all composite construction could have a significantly better mass ratio. Could it even reach orbit? I would like to see a breakdown of the orbiter subsystem weights to see which ones could be removed for this application, and which ones such as the frame and body panels could be replaced with lightweight composites, if anyone knows a reliable source for this. The Astronautix page on the Atlantis gives some subsystem weights including the airframe structural weight but their numbers can be unreliable. As a first guess, I'm thinking that going to an all-composite version of the shuttle with propellant tanks in the payload bay would not allow this reconfigured shuttle to reach orbit. However, there is a significant amount volume in the wings, at about a 250 square meter wing area and maximum wing thickness of 1.5 meters. This could amount to a propellant tank volume near that of the payload bay. Note that for aircraft it is common to hold the fuel in the wings. The shuttle wings would need significant strengthening to hold this higher weight however. This would add on to the dry weight. However, again as a first guess, use of this wing volume on an all-composite version would give you a vehicle that could reach orbit. Then you would have a fully reusable SSTO. Bob Clark |
#9
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On another forum someone reminded me, you could just use wet wings as
the propellant tanks. As a preliminary estimate, the wing volume may be close to that of the payload bay based on a wing area of 250 square meters and a maximum wing thickness of 1.5 meters. Then you could keep the large shuttle payload bay to carry payloads while having close to the same propellant load. You would need some strengthening of the wings though, which would increase the dry weight. Bob Clark |
#10
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![]() "Pat Flannery" wrote in message dakotatelephone... I can't for the life of me figure out why Robert Clark is constantly coming up with ideas for so radically modifying something that already exists that it effectively becomes a entirely different spacecraft, but without the advantages that a whole new design would offer. I don't know, but I solved the problem long ago by putting him in my killfile. Jeff -- "Take heart amid the deepening gloom that your dog is finally getting enough cheese" - Deteriorata - National Lampoon |
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