![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Henry Spencer wrote:
Mind you, the crash-program timing I noted above is unfortunate, in that it may put your first lunar expeditions during the nasty solar maximum of the late 50s. Wasn't the 1972 maximum, which was in the middle of the Apollo program, even larger? I remember marveling at the August 1972 auroras. Fortunately there didn't happen to be an Apollo aloft that day. If there had been, how much radiation would they have gotten? -- Keith F. Lynch - http://keithlynch.net/ Please see http://keithlynch.net/email.html before emailing me. |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Derek Lyons wrote:
Pat Flannery wrote: And when you need 30 motors per first stage of each individual N-1 rocket, you are turning out large numbers of motors that you can't be sure of until the first launch is attempted and then you get a few successful launches under your belt. sigh Pat... You keep repeating this as fact, and it is not. It is possible, nay fairly straightforward, to produce a large number of motors *and* to be sure of their performance. That the Russians screwed it up by making the wrong choices doesn't change this. I'm not outright condemning the use of multiple motors on spacecraft, but am stating that all things being equal in the reliability department, you are more liable to have a motor fail the larger the number of motors you use on a individual booster; the upside of the multiple motor argument is that if you use enough, you can afford to have one fail and still have a successful flight by increasing the burn time of the other motors, such as on the second stage of Apollo 13; that's an advantage. And smaller motors are easier and cheaper to design than large ones; that's also an advantage. but once you start getting beyond ten motors or so, you have to consider that your chances of having one of them fail on a flight are starting to increase; as long as the motor fails in a benign manner (sensing that it's function is going outside of specification and shutting itself down) there isn't any problem- but if the motor fails in a destructive manner- say by having its turbopump disintegrate- then it is liable to damage other motors that are near it, and you end up with a multiple motor failure at best, and a potential chain reaction failure mode at worst, causing loss of the vehicle. Problems easily resolved with a proper design, qualification, and production process. That the Russians chose not to follow this well trodden path is no indication that the job is impossible. I'm not saying it's impossible, I am just saying that beyond a certain point you are probably going to end up with more problems from multiple engines than the benefits you going to get from them, and thirty motors to me sounds like it's beyond that point. if they had wanted to, von Braun's Saturn team could have just taken a lot more of those H-1 Saturn I motors, and built something very much like the Collier's ferry rocket instead of the Saturn V...they didn't because they preferred a lesser number of large engines over a large number of smaller ones. Pat |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Derek Lyons wrote:
Again, not an issue. Start your production early enough with one line, then 'twin' it (I.E. move experienced workers from the first line to the second, then filling both with less experienced). Repeat as needed. (Or start a bunch of lines at once and be prepared to scrap a lot of early motors.) What exactly is the advantage to having to use a larger number of workers and production facilities to get the same amount of thrust? Pat |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Pat Flannery wrote:
Derek Lyons wrote: Again, not an issue. Start your production early enough with one line, then 'twin' it (I.E. move experienced workers from the first line to the second, then filling both with less experienced). Repeat as needed. (Or start a bunch of lines at once and be prepared to scrap a lot of early motors.) What exactly is the advantage to having to use a larger number of workers and production facilities to get the same amount of thrust? The only possible advantage is if the motors are already proven and in production. (I.E. Cluster's Last Stand.) That was the Russians first mistake in the N-1 design. I'm by no means advocating the design, only pointing out that your repeated assertion that it was 'impossibly difficult to make work' isn't quite true. D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. -Resolved: To be more temperate in my postings. Oct 5th, 2004 JDL |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Pat Flannery wrote:
I'm not saying it's impossible, I am just saying that beyond a certain point you are probably going to end up with more problems from multiple engines than the benefits you going to get from them, and thirty motors to me sounds like it's beyond that point. The problem Pat, is that is *exactly* what you keep saying. That it's an impossible job to tune/test that many motors. D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. -Resolved: To be more temperate in my postings. Oct 5th, 2004 JDL |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Derek Lyons wrote:
The problem Pat, is that is *exactly* what you keep saying. That it's an impossible job to tune/test that many motors. I said it was going to be difficult and time consuming to do it; I didn't say it was going to be impossible to do...and I was specifically referring to the N-1 program in this regard- I said I thought the Soviets would have had a very hard time making enough NK-15 motors to sustain a high launch rate, while assuring that each motor had been thoroughly checked out. This would take a lot of workers and a lot of construction infrastructure to accomplish. It's not impossible, but I think it isn't a good way to go about things by any means. Pat |
#37
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bull scheis.
"Greg D. Moore (Strider)" wrote: wrote in message oups.com... I was arguing with a friend that the lunar landing required very little new science but merely extrapolations of existing technology. This leads to: If it had been necessary, and cost was no object, what would be the earliest time that a lunar landing would have been possible. I argue that the Germans could have done it with their 1940s technology. "It depends". You can look at the Saturn V as a scale-up of the V-2. Just a much bigger rocket. That is of course an extremely simplified look at things. Getting the F-1 engines to burn stablely was itself a large task. Then of course you have things like the IU and on-board computation. Even with the advances there, much of the navigation was helped out by the ground. And of course things like fuel cells. While the science had been around for I think about a century, making it work effectively was part of the problem. Ultimately I think it comes down to, "how much brute force and money are you willing to throw at the problem?" |
#38
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wellyou were "arguing" total nonsense, so you were agruing nothing!
You like to argue! Go handle rattlesnakes next time and save us some further nonsense. wrote: I was arguing with a friend that the lunar landing required very little new science but merely extrapolations of existing technology. This leads to: If it had been necessary, and cost was no object, what would be the earliest time that a lunar landing would have been possible. I argue that the Germans could have done it with their 1940s technology. |
#39
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ok a more polite reply. vonBraun wanted to go to the Moon from
the outset. That was one of his earliest dreams in youth. He considered the V2 and all of its planned successors in Germany, totally inadequate to this job. Later when the political climate turned in favour of realising this task he and his team designed the Saturn V specific to this job. So there is your answer. John "Greg D. Moore (Strider)" wrote: wrote in message oups.com... I was arguing with a friend that the lunar landing required very little new science but merely extrapolations of existing technology. This leads to: If it had been necessary, and cost was no object, what would be the earliest time that a lunar landing would have been possible. I argue that the Germans could have done it with their 1940s technology. "It depends". You can look at the Saturn V as a scale-up of the V-2. Just a much bigger rocket. That is of course an extremely simplified look at things. Getting the F-1 engines to burn stablely was itself a large task. Then of course you have things like the IU and on-board computation. Even with the advances there, much of the navigation was helped out by the ground. And of course things like fuel cells. While the science had been around for I think about a century, making it work effectively was part of the problem. Ultimately I think it comes down to, "how much brute force and money are you willing to throw at the problem?" |
#40
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Henry Spencer wrote:
In article , Greg D. Moore (Strider) wrote: ...If it had been necessary, and cost was no object, what would be the earliest time that a lunar landing would have been possible. I argue that the Germans could have done it with their 1940s technology. You can look at the Saturn V as a scale-up of the V-2. Just a much bigger rocket. That is of course an extremely simplified look at things. Getting the F-1 engines to burn stablely was itself a large task. However, that was mostly a consequence of its very large combustion chamber. When the Russians ran into similar problems, they responded by clustering smaller chambers instead, which worked. Von Braun's "Das Marsprojekt" -- published in 1952, but based on work done somewhat earlier -- proposed going to *Mars* with essentially WW2 German technology. Nicht! Theis was a dream theory thesis, a science fiction story idea, not a practical proposal and he intended nothing more by this. He had been so impressed with the rate o technological advancement he now considered space missions possible at some near time in the future and so was trying to get public support 'through a fantasmic idea' so political funding would continue to grow in support of the growing technoloigcal base. Werner was a consumate successful politician of ideas. He had won his way with Hitler finally! Had he been younger we might never have seen the Shuttle but kept with a rocket program? John Then of course you have things like the IU and on-board computation. Even with the advances there, much of the navigation was helped out by the ground. Apollo could have gone to the Moon without ground help, using the on-board optical navigation system. In fact, completely autonomous navigation was originally a design requirement, and the capability was retained for abort cases. (The ability to fly a lunar landing solely on optical navigation was eventually sacrificed to free up some memory in the computer.) Tests on Apollo 8 confirmed navigation accuracy comparable to ground-based radio navigation. Doing without the on-board computer would have been a bit less easy, but Gemini demonstrated computerless LEO navigation (including rendezvous). And of course things like fuel cells. While the science had been around for I think about a century, making it work effectively was part of the problem. Alternative approaches would have been used -- either solar-dynamic power (concentrating mirrors supplying steam for turbogenerators), or possibly, for the shorter lunar mission, gas turbines tapping propellant from the rocket tanks. Heavier and involving moving parts, but quite workable, especially on a larger scale than Apollo. Ultimately I think it comes down to, "how much brute force and money are you willing to throw at the problem?" Quite so. I can't immediately think of any technological issues that couldn't be finessed by just throwing mass at the problems. The one area where von Braun's original concepts might have hit a serious technological snag would be the extensive reliance on orbital assembly work done in spacesuits. 40s and 50s concepts were (in hindsight) grossly over-optimistic about both working in free fall and getting adequate suit flexibility. It wasn't until the mid-60s that we really understood how big a headache this all was. The discovery of this might have required replanning around either modular concepts or development of much larger launchers to minimize dependence on orbital assembly. (Well, and there would have been the small matter of his favored assembly orbit -- the "two-hour orbit" -- being right in the middle of the inner Van Allen belt...) -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
The Apollo Hoax FAQ (is not spam) :-) | Nathan Jones | UK Astronomy | 8 | August 1st 04 09:08 PM |
The Apollo Hoax FAQ (is not spam) :-) | Nathan Jones | Astronomy Misc | 5 | July 29th 04 06:14 AM |
The Apollo Hoax FAQ | darla | Misc | 10 | July 25th 04 02:57 PM |
The Apollo Hoax FAQ | darla | UK Astronomy | 11 | July 25th 04 02:57 PM |
The Apollo Hoax FAQ | Nathan Jones | Astronomy Misc | 5 | November 7th 03 08:53 PM |