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#51
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In article ,
David Shannon wrote: Even at mach 8 separations, is the first stage all that far down range, more than 100-200 miles? It'll have a lot of energy from altitude and ... My trusty spreadsheet says 2,247 m/sec, 74 km up and 93 km downrange. Unless you're planning on using rocket thrust to turn it around (as Kistler was going to do), what you care about is not where separation occurs, but where the booster reenters, because it's going to coast a long way farther downrange before it has enough lift to do anything about it. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
#52
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In article ,
David Shannon wrote: Even at mach 8 separations, is the first stage all that far down range, more than 100-200 miles? It'll have a lot of energy from altitude and ... My trusty spreadsheet says 2,247 m/sec, 74 km up and 93 km downrange. Unless you're planning on using rocket thrust to turn it around (as Kistler was going to do), what you care about is not where separation occurs, but where the booster reenters, because it's going to coast a long way farther downrange before it has enough lift to do anything about it. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
#53
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#54
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#55
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Bimese is one of those ideas that just doesn't work when you start looking
at the details. Forcing the two stages to be identical isn't free. It isn't even cheap. Among other things: The fixed proportion of stage sizes constrains the staging point to a specific value around Mach 3-4. This is a low staging velocity by normal standards and is a very non-optimum split between the two stages, forcing the overall system to be much larger then necessary, even before the inefficency of the identical design is taken into account. The low staging point also results in a relatively high dynamic pressure at staging (well past max Q, bust still decidedly endoatmospheric. The staging velocity is low enough that a glide return is possible, but high enough to make it touchy - attention must be paid to the glide characteristics of the booster and the wind profile. Bimese requires crossfeed (transfer of propellant from the booster to the orbiter in flight) because otherwise the orbiter runs out of propellant around the same time as the booster, and you would effectively just have two SSTOs bolted together. Crossfeed is not impossible, but it is quite complex. In particular, a Bimese vehicle requires that the crossfeed flow be shut down and the feed system switch to the internal tanks while the engines keep running. It is therefore not especially analogous to the Space Shuttle Orbiter/ET connection. On top of that, the functional requirements for a first and second stage really aren't all that similar. A true bimese configuration forces the duplication of wholly unnecessary systems on the two stages. For example, the booster has essentially no need for a TPS system because of the low staging velocity. It also has no need for OMS, or a long duration power supply such as fuel cells (which may or may not be required on the second stage depending on the mission duration requirement). In turn, a booster stage must, by definition, have a stage vacuum thrust/Weight ratio well in excess of 1. An optimally designed orbiter can get by with a T/W of 1 or less at staging. Therefore, forcing commonality puts more engines on the orbiter than it really needs. Obviously, carrying around the deadweight of these superfluous systems makes the overall system substantially heavier than an optimized design. To which one might argue that mass isn't what matters - cost is. So consider this, does it really make sense, from an cost standpoint, to needlessly duplicate the components of the system that are the most expensive to buy and maintain - engines, TPS and power? It can be relatively painless to share only the subsystems that are most expensive to design - engines, avionics, software - without making the airframes look the same. That kind of commonality has a much better payoff than a pure Bimese system. For more on this subject, see "Selection of Lockheed Martin's Preferred TSTO Configurations for the Space Launch Initiative" paper number IAC-02-V.4.03 from the 2002 World Space Congress. It describes a trade study in which bimese placed last out of twenty TSTO configurations. It is interesting to observe that all three of the SLI/2GRLV contractor teams plus NASA studied bimese concepts, and that bimese was the initial baseline for Boeing and Orbital, yet by the end of the contract no one thought it was the preferred choice. Josh Hopkins |
#56
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Bimese is one of those ideas that just doesn't work when you start looking
at the details. Forcing the two stages to be identical isn't free. It isn't even cheap. Among other things: The fixed proportion of stage sizes constrains the staging point to a specific value around Mach 3-4. This is a low staging velocity by normal standards and is a very non-optimum split between the two stages, forcing the overall system to be much larger then necessary, even before the inefficency of the identical design is taken into account. The low staging point also results in a relatively high dynamic pressure at staging (well past max Q, bust still decidedly endoatmospheric. The staging velocity is low enough that a glide return is possible, but high enough to make it touchy - attention must be paid to the glide characteristics of the booster and the wind profile. Bimese requires crossfeed (transfer of propellant from the booster to the orbiter in flight) because otherwise the orbiter runs out of propellant around the same time as the booster, and you would effectively just have two SSTOs bolted together. Crossfeed is not impossible, but it is quite complex. In particular, a Bimese vehicle requires that the crossfeed flow be shut down and the feed system switch to the internal tanks while the engines keep running. It is therefore not especially analogous to the Space Shuttle Orbiter/ET connection. On top of that, the functional requirements for a first and second stage really aren't all that similar. A true bimese configuration forces the duplication of wholly unnecessary systems on the two stages. For example, the booster has essentially no need for a TPS system because of the low staging velocity. It also has no need for OMS, or a long duration power supply such as fuel cells (which may or may not be required on the second stage depending on the mission duration requirement). In turn, a booster stage must, by definition, have a stage vacuum thrust/Weight ratio well in excess of 1. An optimally designed orbiter can get by with a T/W of 1 or less at staging. Therefore, forcing commonality puts more engines on the orbiter than it really needs. Obviously, carrying around the deadweight of these superfluous systems makes the overall system substantially heavier than an optimized design. To which one might argue that mass isn't what matters - cost is. So consider this, does it really make sense, from an cost standpoint, to needlessly duplicate the components of the system that are the most expensive to buy and maintain - engines, TPS and power? It can be relatively painless to share only the subsystems that are most expensive to design - engines, avionics, software - without making the airframes look the same. That kind of commonality has a much better payoff than a pure Bimese system. For more on this subject, see "Selection of Lockheed Martin's Preferred TSTO Configurations for the Space Launch Initiative" paper number IAC-02-V.4.03 from the 2002 World Space Congress. It describes a trade study in which bimese placed last out of twenty TSTO configurations. It is interesting to observe that all three of the SLI/2GRLV contractor teams plus NASA studied bimese concepts, and that bimese was the initial baseline for Boeing and Orbital, yet by the end of the contract no one thought it was the preferred choice. Josh Hopkins |
#57
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In article ,
Christopher M. Jones wrote: The only good example I can recall of liquid fueled rocket engines failing in catastrophic and dramatic fashion in a developed rocketry program (i.e. after the initial development of orbital rocketry) would be the N-1, and there are some fairly good reasons to take that as a special case. Yes, liquid-engine systems can and do misbehave disastrously while still in development... and by any normal standard, the N-1's first-stage propulsion (at least) was not ready for flight. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
#58
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In article ,
Christopher M. Jones wrote: The only good example I can recall of liquid fueled rocket engines failing in catastrophic and dramatic fashion in a developed rocketry program (i.e. after the initial development of orbital rocketry) would be the N-1, and there are some fairly good reasons to take that as a special case. Yes, liquid-engine systems can and do misbehave disastrously while still in development... and by any normal standard, the N-1's first-stage propulsion (at least) was not ready for flight. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
#59
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Derek Lyons wrote:
(George William Herbert) wrote: and you need to enforce on the design team (and ideally on the operations team) that airframes are not going to be shoehorned into either role. That's going to be difficult-to-impossible to enforce. Any self respecting scheduler/planner is going to grab a vehicle already in configuration x in order to fly a mission with requirements x. His boss, and his bosses boss are gonna give him attaboys for saving the manhours. And they'll be right in doing so, over years and decades of operation, those little savings add up. Establishing that in the operations and maintenance schedule model would be great. Why? You waste manhours, and enforce slow degredation of the vehicles by doing so. Other than academic satisfaction, there is utterly no need for routine conversion between configurations. Conversions should be driven by need, not ivory tower dictates. Consider vehicle major maintenance checks. Major reliability drivers that we can predict ahead of time are going to be main engines and TPS. We can also predict that a lower stage engine failure or a lower stage TPS problem are less critical than that of the orbiter, coming back from 2x the velocity and 4x the energy... Consider for example a vehicle maintenance rotation where vehicles spend a year doing orbital work, then get their engines rotated for the short nozzle models and OMS pods unbolted, and then are used for booster flights for 2 years, and then undergo the equivalent of a D-check and are put back into orbital flight for another year. System upgrades and such get introduced along with the checks and refurbishment, in the vehicles that need it the most... the ones which will be flying orbital missions for the next year or so. But the vehicles flying orbital missions don't have to undergo D-checks every year. As their systems and structures age somewhat you just shift them into less demanding booster work for a while, with the short nozzles, and then push them back into orbiter service after the next major rebuild and upgrade cycle. -george william herbert |
#60
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Derek Lyons wrote:
(George William Herbert) wrote: and you need to enforce on the design team (and ideally on the operations team) that airframes are not going to be shoehorned into either role. That's going to be difficult-to-impossible to enforce. Any self respecting scheduler/planner is going to grab a vehicle already in configuration x in order to fly a mission with requirements x. His boss, and his bosses boss are gonna give him attaboys for saving the manhours. And they'll be right in doing so, over years and decades of operation, those little savings add up. Establishing that in the operations and maintenance schedule model would be great. Why? You waste manhours, and enforce slow degredation of the vehicles by doing so. Other than academic satisfaction, there is utterly no need for routine conversion between configurations. Conversions should be driven by need, not ivory tower dictates. Consider vehicle major maintenance checks. Major reliability drivers that we can predict ahead of time are going to be main engines and TPS. We can also predict that a lower stage engine failure or a lower stage TPS problem are less critical than that of the orbiter, coming back from 2x the velocity and 4x the energy... Consider for example a vehicle maintenance rotation where vehicles spend a year doing orbital work, then get their engines rotated for the short nozzle models and OMS pods unbolted, and then are used for booster flights for 2 years, and then undergo the equivalent of a D-check and are put back into orbital flight for another year. System upgrades and such get introduced along with the checks and refurbishment, in the vehicles that need it the most... the ones which will be flying orbital missions for the next year or so. But the vehicles flying orbital missions don't have to undergo D-checks every year. As their systems and structures age somewhat you just shift them into less demanding booster work for a while, with the short nozzles, and then push them back into orbiter service after the next major rebuild and upgrade cycle. -george william herbert |
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