Alpha Centauri 2

Community => Recreation Commons => Destination: Alpha Centauri => Topic started by: Buster's Uncle on March 22, 2013, 05:24:07 pm

Title: SpaceX's New Rocket Engine Cleared for Private Launches
Post by: Buster's Uncle on March 22, 2013, 05:24:07 pm
Quote
SpaceX's New Rocket Engine Cleared for Private Launches
By Mike Wall | SPACE.com – 17 hrs ago...

(http://media.zenfs.com/en_US/News/SPACE.com/SpaceX%27s_New_Rocket_Engine_Cleared-04ac415b789f2650b21b7f613e824c57)
Two of SpaceX's Merlin 1D engines sit on a test stand at the company's rocket-development facility in McGregor, Texas.



SpaceX's next-generation rocket engine is ready to fly and will likely power a commercial space launch for the first time this summer, company officials announced Wednesday (March 20).

The Merlin 1D engine was judged flight-ready after firing for a total of nearly 33 minutes over the course of 28 different tests at SpaceX's rocket-development facility in McGregor, Texas. The new engine will soon be incorporated into the company's Falcon 9 rocket, officials said.

"The Merlin 1D successfully performed every test throughout this extremely rigorous qualification program," SpaceX CEO and chief designer Elon Musk said in a statement. "With flight qualification now complete, we look forward to flying the first Merlin 1D engines on Falcon 9’s Flight 6 this year."



The Falcon 9 has flown five times to date, most recently on March 1, when it blasted the robotic Dragon capsule toward the International Space Station on California-based SpaceX's second contracted supply run for NASA. According to the company's launch manifest, flight number six will launch a Canadian communications satellite, likely in mid-June. [SpaceX's Amazing Rockets & Spaceships (Photos)]

Company officials say the Merlin 1D will provide a big boost for the Falcon 9, which until now has been powered by Merlin 1C engines in its first stage (nine of them, hence the name).

"The Merlin 1D has a vacuum thrust-to-weight ratio exceeding 150, the best of any liquid rocket engine in history," SpaceX officials wrote in a press release Wednesday. "This enhanced design makes the Merlin 1D the most efficient booster engine ever built, while still maintaining the structural and thermal safety margins needed to carry astronauts."

SpaceX indeed plans to launch astronauts using the Merlin 1D. The company is working on a manned version of its Falcon 9/Dragon transportation system, in the hopes of scoring a NASA contract to ferry astronauts to and from the space station.



SpaceX will also incorporate the 1D into its Falcon Heavy booster, a huge rocket still in development that will use 27 engines in its first stage. The Falcon Heavy will be capable of carrying payloads weighing 53 metric tons to low-Earth orbit, company officials say, and it is also being designed to meet NASA human-rating standards.

The Merlin 1D already powers SpaceX's Grasshopper rocket, an experimental booster that the company hopes will pave the way for a fully reusable launch system. Earlier this month, the Grasshopper lifted off on its fourth test flight, rising 263 feet (80 meters) into the Texas skies before returning to Earth and making a soft landing.
http://news.yahoo.com/spacexs-rocket-engine-cleared-private-launches-234926977.html (http://news.yahoo.com/spacexs-rocket-engine-cleared-private-launches-234926977.html)
Title: Re: SpaceX's New Rocket Engine Cleared for Private Launches
Post by: Unorthodox on March 26, 2013, 05:14:04 pm
To give you perspective, the shuttle had a ~75 ratio.  The old Saturn V/Apollo program, ~93. 



Title: Re: SpaceX's New Rocket Engine Cleared for Private Launches
Post by: Buster's Uncle on March 26, 2013, 05:50:53 pm
What was the lift capacity on the Saturn V?
Title: Re: SpaceX's New Rocket Engine Cleared for Private Launches
Post by: Unorthodox on March 26, 2013, 08:36:25 pm
Wiki says 120 metric tons to LEO

45 metric tons to TLI (moon).

Keep in mind, the Falcon Heavy is almost half the actual size of the Saturn V.  Roughly 2 million lbs lighter (mostly fuel weight).

It's best compared to the Shuttle, which had a 24 metric ton payload to LEO. 
Title: Re: SpaceX's New Rocket Engine Cleared for Private Launches
Post by: Geo on March 30, 2013, 01:55:27 pm
I assume you mean the whole launch setup of the 'shuttle'? Not only the orbiter itself?
Because you can't really compare the Falcon with the shuttle then, since alot more 'mass' came back to Earth which had to be launched in orbit.
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