Yes Jim, you're entirely right but...The rocket part of it is, IMHO, not that different from other rockets. My point, and perhaps I haven't made it very well, is that, after accumulating experience with rockets for 50 years (other people, that is, certainly not me), engineers can build a rocket, first on the back of an envelope and then inside a computer and calculate what the thrust figures will be and the model will be sufficiently good that when they build the engine, they'll get the thrust figure they expected to get, plus or minus (probably minus) a certain percentage.
They never get the ISP right.
In the event of such an inlet failure, could they not transition to internal LOX supply and abort the mission (to whatever suborbital path is possible), or would events be too rapid for valves and flows to react?
Pretty amazing thread, 200,000 views and very British - that pleases me At the weekend (or in the coming days) I'll start a fresh thread, especially as we have that milestone of the engine success. So look to find a cut off point in your conversations in preparation for the new thread.PS Anyone from Reaction on here. Would love to do an article....but I don't like re-writing press releases (boring).
Quote from: STS-200 on 11/30/2012 01:28 pmHowever, Skylon would fly fairly straight and in a gentle climb without any rapid throttling, with all of the high-Mach supersonic flight in the Stratosphere - flight conditions that are quite smooth and predictable. Unstart is much more likely to occur in variable-throttle maneuvering flight in the more turbulent Troposphere.What kind of "variable-throttle maneuvering flight" did the SR-71 do?
However, Skylon would fly fairly straight and in a gentle climb without any rapid throttling, with all of the high-Mach supersonic flight in the Stratosphere - flight conditions that are quite smooth and predictable. Unstart is much more likely to occur in variable-throttle maneuvering flight in the more turbulent Troposphere.
Quote from: Hempsell on 11/30/2012 12:51 pmQuote from: Jim on 11/30/2012 11:08 amThey never get the ISP right.?? if you agree we can predict the thrust of course we can predict the Isp. One determines the other. We have had no problems with Isp modelling in the past.Every other recent engine development says otherwise (RD-180, RS-68, J-2X, etc)
Quote from: Jim on 11/30/2012 11:08 amThey never get the ISP right.?? if you agree we can predict the thrust of course we can predict the Isp. One determines the other. We have had no problems with Isp modelling in the past.
What kind of "variable-throttle maneuvering flight" did the SR-71 do?
Quote from: Jim on 11/30/2012 02:30 pmWhat kind of "variable-throttle maneuvering flight" did the SR-71 do?Outrunning Libyan SAMs?
Concorde also had a digital inlet control system and that worked flawlessly.
Quote from: 65816 on 12/01/2012 03:19 pmConcorde also had a digital inlet control system and that worked flawlessly.Not the same. Mach 2 jets fly all the time.
Quote from: Hempsell on 12/01/2012 01:38 pmI am surprised - another good reason to buy your rocket engines from Reaction Engines.That attitude shows that you really don't know what is ahead of you and you mock others in the field who are much more experienced. You have yet to demonstrate "a" rocket engine much a complex one like SABRE. Also, forgot to include the Merlin.
I am surprised - another good reason to buy your rocket engines from Reaction Engines.