Good going too considering I was half-stunned for a few minutes seeing the precooler wondering if I was actually looking at the right page...Yeah I saw the other article but it seemed a bit more dumbed down.I especially like,Quote"We intend to go to the Farnborough International Air Show in July with a clear message," explained REL managing director Alan Bond."The message is that Britain has the next step beyond the jet engine; that we can reduce the world to four hours - the maximum time it would take to go anywhere. And that it also gives us aircraft that can go into space, replacing all the expendable rockets we use today." Just need to prove it works first...
"We intend to go to the Farnborough International Air Show in July with a clear message," explained REL managing director Alan Bond."The message is that Britain has the next step beyond the jet engine; that we can reduce the world to four hours - the maximum time it would take to go anywhere. And that it also gives us aircraft that can go into space, replacing all the expendable rockets we use today."
Thats really the elephant in the room here.]has anyone given any thought on how to prevent this cooler and the modified jet turbine from icing up severely?[/b] There is moisture in
Quote from: simonbp on 04/27/2012 03:56 pmHonestly, the bigger question (as identified in the ESA report) was not whether it would cool the hottest air, but whether it would cool troposphere air with becoming covered in ice. And that's what they're testing right now.You're right. They are clearly taking things in priority order and the frost control system is THE big thing to prove. It was only discussed a few pages ago in this thread how air is most humid and problematic down here, not at the latter stages of the air breathing mode at higher altitude.As per their faq, this is their key, revolutionary technology:http://www.reactionengines.co.uk/faq.html11. How does your frost control technology work? Very well, thank you! (We aren't giving everything away!)
Honestly, the bigger question (as identified in the ESA report) was not whether it would cool the hottest air, but whether it would cool troposphere air with becoming covered in ice. And that's what they're testing right now.
Quote from: lkm on 04/27/2012 05:11 pmSo who thinks that we'll see David Willetts and Kevin Holleran announcing full phase 3 funding at Farnborough this July?This level of publicity coupled with stating that they'd actually like some public money [snip!] A minority government in the UK opening up its purse to this project?The British Chancellor of the Exchequer in a generous mood?Hmmm.Not to be skeptical, but to be encouraging, I say that those of you involved in the project should take a page from history (Von Braundeveloping the V2 in wartime; Korolev developing the R7 for the Sovietmilitary) and approach the British DoD (or NATO in general) anpush the SABRE engine's/Skylon's military applications...and eventually you may get civilian applications (just like the V2 evolved into the Jupiter satellite launcher; R7 into the Sputnik launcher). Of course if you are or you are not, you aren't saying.
So who thinks that we'll see David Willetts and Kevin Holleran announcing full phase 3 funding at Farnborough this July?This level of publicity coupled with stating that they'd actually like some public money [snip!]
Yup. <£30m per year over 3 years. Exactly the figuresI was thinking about.They seem to have gone out of their way to not mention skylon in the same breath as government and defence. I think they have wanted to make clear that this has legs without either of them....but clearly there are defence applications.
They don't want any public funding, so the chancellor of exchequer mood doesn't matter. And yes, if Skylon ever works, the military applications are obvious. I wonder how REL, Alan Bond and even Great Britain will handle that ? Will REL sell Skylons to USAF if required ?
Skylon will be ITAR-free, can't see the USAF/DOD buying a vehicle with no significant American industrial involvement. I expect armed forces as customers only.I would hardly call RR, BAE, EADS etc "anglo-american" either, especially in light of the USAF tanker procurement...
I am hoping Baldusi will see this response and let us know anything more about the 'D4' 20 ton revision? Do you have any links? Thanks.
Quote from: flymetothemoon on 04/18/2012 11:09 pmI am hoping Baldusi will see this response and let us know anything more about the 'D4' 20 ton revision? Do you have any links? Thanks.I'm more than ashamed to say that I misread my notes on the D1 and the Shuttle comparison. The current version is the D1. No D4 that I have information of. I had misnoted shuttle bay size and payload.
Pre-cooler testing at B9 Phase 1 successfully completedThe first phase of the pre-cooler test programme has been completed successfully and the test cooler is currently being disassembled, inspected and re-assembled in a new configuration for the second phase of testing.
It's too bad Alan Bond didn't pursue that avenue with Margaret Thatcherin the 1980's; we might have a civilian HOTOL today evolved from a military hypersonic transport.
23 years later it looks like they might be vindicated.
The UK is the only country that had independent space launch and nuclear weapons. It gave up the space launch capability.