Were there any proposals to use the RS-64 in clustered or single form to propel an American heavy lift vehicle?
Quote from: JoeFromRIUSA on 04/11/2022 08:27 pmWere there any proposals to use the RS-64 in clustered or single form to propel an American heavy lift vehicle?If you mean RS-68, the answer is yes. There were proposals to cluster RS-68 engines on the Ares V core stage. - Ed Kyle
Vacuum nozzle and regen cooling would probably get you to about 440, but you wouldn't be able to run at sea level. To get 450 and vacuum performance you'd have to get off gas-generator and go to staged-combustion.But then you've just got an SSME.RS-68 is just right for what it does. That's why it's cheap. But it's not a high-performance engine, nor is it intended for extended vacuum performance.
Isn't Aerojet going to quit making the RS-68 after Delta IV heavy retires?
Quote from: spacenut on 04/12/2022 02:33 amIsn't Aerojet going to quit making the RS-68 after Delta IV heavy retires?The production line has long been inactivated and closed out. Testing has either completed or soon to be completed at NASA SSC.
Today, the world’s most powerful hydrogen-fueled rocket engine built by Aerojet Rocketdyne, the RS-68A, completed its final hot-fire acceptance test for use on the United Launch Alliance (ULA) Delta IV Heavy launch vehicle on the B-1 Test Stand at NASA’s Stennis Space Center in Mississippi.
Quote from: spacenut on 04/12/2022 02:33 amIsn't Aerojet going to quit making the RS-68 after Delta IV heavy retires?Seems like it to me. What else could the RS-68A be used for?
What was the RS-68B?
But the ablative nozzle that is standard on RS-68 and RS-68A, turned out to be ill-suited for the base-heating environment of Ares V.
Quote from: woods170 on 06/14/2023 12:39 pmBut the ablative nozzle that is standard on RS-68 and RS-68A, turned out to be ill-suited for the base-heating environment of Ares V. Did this forum ever come to a consensus on whether the problem was specifically the big SRBs, or just clustering ablative nozzles in general?
Quote from: JEF_300 on 03/10/2024 05:41 pmQuote from: woods170 on 06/14/2023 12:39 pmBut the ablative nozzle that is standard on RS-68 and RS-68A, turned out to be ill-suited for the base-heating environment of Ares V. Did this forum ever come to a consensus on whether the problem was specifically the big SRBs, or just clustering ablative nozzles in general?Thermal modeling showed that the combined thermal environment, both from the SRBs and the clustered RS-68 engines, was something that the ablative nozzles of RS-68 could not handle.
Quote from: woods170 on 03/11/2024 07:07 amQuote from: JEF_300 on 03/10/2024 05:41 pmQuote from: woods170 on 06/14/2023 12:39 pmBut the ablative nozzle that is standard on RS-68 and RS-68A, turned out to be ill-suited for the base-heating environment of Ares V. Did this forum ever come to a consensus on whether the problem was specifically the big SRBs, or just clustering ablative nozzles in general?Thermal modeling showed that the combined thermal environment, both from the SRBs and the clustered RS-68 engines, was something that the ablative nozzles of RS-68 could not handle.Keeping in mind that they do just fine in a cluster of three at the base of Delta 4 Heavy. - Ed Kyle
Keeping in mind that they do just fine in a cluster of three at the base of Delta 4 Heavy. - Ed Kyle