Quote from: Rik ISS-fan on 01/08/2023 11:48 amI think Europe requires 5 sizes of launchers. (and several suborbital rockets) SpaceX shows that you only need one (Falcon 9) to dominate the market. Build your vehicle a little bigger than Falcon 9 and you cover both Falcon Heavy and Starship (for payloads larger than 25 t, split them into smaller chunks).
I think Europe requires 5 sizes of launchers. (and several suborbital rockets)
Quote from: Steven Pietrobon on 01/09/2023 04:09 amQuote from: Rik ISS-fan on 01/08/2023 11:48 amI think Europe requires 5 sizes of launchers. (and several suborbital rockets) SpaceX shows that you only need one (Falcon 9) to dominate the market. Build your vehicle a little bigger than Falcon 9 and you cover both Falcon Heavy and Starship (for payloads larger than 25 t, split them into smaller chunks).A single core F9R equivalent would handle most of their missions. Add A6 SRBs for high performance missions and operate as ELV. Cheaper to add SRBs they already have than try to design FHR equivalent which rarely flies.
Guessing what @Steve Pietrobon is hinting at is a down-sized New Glenn equivalent. However the Europeans don't really have a suitable engine available. Unless they acquire some recent American cryogenic engines.
THEMIS! The @ArianeGroup Themis reusable launch booster demonstrator has arrived in Sweden ahead of the inauguration of the Esrange orbital launch facility on Friday. This is the first time we've got to see a Themis booster. Credit: Mia Kleregård of @SSCspace on LinkedIn
Quote from: TrevorMonty on 01/09/2023 06:56 amQuote from: Steven Pietrobon on 01/09/2023 04:09 amQuote from: Rik ISS-fan on 01/08/2023 11:48 amI think Europe requires 5 sizes of launchers. (and several suborbital rockets) SpaceX shows that you only need one (Falcon 9) to dominate the market. Build your vehicle a little bigger than Falcon 9 and you cover both Falcon Heavy and Starship (for payloads larger than 25 t, split them into smaller chunks).A single core F9R equivalent would handle most of their missions. Add A6 SRBs for high performance missions and operate as ELV. Cheaper to add SRBs they already have than try to design FHR equivalent which rarely flies.None of the SRBs they already have (P120, P120+, whatever) is exactly easy or cheaper to add to a rocket, probably not any more than making a multi-core variant of this Maia.
Will point out that there is a limit to the number of A6/Vega-C SRB that can be poured at Kourou. Estimate the current limit is about 20 SRB annually. The locals around Kourou prefer less A6/Vega-C SRB being manufactured there, AIUI.
Quote from: Zed_Noir on 01/10/2023 04:38 pmWill point out that there is a limit to the number of A6/Vega-C SRB that can be poured at Kourou. Estimate the current limit is about 20 SRB annually. The locals around Kourou prefer less A6/Vega-C SRB being manufactured there, AIUI.Back up that estimate with a source please.Afaik the limit is around 35 P120C annually.I think it's odd Themis (mini Maia 1th stage) arrived at Esrange before Callisto. I thought 1MN thrust was above the limit for Esrange LZ-3. Themis is 3x as powerful. But the limit is 15mT TNT- equivalent, so amount of propallent is limited.I'm don't know how to convert the TNT equivalent into rocket size allowed.But Themis is a ridiculously large demonstrator for it's purpose. Sirius-1 (multiple pressure feed engines, possible Prometheus gas generator derived) would have been much more logical in my oppinion.I also want the Maia heavy to be the focus for Maia space/ArianeGroup-France. A 5.4m diameter stage with 7 to 9 Prometheus (Gas Generator) or a staged combustion engines. This could be produced alongside the Ariane 6 LLPM (core). Heavy could use a modified ULPM, with more powerful Vince, or a Prometheus/M60 powered stage. The super heavy could use two Maia heavy boosters, with a expendable LLPM, or Maia Heavy with less engines as expendable core. With the same upperstages.The problem is that if Avio is allowed and able to develop the M60 (ACE-60) and Vega Next gen (3.4m diameter with 7-9 M60 engines) This is similar to the Maia medium and better suitable to be integrated with Ariane 6. Arianegoup proposes what delivers work for them. Avio does the same. And it's ESA employees or politicians who decide what proposal gets funded. Risks are way to high for private funding (in Europe). Both Themis/ Maia space Mini and Avio TSTO demo rocket, ruļne the commercial mini/micro launcher market in Europe.Why invest into a competing system to a fully state funded launcher?!
Sorry, but how many second of engine burning time have been achieved on the two demonstrator Prometheus engines?Is this enough for a demonstrator rocket. NO, Far to few to use it on a reusable stage demonstrator. Where has commen sence gone to?
It looks like we're going to have to wait another year before the first hop test of the @ArianeGroup Themis reusable booster demonstrator.
The European space launcher's reusable first stage demonstratorFirst lift off in 2024 from Spaceport Esrange, Sweden.
MaiaSpace finally has a website - https://maia-space.com/
https://twitter.com/andrewparsonson/status/1613895083539009537QuoteMaiaSpace finally has a website - https://maia-space.com/
During an interview with @B_SMART_TV MaiaSpace CEO Yohann Leroy described the challenges of implementing reusability in a small launch vehicle.