Author Topic: French Secret Projects 3 volume  (Read 9065 times)

Offline Vahe231991

  • Full Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1687
  • 11 Canyon Terrace
  • Liked: 469
  • Likes Given: 199
French Secret Projects 3 volume
« on: 02/02/2022 09:35 pm »
A new volume regarding French and other European spaceplane projects from the 1960s to 1990s is now available at these links:
http://www.crecy.co.uk/french-secret-projects-volume-3
https://www.amazon.com/French-Secret-Projects-Spaceplane-1964-1994/dp/1910809918

Offline Hobbes-22

  • Full Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1020
  • Acme Engineering
    • Acme Engineering
  • Liked: 708
  • Likes Given: 600
Re: French Secret Projects 3 volume
« Reply #1 on: 02/03/2022 07:44 am »
The 'Secret Projects' series aims to describe all of the projects and proposals that were made, in this case, for spaceplane projects.
This ranges from paper exercises to projects that got into full development before being cancelled. Despite being called 'French secret projects', it describes a number of non-French projects.

Quote
In 1963, Eugen Sanger, became head of the Eurospace organization which promoted the 'AeroSpace Transporter'. In response to a Eurospace call, aircraft makers in France, Germany and UK designed recoverable, winged spacecraft. From 1964 to 1970 the French government led studies to evaluate the feasibility of the concept.

Those studies, under the leadership of the French Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (CNES), coalesced into the Hermes spaceplane which was then adopted by the European Space Agency. In parallel, Germany and UK proposed fully recoverable designs while other countries, including Japan, India and Russia came to CNES to share ideas about spaceplane design. Unfortunately Hermes was never launched and by 1994 was abandoned after many alternative propositions were discussed.

This book relates the story of these remarkable concepts, crossovers between aircraft and spacecraft beginning with the 'antipodal bomber' of 1944 and continuing to Aerospatiale STS-2000 project through the Transporteur Aero-Spatial, VERAS, AW Pyramid, Bumerang, Sanger II, HOTOL, Hermes, and Taranis. Non-European projects like Dyna-Soar, Hyperplane, HOPE, and MAKS are also covered. It provides a fascinating and detailed account of these projects which, being halfway between aircraft and spacecraft, have often been neglected by aviation writers and historians.


It's quite astonishing to see so many concepts and studies for spaceplanes gathered in one place. Each project is described briefly, and for many projects, 3-view drawings and/or artist impressions have been included. The detail level varies: quite a few studies were limited to parametric studies and didn't advance to detail design, let alone hardware.
The book contains quite a few quotes from Henri Lacaze, who was involved in some of these projects at Aerospatiale, along with quotes from other key figures and from primary sources.
The projects range from 'requires materials that don't exist yet' to 'could be built today', although Hermes shows even such projects are not free from pitfalls.

The book can be divided into 3 parts:
1. WW2 up to the start of Hermes (page 1-104). From the 1960s, aerospace companies started seriously thinking about what came next after the expendable rocket. Almost universally this took the shape of a large hypersonic aircraft replacing the first stage, usually with a small spaceplane on top and maybe a single-use second stage.
2. Hermes and competitors (pp 104-196). Hermes went through many iterations, so even 100 pages can't describe every detail (see Luc van den Abeelen's book for more).
3. After Hermes (pp 196-227). This lists a few more projects, ending with the ESA FESTIP study (1994 onwards) which again examined a bunch of possible routes to a reusable launcher.

The book provides a good overview of the subject. The large number of projects means there's limited space to describe each of them, so there were a few projects I'd like to know more about *. It leaves the impression that Europe could have had its own reusable spaceplane at several points, if we'd accepted the cost of such a project. I enjoyed reading the book and exploring the variety of approaches to the same goal.


There's a companion volume 'British Secret Projects 5, Britain's Space Shuttle' by Dan sharp, this goes into more detail of the British efforts in this area (focusing on BAC MUSTARD).


*: the main one being BAe HOTOL. This is mentioned briefly in FSP 3, but would rate a book of its own in my opinion.
« Last Edit: 03/22/2022 12:33 pm by Hobbes-22 »

 

Advertisement NovaTech
Advertisement
Advertisement Margaritaville Beach Resort South Padre Island
Advertisement Brady Kenniston
Advertisement NextSpaceflight
Advertisement Nathan Barker Photography
0