Kerolox has a mixture ratio ranging from about 2.3 to 2.7 to one. That means that LOX is about 70% to 73% of your total propellant mass. So only loading RP-1 at altitude means you have to carry 70% of to 73% of your total propellant mass, so it means not much of advantage compared to loading LOX at altitude. An alternative to LOX is HTP (high test peroxide) which is storable at room temperature and non-toxic, but nearly everyone in the US is afraid of the peroxide boogeyman. HTP has a mixture ratio about 7 to one part RP-1, meaning it is about 88% of total propellant mass. You could carry the flight RP-1 in your spaceplane and only transfer the HTP at altitude, avoiding having to transfer two propellants in close proximity to each other (or in separate booms).
Oh God, it will never die ! George French. Keep that man away from any space companies. And now its back. Hopefully without French !
Someone please shoot this zombie...
Oh gosh, not this again. I knew there had been a thread about it a while back, I've managed to found it. https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=30948.0http://newsok.com/rocketplane-emerges-from-bankruptcy-keeps-reaching-for-moon/article/3745490Look at the article: RpK went bankrupt, and was auctionned out for a miserable 25 000$. To whom ? a good friend of George French. Also Chuck Lauer ! And look at the new website, who is along George French ? Chuck Lauer. Here we go again... By the way, RpK pretty much screwed Oklahoma. French and Lauer are just like Art Dula of Excalibur Almaz: they have a clever, interesting concept (Soviet capsules or Kistler K-1), on PAPER, but they are not able to develop it, or maybe they are not honest. Pick your choice. The little company that always failed. - They got contracts to launch Iririum satellites, and failed.- They got a NASA contract for the Space Launch Initiative - and failed. - They got a COTS contract along SpaceX, failed, and NASA money went to Orbital's Cygnus instead. They burned a lot of money (and Oklahoma) saying they would stick a rocket engine on a Learjet 25 and voilą, a SpaceShip2 at far lower cost, and far earlier. Yeah. They soon found that the Learjet basic structure couldn't handle Mach 3 surborbital flight (how surprising !) but French kept saying "no problem, we will fly soon" (hello, Mr. Branson) They also hyped point to point suborbital travel.
Chuck Lauer still doing the rounds:https://twitter.com/RISpace2018/status/1057566507331448833Looking at their website no sign that there's any funding yet (or any updates in the last 18 months).Edit to add:https://twitter.com/davidhitt/status/1057569240079831040
Edit to add:https://twitter.com/davidhitt/status/1057569240079831040
An aircraft that can deploy a HIAD.In front? Behind?The TRL level is dropping.
Quote from: john smith 19 on 11/03/2018 11:34 amAn aircraft that can deploy a HIAD.In front? Behind?The TRL level is dropping. The proper explanation is the space plane isn't an SSTO and the HIAD applies to the second stage. The picture of the satellite deployment shows (to my eye) two distinct portions to what comes out of the payload bay. Presumably that is a 2nd stage and a satellite similar in concept to Shuttle-Centaur.
I believe that Chuck Lauer has passed away.
In Loving Memory of Charles (Chuck) LauerNovember 15, 1955 - March 28, 2021To our colleagues and partners in Space,It is with a heavy heart that we announce the passing of Charles (Chuck) Lauer, a true veteran of theSpace sector, one of the founders of Rocketplane Global, instrumental in developing spaceports in NorthAmerica, CBDO of Spacebit, President of Spacebit North America and member of the Board of Advisors ofthe Space Frontier Foundation. Chuck has been researching and developing potential businessopportunities in space since 1991, and has published many general interest articles and technical paperson commercial space development.