Joat42 wrote:
The nuclear version considered as part of the Saturn V would have increased LEO delivery from 127t to 155t.
A later model would have upped that a bit more.
IF it worked. IF it worked reliably.
Simple truth is that most of the shouting about this stuff, like Project Orion etc, is mostly hype, because it was never finalised into a finished working model. At most there were some coldfiring tests and not a lot more.
That's not entirely true. The NERVA program for example was a success, the latest iterations of the engine worked reliable and NASA was in the process of designing a vehicle around it when the political backing for it disappeared due to various reasons.
If the development of NERVA had continued we probably would have a quite large permanent presence on the moon today among other things.[/quote]
A low cost S>O would be excellent. For nuclear, take a look at project Dumbo. NERVA was never designed to get 1g+ acceleration. For chemical, I'd start with an oxygen breathing first stage and possibly 2nd stage, as high and mostly fast as possible. These could be horizontal take off and landing, ie. airplanes and the final orbital stage a rocket. My reasoning? Calculate the proportion of fuel weight that is oxidizer. Even if it is only practical to reach Mach 1 and 30,000 feet, you have some velocity and are now above most of the atmosphere. If they get the SCRAMjet working, it should be possible for an air breathing 2nd stage to reach mach 7 or so.