Imaginos1892 wrote:My proposal is methane/air and methane/oxygen. Is it really that hard to design and build methane-fueled jet engines?
Yes. Come back in a century or two and it might be realistic. MAYBE. Methane has a number of issues in regards to the extreme cold and heat that tends to be involved during spaceflights.
In short, sounds great in theory but doesn´t actually work. Desktop general style spaceflight theory.
Imaginos1892 wrote:Fuel (and oxygen) tanks get emptied no matter what kind of engines you're using, so I don't see why you even mentioned that.
Because when vertically launched, this causes no troublesome inbalance.
It is one of THE big issues with horizontal takeoff/launch. For a tiny craft with little to no real usefulness, it´s relatively easy to compensate for. For heavy lifters it´s a nightmare.
Imaginos1892 wrote:This is not to be built on government contracts, so will you allow me to believe they won't be stuck-on-stupid?
...
Everything about the way NASA puts stuff into orbit is wrong. They build a huge, complex, hideously expensive rocket, stand it up on its ass end and light it off. Then they start building another one just like it to carry the next load because each one is completely consumed in the course of its single flight! That's planned obsolescence with a vengeance, coupled with institutional inertia. NASA is no longer the organization it was back in the 1960's; it's been taken over by bureaucrats, bean-counters and pencil-pushers. Decisions are based on politics and pandering instead of physics and engineering.
Some of you here make the same mistake and persist in misusing "the rocket equation" where it does not apply, to "prove" that the ONLY way to reach orbit is with vertical-launch staged rockets, when it is in fact the WORST way.
Funny thing you know... That was basically the idea behind the Space Shuttle.
Yet in the end, it became drastically LESS reliable, MORE expensive and mostly less useful than the Apollo/Saturn.
Imaginos1892 wrote:Some of you here make the same mistake and persist in misusing "the rocket equation" where it does not apply, to "prove" that the ONLY way to reach orbit is with vertical-launch staged rockets, when it is in fact the WORST way.
Do you REALLY think you´re the only one who reached that conclusion?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAKS_%28spacecraft%29 USSR
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buran_%28spacecraft%29 USSR
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kliper Russia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HOPE-X Japan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RLV_Techn ... _Programme India
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Da_Vinci_Project private project
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermes_%28spacecraft%29 France
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikoyan-Gurevich_MiG-105 USSR test
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HOTOL British
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MUSTARD British
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XCOR_Lynx private project
Now lets see, what´s the common thing about all of them? Oh yeah, they were dumped for being
MORE EXPENSIVE AND LESS RELIABLE than vertical launch systems.
Imaginos1892 wrote:If you shoot something straight up, it must have a thrust-to-weight ratio greater than 1 at the worst possible time
Yeah, so what? Horizontal launch means instead you get the fun of requiring a drastically LONGER boost phase because you´re travelling through atmosphere much longer.
Imaginos1892 wrote:They build a huge, complex, hideously expensive rocket, stand it up on its ass end and light it off. Then they start building another one just like it to carry the next load because each one is completely consumed in the course of its single flight!
Yup. Because face the facts man, massproducing rockets and capsules this way is by far the cheapest way to get into space.
The Space Shuttle was designed EXACTLY for this reason.
Yet in the end, for smaller loads the Soyuz system costs a fraction per kg to put in orbit, while for large loads, the previous Saturn rockets were eventually found to have been considerably cheaper. And better. And safer. And more capable.
I would absolutely LOVE it if there was a better way, but right now, you´re just spouting old rehashed news that was PROVEN A MISTAKE.
Imaginos1892 wrote:We know that a jet aircraft can reach Mach 3.3 at 25KM altitude because the SR-71 did that 50 years ago. If it's going east near the equator, that adds up to 1.5 KPS. It now needs rockets to produce another 6.5 KPS and reach low orbit, which can be achieved with a fuel fraction of less than 0.7. If it spent 6% of its takeoff weight in fuel to reach this point, that makes its overall fuel fraction around 0.75 and puts a big dent in "the tyranny of the rocket equation".
So, just a few advantages of a hybrid spaceplane over a rocket:
Except you´re never going to get an SR-71 to actually be able to reach orbit. And even if you did, how exactly are you going to protect such an extremely nonoptimal shape against reentry heat?
And if you got it into orbit, you DO remember that the SR-71s fueltanks are designed to be leaky while cold, to offset the problems of heat during highspeed flight. Which means while it is in space, you´re going to have a spacecraft leaking fuel. This was something that almost caused a fatal accident for a space shuttle and you want to do it deliberately? Not so bright.
So, i´ve already identified TWO CRITICAL FAILURES in your example. Either of which just on their own completely kills your claims.
Imaginos1892 wrote:You can fly it again tomorrow!
That´s what the slogan was for the space shuttles! Before they were actually built at least. Ended up being an extremely unrealistic pipedream.
Imaginos1892 wrote:If it's going east near the equator, that adds up to 1.5 KPS. It now needs rockets to produce another 6.5 KPS and reach low orbit, which can be achieved with a fuel fraction of less than 0.7. If it spent 6% of its takeoff weight in fuel to reach this point, that makes its overall fuel fraction around 0.75 and puts a big dent in "the tyranny of the rocket equation".
Where the hell did you get 6% from? An SR-71 did not get to topspeed at max altitude without an inflight refuelling.
And funny thing is, it´s those "last" KPS you dismiss so easily that are the hardest to reach.
In case you forgot, as long as you´re in atmosphere, the faster you go, the hotter it gets because the more friction you generate.
So your idea for reaching space basically has the prerequisite of reaching space first, because otherwise you don´t have enough thrust or fuel to reach space so you can reach space...
How are you going to cool the lift surfaces while at high speed in atmosphere?
How are you going to keep those same areas from misbehaving once they reach the mix of overheating and cold that you get in space?
The SR-71 is a horrible starting point for a spaceplane.
The MiG-25 managed similar speeds and might work slightly better, but that´s because it´s a fricking flying BRICK, due to being built to a large extent with steel, because aluminium couldn´t handle the stress.
The SR-71 in turn used a mix of titanium and corrugated aluminium to overcome the same issues. Unfortunately, its design would NOT survive spaceflight.
The SR-71 was an awesomely neat aircraft, but it´s NEVER going to get anyone into space.