Thinksmarkedly wrote:I might agree but that's irrelevant because it's not two thirds of the volume. From the drawings we've seen, the three drive rings together occupy at a third of the missile's volume. So shedding two of them would reduce your volume by a quarter or a fifth.
penny wrote:That calculation might be a bit premature. The volume occupied by the drive rings does not necessarily indicate the volume of the missile that would be rendered inert when a particular drive ring is spent. As a matter of fact, don't stages (even in multi-drive missiles) have differently rated burn times? Anyway, I would hesitate associating and guestimating the inert volume of a missile based on the volume occupied by its drive ring.
As an example that is included solely to accompany my thoughts.Five-Segment Solid Rocket Booster The SLS booster is the largest, most powerful solid propel-lant booster that will ever fly. Standing 17 stories tall and burning approximately six tons of propellant every second, each booster generates more thrust than 14 four-engine jumbo commercial airliners. Together, the SLS twin boosters provide more than 75 percent of the total SLS thrust at launch.
If our very own booster rockets burn that much fuel every second then surely the infrastructure associated with the far longer burns of HV missiles (capacitors and accompanying electronics) occupy a formidable volume. Multidrive missiles got much longer than the volume occupied by the drive rings over their long history of development. No?
But yeah, I might be a tad bit overly optimistic about a missile possibly shedding two thirds of its volume. But I've always been an open-minded sort. And as stated upstream, I will remain optimistic about the volume of a missile that might be shed if some entity were to specifically design its missiles to separate after a spent stage. Capacitors, associated electronics and other gizmos just might be as volume intensive as the chemical fuel aboard our very own booster rockets since the range and burn time of the missiles in the HV are far longer. So who knows. I shall remain opti– … enthusiastically optimistic.
What is the burn time of the various stages of multistage missiles? Anyone know?
Jonathan_S wrote:But that's not how Honorverse missiles work.
The cataphract, being a 2-stage missile does appear to drop it's SDM-derived first stage when it launched the CM-derived stage grafted onto it's nose -- and the Cataphract is also the only missile we know of that can have more than 1 acceleration during it's flight.
(The MWW talked about a possible 4-drive system defense missile for the RMN which had a CM derived final drive; and so would have had differing accelerations. But we've never seen such a thing actually deployed)
But for everybody else's DDMs and MDMs you have to set all drives to the same settings before launch. MWW responded to a thread speculating about mixed acceleration launched and said, in effect, 'nope. they currently can't work that way. there's some effect that prevents you from setting an adjacent drive ring to a different acceleration setting'
I know they don't currently work that way, and I know that currently all drives have to be set for the same acceleration; but again, that might be the effect caused by the static nature of the compensator whose compensation effect cannot be changed on the fly because the volume to be compensated is normally not going to change. But it will change if spent drives are separated. IOW, perhaps they might be made to work that way. If a Cataphract can do it, why can't any multistage missile, and eventually MDMs. Anyway, when the range of multi-drive missiles changed, the drive rings didn't get bigger, only the missile body did. No? Is there a link to one of MaxxQ's drawings?
Jonathan_S wrote:So for DDMs (or MDMs) you could have all drives all set to half-power (which is their normal usage); giving (for the RMN) 46000g for up to 180 seconds each. Or you could have all drives set to full-power; giving 92000g for up to 60 seconds each.
Half power:
DDM
29.2 million km continuous powered range
0.54c terminal velocity
MDM
65.7 million km continuous powered range
0.81c terminal velocity
Full power:
DDM
6.4 million km continuous powered range
0.36c terminal velocity
MDM
14.6 million km continuous powered range
0.54c terminal velocity
Thanks for the trouble, but I was more interested in whether all drive stages had the same capability on any particular setting. IOW, are all stages equal? From your post I gather they are.
Jonathan_S wrote:I say "up to" because while you can't pick a different acceleration once the drive is active you're free to turn a drive off early; and I assume that would apply to any of a DDM or MDM's drives. It's just that you can't ever turn it back on; so running less than the maximum time just gives you shorter range and lower velocity. The only drive that isn't normally run for its full duration is the final drive; and that's just because most engagements aren't made at the maximum possible range -- so the missile reaches its target with time still left on its final drive.
RMN missiles in particular aren't going to be shedding significant volume if they drop spent drive rings because, in almost the complete opposite of your solid rocket fuel example, they use the same power source (the microfusion power plant) to power all their drives. The reactor is way bigger than the fuel tanks; so even if you split the fuel into 2 or 3 tanks so you could drop an empty tank with its expended drive ring they'd still take up a pretty small fraction of the missile volume compared to the reactor itself.
You certainly guessed where I was headed. A smaller reactor servicing each stage.
Jonathan_S wrote:(Other people's capacitor powered MDMs could be a bit different, as you might be able to split into 3 capacitor banks -- one per drive -- and drop them when empty. Though even that's likely requiring more initial space in the missile as 3 separate banks each run to empty are going to be less efficient at storing energy that one big capacitor bank that's shared across the drives.
I don't think I can agree with the less efficient notion. Power is usually loss with distance. Hence, step-up transformers. A more contained setup should be more efficient, not less. That is presently the case with all of our current applications and electronics.
At any rate, what exactly is contained inside the huge volume of the separate stages of multi-drive missiles that can't be discarded. At any rate, only multi-drive missiles might be off the table, not multistage missiles.