Engine design

Apollo

Apollo

As far as storable propellant engines used on spacecraft themselves go, one of the classic examples was the “Service Propulsion System (SPS)” for the Apollo Command & Service Module (CSM). The SPS generated 91.2 kN (9,300 kg / 20,500 lb) of thrust. It was a fully restartable pressure-fed engine, with no turbopumps, with redundant...

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Solid Fuel engine design

Solid Fuel engine design

Work on large solid-fuel grains for the Minuteman and Polaris programs also led to the development of the first all-solid-fuel space launch vehicle, the LTV “Scout”, which would have a long career putting small payloads into space. In addition, the Minuteman development effort had a direct connection to the development of segmented solid rocket...

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Soviet rocket engines – and Atlas V

Soviet rocket engines – and Atlas V

The primary Soviet rocket engines in the early days of the Space Race were the “RD-107″ and “RD-108″. These were basically “sister” designs, each with four thrust chambers and a single turbopump, differing in that the RD-107 had two vernier engines, while the RD-108 had four. They both produced 907.4 kN (92,500 kgp /...

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Hybrid / Gel Engine design

Hybrid / Gel Engine design

As with liquid-fuel rocket engines, trying to write a detailed history of solid-fuel rocket engines here would be impractical, and a short survey will have to do. The first modern solid-fuel rockets were developed in the late 1940s, for use as RATO boosters and to power relatively small missiles, such as air-to-air missiles (AAMs)....

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Aerospike and RBCC Engines

Aerospike and RBCC Engines

The first liquid-fuel rocket engine to be produced in quantity was the engine for the German V-2 missile, which burned LOX and ethanol and produced 245.25 kN (25,000 kgp / 55,000 pounds) of thrust, which was far beyond the capabilities of any other rocket engine available at the time. After the war, however, substantially...

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Aerospike engines

Aerospike engines

While conventional chemical rocket engines continue to be refined, work has also been performed on new configurations, such as the “linear aerospike” and “rocket-based combined cycle” engines. NASA was working with private industry on an aerospike engine for the cancelled X-33 experimental reusable launch vehicle. An aerospike engine is very different in appearance from...

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Solid Propellant Engine design

Solid Propellant Engine design

Solid-fuel rockets go back for centuries, and their fundamental form has remained much the same. They contain propellant formed in a solid cylindrical block, or “grain”, normally with a hole up the centre to ensure uniform burning of the propellant. The hole can have a variety of configurations that give different “thrust profiles”: for...

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