OK - NOW we have CONFIRMED info from SpaceX about their super-heavy launcher plans and the engine that will power them.
Some things have changed, but the end game is STILL a mindblower. 800lb gorillas are pounding on the door, and SpaceX is cutting/printing metal..
One thing is certain: their main purpose is going to Mars, with perhaps a trip to the Moon just to prove capabilities (per Musk.)
I've filled in some gaps to flesh out the big new rocket motor, labeling or bracketing where.
(BFR =Big F'ing Rocket)
(Core diameter = stage width)
(S1 = first stage)
Raptor:
Full-Flow Staged Combustion (FFSC) engine
Dual independent shaft turbopumps
Propellants: Methane/liquid oxygen
Maximum thrust: 1,000,000 lbf (Merlin is 147,000 lbf)
Specific Impulse (Isp): 321 seconds sea level, 363 seconds vacuum
What it means:
Full Flow Staged Combustion engines are very advanced. In very basic terms, Staged Combustion means the turbopump exhausts are recycled and run through the firing chamber to up efficiency. In a Full Flow Staged Combustion engine the turbopumps also run cooler because of a higher mass flow, they use high chamber pressures and are therefore compact for their power. They also differ by injecting their propellants as gases and not liquids. Russia calls them Gas-Gas because of this. FFSC's are also highly reusable.
The super-heavy rockets:
BFR because of no official names, yet. More info on these monsters in another thread dedicated to them. Images above created by a Russian rocket designer based on background info. The full images are stunning, but those are for later - many details are still in the black for a short bit.
I will say this: previous sims of similar Raptor powered launchers have UNDERESTIMATED the power of these beasts, especially the tri-core..
Hint: think the 1962 Sea Dragon rocket.
Single core BFR
A massively scaled-up Falcon 9 theme
Core diameter: 10m (32.8 feet, F9 is 12 feet)
S1: 9x Raptors in an Octaweb
S2: (redacted)
Tri-core BFR
A massively scaled-up Falcon Heavy theme
Core diameter: 10m (32.8 feet) x 3
S1: 27x Raptor in 3 Octawebs (O-O-O)
S2: (redacted)
MCT: (Mars Colonial Transporter)
No specifics, still in dev. BIG. More later.
What it means:
Both BFR's will be more powerful than any rocket ever flown, or even NASA's Space Launch System. The tri-core by a LOT. No current launch pad on Earth could handle it, they would be heavily damaged or destroyed. They need a bigger pad.
Raptor testing:
Work converting the NASA Stennis E2 (E Complex #2) test stand for methane engine component tests is almost finished, and SpaceX has been embedded for months.
Many outside rocket engineers speculate the full Raptor will be tested at NASA Stennis A Complex's A1 or A2 stands, not McGregor. We'll see.
There is also a contingent that sees indications there are already huge payloads for these beasts. A Bigelow Aerospace BA-2100 Olympus space station module (2x the volume of ISS), a govt./military payload, who knows?, but the vibe is palpable. People are scrounging recent conference reports for clues.
NASA Stennis test stands. The E Complex is in the foreground, the large A Complex stands are in the middle, and the B Complex is at the rear.
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