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Rocketdyne H-1

The Rocketdyne H-1 was a 205,000 lbf (910 kN) thrust liquid-propellant rocket engine burning LOX and RP-1. The H-1 was developed for use in the S-I and S-IB first stages of the Saturn I and Saturn IB rockets, respectively, where it was used in clusters of eight engines. After the Apollo program, surplus H-1 engines were rebranded and reworked as the Rocketdyne RS-27 engine with first usage on the Delta 2000 series in 1974. The RS-27 variant is also used on the Delta II and Delta III.[1][2]

H-1
An H-1 engine at the Udvar-Hazy Center
Country of originUnited States
Date1963-1975
ManufacturerRocketdyne
ApplicationBooster
SuccessorRS-27
StatusRetired
Liquid-fuel engine
PropellantLOX / RP-1
CycleGas generator
Configuration
Chamber1
Performance
Thrust, sea-level205,000 lbf (900 kN)
Thrust-to-weight ratio102.47
Chamber pressure700 psia (4.8 MPa)
Specific impulse, vacuum289 seconds (2.83 km/s)
Specific impulse, sea-level255 seconds (2.50 km/s)
Burn time155 s
Dimensions
Length8.8 feet
Diameter4.9 feet
Dry weight2,200 lb (1,000 kg)
Used in
Saturn I, Saturn 1B

History

Early engines

The H-1 is one of a series of engines developed from the wartime V-2 ballistic missile. During the war, North American Aviation (NAA) was given several 59,600 lbf (264.9 kN)[3] V-2 engines to examine and convert from metric to SAE measurements. They formed their "Propulsion Division" to handle this work, later becoming Rocketdyne.

NAA had also been given a wealth of technical documentation on the engine. Engineers studying them came across plans to improve the V-2 engine using a new "waterfall" fuel injector. The Germans were unable to get the design to work and it never went into service. NAA engineers decided to attack this problem and quickly came up with solutions. This allowed them to raise the thrust of the design to 75,000 lbf (330 kN), and then 78,000 lbf (350 kN) for the Redstone missile.

NAA had also been working on the SM-64 Navaho cruise missile project, which used the same engine as a booster to get the missile up to speed so its ramjet engines could light. The Air Force continually demanded higher performance from the Navaho, which forced NAA to build larger missiles, and larger boosters to launch it. By the early 1950s, the basic engine design had been enlarged to produce 120,000 lbf (530 kN).

All of these designs, like the V-2 that spawned them, burned ethanol, but other fuels had also been experimented with, including kerosene, diesel oil, paint thinner, JP-4, and JP-5 jet fuel. In January 1953 Rocketdyne started their "REAP" program to convert these engines to a specific and well-engineered kerosene fuel specifically for rocket engines, which became RP-1, officially specified in Military Specification MIL-R-25576 in 1954.

In 1955, the Air Force selected a JP-4 burning version of the engine to power their Atlas missile. The US Army requested a further boost to 150,000 lbf (670 kN) for their Jupiter missile, and the Air Force used the same version for their Thor, producing the Rocketdyne S-3D (or LR-79).

All of these engines were based on a similar design concept, featuring a "waterfall injector", where many small fuel injectors were used to spray burning fuel into the main combustion chamber. They also shared a complex system for starting the turbopumps, using a set of secondary fuel tanks and plumbing that fed the gas generator and main combustors while the pumps were still bringing the main fuel lines up to pressure. A complex series of electropneumatic valves operated the various fuel flows until the engine was fully started.

X-1

 
This chart shows the dramatic simplification of the S-3D engine, via the unillustrated X-1, to the Saturn I's H-1.

With the successful running of the S-3D for the Thor and Jupiter, the company turned their attention to a radically updated version, originally known as the S-3X, but later becoming the X-1. This engine replaced the complex valve system and all of its attended sensors and electronics with new valves that operated on the pressure of the fuel itself. This meant that the complex start-up procedure was entirely automated and driven off the fuel flow itself.

Additionally, the X-1 removed the entire start tank system and replaced it with a small solid fuel rocket engine that fed its exhaust through the gas generator to spin the turbopumps. This change dramatically simplified engine plumbing, at the cost of making the design a single-shot device. Earlier engines could, in theory, be restarted in flight, but with a single starter cartridge, the X-1 could be started once only.

Another change was to introduce an ignitor using a pyrophoric fuel in place of the solid fuel versions of earlier designs. The earlier engines required the ignitors to be inserted through holes in the engine into the combustion chamber, but the new system allowed the fuel to be sprayed into the main injector. The fuel, triethylaluminum, was delivered in a cube with diaphragms that burst when the fuel flow in the injector reached a set threshold.

Finally, the X-1 introduced a new lubrication system that added a small amount of additive to the RP-1 fuel as it flowed through the various components. This was fed under pressure into the various bearings in the turbopump system, both lubricating it and carrying away heat.

Saturn and H-1

 
H-1 on display at the Arkansas Air & Military Museum in Fayetteville, Arkansas

Saturn started as a paper project to meet a new US Department of Defense requirement for a heavy-lift vehicle able to lift 10,000 to 40,000 pounds into low Earth orbit (LEO), or accelerating 6,000 to 12,000 lb to escape velocity. Existing launchers might be extended to reach 10,000 lb to LEO, below the requirements. A new and larger design was needed, and in April 1957, Wernher von Braun handed the preliminary design task to Heinz-Hermann Koelle.[4]

Koelle's solution to reducing the development time was to use a cluster of fuel tanks from Redstone and Jupiter missiles, sit them on top of a single thrust plate, and then attach the required engines to the bottom of the plate. Calculations demonstrated that a total thrust of about 1 million pounds would be needed, greatly limiting their engine selection. Looking for suitable designs, Koelle learned of the E-1 from Rocketdyne's George Sutton.[5] Rocketdyne was developing this 400,000 lbf (1,800 kN) engine for the Titan missile, and it was the largest engine nearing introduction within the time frame that ARPA gave Wernher von Braun to develop what was then known as the "Juno V".[6] The E-1 had originally been developed as a backup engine for the Titan missile, designed specifically to be as simple to develop as possible, in case the Aerojet General LR-87 did not pan out.[7]

The launch of Sputnik that October led to rapid changes in the US rocketry establishment. In order to demonstrate peaceful intent, the US decided to spin out its various non-military rocketry programs to a new agency, which would evolve as NASA. As the Army had lost interest in large rockets, they agreed to turn over von Braun's ABMA team to NASA, becoming the Marshall Space Flight Center.[8] The handover would take place in 1960.[8]

Shortly after these plans were made, in July 1958 ARPA visited ABMA and told von Braun that they still had $10 million in their budget to spend before the handover, and asked if there was any way to effectively use the money. Von Braun called in Koelle and showed them a model of the Juno V, but the ARPA visitors noted that the E-1 engine wouldn't be ready by 1960.[9] Brainstorming, they decided that the best approach was to make a minor upgrade to Rocketdyne's existing S-3D engines to boost them from 175,000 lbf (780 kN) to 200,000 lbf (890 kN), and use eight of these engines instead of four E-1s.[9]

When Koelle returned to Rocketdyne looking for an upgraded version of the S-3D, they instead presented the X-1 and suggested it be used in place of a further upgrade to the S-3. Although experimental, the X-1 was already in the right thrust range and ready for full development. A contract for development was tendered on 15 August 1958,[10] and by early 1959 the name had changed from Juno to Saturn, referring to the succession as the planet after Jupiter, the Jupiter missile being the previous ABMA design.[11]

Description

 
Eight H-1 engines in a Saturn I

Like all of Rocketdyne's early engines, the H-1 used a waterfall injector fed by turbopumps, and regeneratively cooled the engine using the engine's fuel. The combustion chamber was made of 292 stainless steel tubes brazed in a furnace.[12]

Unlike the J-2 engine used on the S-IVB stage, the H-1 was a single-start engine. It could be fired multiple times—and engines were usually subject to two or more static test firings before a mission to flight-qualify them—but it could not be restarted in flight, because some components required for the startup sequence were non-reusable. In particular, the turbopumps were initially driven by a Solid Propellant Gas Generator (SPGG), which was essentially a small solid rocket, and had to be replaced after each firing.

To start the engine a 500V AC voltage was applied to the SPGG, which ignited the solid propellant. This produced hot gas which was allowed to build up until reaching a pressure of 600–700 psi, after which a bursting diaphragm released it into the turbine which drove the fuel turbopumps. This began the process of pumping fuel and oxidizer into the gas generator and the engine, and the hot gases from the SPGG provided the initial energy required to ignite the fuel/oxidizer mix. This started the turbopumps spinning. Once RP-1 and LOX started burning in the gas generator, the exhaust powered the turbopumps until engine shutdown.

 
(See the original diagram with specifications.)

Specifications

  • Contractor: NAA/Rocketdyne
  • Vehicle application: Saturn I / S-I 1st stage – 8 engines
  • Vehicle application: Saturn IB / S-IB 1st stage – 8 engines
  Vehicle effectivity
SA-201 through SA-205 SA-206 and subsequent
Thrust (sea level) 200,000 lbf (890 kN) 205,000 lbf (910 kN)
Thrust duration 155 s 155 s
Specific impulse 289 seconds (2.83 km/s) 289 seconds (2.83 km/s)
Engine weight dry (inboard) 1,830 pounds (830 kg) 2,200 pounds (1,000 kg)
Engine weight dry (outboard) 2,100 pounds (950 kg) 2,100 pounds (950 kg)
Engine weight burnout 2,200 pounds (1,000 kg) 2,200 pounds (1,000 kg)
Exit-to-throat area ratio 8:1 8:1
Propellants LOX & RP-1 LOX & RP-1
Mixture ratio 2.23±2% 2.23±2%
Fuel flow rate 2092 USgal/min (132 L/s)  
Oxidizer flow rate 3330 USgal/min (210 L/s)  
Nominal chamber pressure 633 psi (4.36 MPa)  

References

  1. ^ . Encyclopedia Astronautica. Archived from the original on 18 June 2012. Retrieved 8 June 2012.
  2. ^ Kyle, Ed (9 April 2010). "Delta 2000 series – Extended Long Tank Delta". Space Launch Report. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-09-06. Retrieved 2011-09-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ Wernher von Braun, , NASA SP-350, 1975
  5. ^ Young 2008, p. 41.
  6. ^ Neufeld 2007, p. 331.
  7. ^ Young 2008, p. 40.
  8. ^ a b Neufeld (2007), pp. 341–346.
  9. ^ a b Neufeld (2007), p. 331.
  10. ^ Bilstein (1996), pp. 27–28.
  11. ^ Bilstein (1996), p. 37.
  12. ^ H-1 Rocket Engine Smithsonian

  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Bibliography

  • Bilstein, Roger E. (1996). . The NASA History Series. Washington: NASA. ISBN 978-0-16-048909-9. Archived from the original on 2004-10-15.
  • Neufeld, Michael J. (2007). Von Braun: Dreamer of Space, Engineer of War. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-307-26292-9.
  • Skylab Saturn IB Flight Manual, 30 September 1972
  • * Young, Anthony (2008). The Saturn V F-1 Engine: Powering Apollo Into History. Springer. ISBN 978-0387096292.

rocketdyne, thrust, liquid, propellant, rocket, engine, burning, developed, first, stages, saturn, saturn, rockets, respectively, where, used, clusters, eight, engines, after, apollo, program, surplus, engines, were, rebranded, reworked, rocketdyne, engine, wi. The Rocketdyne H 1 was a 205 000 lbf 910 kN thrust liquid propellant rocket engine burning LOX and RP 1 The H 1 was developed for use in the S I and S IB first stages of the Saturn I and Saturn IB rockets respectively where it was used in clusters of eight engines After the Apollo program surplus H 1 engines were rebranded and reworked as the Rocketdyne RS 27 engine with first usage on the Delta 2000 series in 1974 The RS 27 variant is also used on the Delta II and Delta III 1 2 H 1An H 1 engine at the Udvar Hazy CenterCountry of originUnited StatesDate1963 1975ManufacturerRocketdyneApplicationBoosterSuccessorRS 27StatusRetiredLiquid fuel enginePropellantLOX RP 1CycleGas generatorConfigurationChamber1PerformanceThrust sea level205 000 lbf 900 kN Thrust to weight ratio102 47Chamber pressure700 psia 4 8 MPa Specific impulse vacuum289 seconds 2 83 km s Specific impulse sea level255 seconds 2 50 km s Burn time155 sDimensionsLength8 8 feetDiameter4 9 feetDry weight2 200 lb 1 000 kg Used inSaturn I Saturn 1B Contents 1 History 1 1 Early engines 1 2 X 1 1 3 Saturn and H 1 2 Description 3 Specifications 4 References 4 1 BibliographyHistory EditEarly engines Edit The H 1 is one of a series of engines developed from the wartime V 2 ballistic missile During the war North American Aviation NAA was given several 59 600 lbf 264 9 kN 3 V 2 engines to examine and convert from metric to SAE measurements They formed their Propulsion Division to handle this work later becoming Rocketdyne NAA had also been given a wealth of technical documentation on the engine Engineers studying them came across plans to improve the V 2 engine using a new waterfall fuel injector The Germans were unable to get the design to work and it never went into service NAA engineers decided to attack this problem and quickly came up with solutions This allowed them to raise the thrust of the design to 75 000 lbf 330 kN and then 78 000 lbf 350 kN for the Redstone missile NAA had also been working on the SM 64 Navaho cruise missile project which used the same engine as a booster to get the missile up to speed so its ramjet engines could light The Air Force continually demanded higher performance from the Navaho which forced NAA to build larger missiles and larger boosters to launch it By the early 1950s the basic engine design had been enlarged to produce 120 000 lbf 530 kN All of these designs like the V 2 that spawned them burned ethanol but other fuels had also been experimented with including kerosene diesel oil paint thinner JP 4 and JP 5 jet fuel In January 1953 Rocketdyne started their REAP program to convert these engines to a specific and well engineered kerosene fuel specifically for rocket engines which became RP 1 officially specified in Military Specification MIL R 25576 in 1954 In 1955 the Air Force selected a JP 4 burning version of the engine to power their Atlas missile The US Army requested a further boost to 150 000 lbf 670 kN for their Jupiter missile and the Air Force used the same version for their Thor producing the Rocketdyne S 3D or LR 79 All of these engines were based on a similar design concept featuring a waterfall injector where many small fuel injectors were used to spray burning fuel into the main combustion chamber They also shared a complex system for starting the turbopumps using a set of secondary fuel tanks and plumbing that fed the gas generator and main combustors while the pumps were still bringing the main fuel lines up to pressure A complex series of electropneumatic valves operated the various fuel flows until the engine was fully started X 1 Edit This chart shows the dramatic simplification of the S 3D engine via the unillustrated X 1 to the Saturn I s H 1 With the successful running of the S 3D for the Thor and Jupiter the company turned their attention to a radically updated version originally known as the S 3X but later becoming the X 1 This engine replaced the complex valve system and all of its attended sensors and electronics with new valves that operated on the pressure of the fuel itself This meant that the complex start up procedure was entirely automated and driven off the fuel flow itself Additionally the X 1 removed the entire start tank system and replaced it with a small solid fuel rocket engine that fed its exhaust through the gas generator to spin the turbopumps This change dramatically simplified engine plumbing at the cost of making the design a single shot device Earlier engines could in theory be restarted in flight but with a single starter cartridge the X 1 could be started once only Another change was to introduce an ignitor using a pyrophoric fuel in place of the solid fuel versions of earlier designs The earlier engines required the ignitors to be inserted through holes in the engine into the combustion chamber but the new system allowed the fuel to be sprayed into the main injector The fuel triethylaluminum was delivered in a cube with diaphragms that burst when the fuel flow in the injector reached a set threshold Finally the X 1 introduced a new lubrication system that added a small amount of additive to the RP 1 fuel as it flowed through the various components This was fed under pressure into the various bearings in the turbopump system both lubricating it and carrying away heat Saturn and H 1 Edit H 1 on display at the Arkansas Air amp Military Museum in Fayetteville ArkansasSaturn started as a paper project to meet a new US Department of Defense requirement for a heavy lift vehicle able to lift 10 000 to 40 000 pounds into low Earth orbit LEO or accelerating 6 000 to 12 000 lb to escape velocity Existing launchers might be extended to reach 10 000 lb to LEO below the requirements A new and larger design was needed and in April 1957 Wernher von Braun handed the preliminary design task to Heinz Hermann Koelle 4 Koelle s solution to reducing the development time was to use a cluster of fuel tanks from Redstone and Jupiter missiles sit them on top of a single thrust plate and then attach the required engines to the bottom of the plate Calculations demonstrated that a total thrust of about 1 million pounds would be needed greatly limiting their engine selection Looking for suitable designs Koelle learned of the E 1 from Rocketdyne s George Sutton 5 Rocketdyne was developing this 400 000 lbf 1 800 kN engine for the Titan missile and it was the largest engine nearing introduction within the time frame that ARPA gave Wernher von Braun to develop what was then known as the Juno V 6 The E 1 had originally been developed as a backup engine for the Titan missile designed specifically to be as simple to develop as possible in case the Aerojet General LR 87 did not pan out 7 The launch of Sputnik that October led to rapid changes in the US rocketry establishment In order to demonstrate peaceful intent the US decided to spin out its various non military rocketry programs to a new agency which would evolve as NASA As the Army had lost interest in large rockets they agreed to turn over von Braun s ABMA team to NASA becoming the Marshall Space Flight Center 8 The handover would take place in 1960 8 Shortly after these plans were made in July 1958 ARPA visited ABMA and told von Braun that they still had 10 million in their budget to spend before the handover and asked if there was any way to effectively use the money Von Braun called in Koelle and showed them a model of the Juno V but the ARPA visitors noted that the E 1 engine wouldn t be ready by 1960 9 Brainstorming they decided that the best approach was to make a minor upgrade to Rocketdyne s existing S 3D engines to boost them from 175 000 lbf 780 kN to 200 000 lbf 890 kN and use eight of these engines instead of four E 1s 9 When Koelle returned to Rocketdyne looking for an upgraded version of the S 3D they instead presented the X 1 and suggested it be used in place of a further upgrade to the S 3 Although experimental the X 1 was already in the right thrust range and ready for full development A contract for development was tendered on 15 August 1958 10 and by early 1959 the name had changed from Juno to Saturn referring to the succession as the planet after Jupiter the Jupiter missile being the previous ABMA design 11 Description Edit Eight H 1 engines in a Saturn ILike all of Rocketdyne s early engines the H 1 used a waterfall injector fed by turbopumps and regeneratively cooled the engine using the engine s fuel The combustion chamber was made of 292 stainless steel tubes brazed in a furnace 12 Unlike the J 2 engine used on the S IVB stage the H 1 was a single start engine It could be fired multiple times and engines were usually subject to two or more static test firings before a mission to flight qualify them but it could not be restarted in flight because some components required for the startup sequence were non reusable In particular the turbopumps were initially driven by a Solid Propellant Gas Generator SPGG which was essentially a small solid rocket and had to be replaced after each firing To start the engine a 500V AC voltage was applied to the SPGG which ignited the solid propellant This produced hot gas which was allowed to build up until reaching a pressure of 600 700 psi after which a bursting diaphragm released it into the turbine which drove the fuel turbopumps This began the process of pumping fuel and oxidizer into the gas generator and the engine and the hot gases from the SPGG provided the initial energy required to ignite the fuel oxidizer mix This started the turbopumps spinning Once RP 1 and LOX started burning in the gas generator the exhaust powered the turbopumps until engine shutdown See the original diagram with specifications Specifications EditContractor NAA Rocketdyne Vehicle application Saturn I S I 1st stage 8 engines Vehicle application Saturn IB S IB 1st stage 8 engines Vehicle effectivitySA 201 through SA 205 SA 206 and subsequentThrust sea level 200 000 lbf 890 kN 205 000 lbf 910 kN Thrust duration 155 s 155 sSpecific impulse 289 seconds 2 83 km s 289 seconds 2 83 km s Engine weight dry inboard 1 830 pounds 830 kg 2 200 pounds 1 000 kg Engine weight dry outboard 2 100 pounds 950 kg 2 100 pounds 950 kg Engine weight burnout 2 200 pounds 1 000 kg 2 200 pounds 1 000 kg Exit to throat area ratio 8 1 8 1Propellants LOX amp RP 1 LOX amp RP 1Mixture ratio 2 23 2 2 23 2 Fuel flow rate 2092 USgal min 132 L s Oxidizer flow rate 3330 USgal min 210 L s Nominal chamber pressure 633 psi 4 36 MPa References Edit Delta 2000 series Encyclopedia Astronautica Archived from the original on 18 June 2012 Retrieved 8 June 2012 Kyle Ed 9 April 2010 Delta 2000 series Extended Long Tank Delta Space Launch Report Retrieved 7 June 2012 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2008 09 06 Retrieved 2011 09 14 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Wernher von Braun Saturn the Giant NASA SP 350 1975 Young 2008 p 41 Neufeld 2007 p 331 Young 2008 p 40 a b Neufeld 2007 pp 341 346 a b Neufeld 2007 p 331 Bilstein 1996 pp 27 28 Bilstein 1996 p 37 H 1 Rocket Engine Smithsonian This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Bibliography Edit Bilstein Roger E 1996 Stages to Saturn A Technological History of the Apollo Saturn Launch Vehicles The NASA History Series Washington NASA ISBN 978 0 16 048909 9 Archived from the original on 2004 10 15 Neufeld Michael J 2007 Von Braun Dreamer of Space Engineer of War New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 307 26292 9 Skylab Saturn IB Flight Manual 30 September 1972 Young Anthony 2008 The Saturn V F 1 Engine Powering Apollo Into History Springer ISBN 978 0387096292 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rocketdyne H 1 amp oldid 1124273236, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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