I overlooked Falcon heavy has 27 Raptors.
Your mention there was ever considered an F5 concept in the 60ies
surprised me. Yes there were so many gargantuan rockets considered only
to be found in magazines now brown & falling apart.
John
F5s could maybe have made the shuttle unnecessary to build the ISS and
an early moon base.
John
Verzonden vanuit Proximus Mail
Van: Henry Spencer <hspencer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Verzonden: 21 april 2023 02:15:39 CEST
Aan: Arocket List <arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Onderwerp: [AR] Re: starship abort?
On Fri, 21 Apr 2023, John Dom wrote:
N1 had too many relatively tiny engines bundled imo and maybe so has
Musk's Starship. Detonation altitude anybody?
Consider a 747 upgrade with 20 engines, go figure :-(.
How about a Falcon Heavy with 27? Five flights so far, if I've kept
count correctly, and all successful.
There's nothing particularly wrong with using big engine clusters, if
they're reliable engines. It looks like SpaceX hasn't got all the bugs
out of the Raptors yet, and one might suspect that they haven't done
enough testing of their big clusters.
That last was the N1's problem: the full first stage had *no* ground
tests -- none, zero -- because Korolev had wanted to avoid the costs and
bureaucratic complications of building a big new test stand for it.
(The Soviet lunar program was *not* a mirror-image of Apollo, and never
had Apollo's blank-check budget or national-crisis priority.) Unless
I've missed something, SpaceX has done only one or two full first-stage
firings, which is better than none but hardly a systematic test effort.
What about designing/building a bigger "F6"= 6*F1 engine ?
A number of the 1960s proposals for "post-Saturn" launchers used the
hypothetical "F-5" engine, equal to about five F-1s. No serious work
was ever done on it, though, and combustion stability might have been a
major problem (like the F-1, but worse).
Henry