Canon PowerShot G9
ƒ/2.8
7.4 mm
1/60
80

My new Loki Q motor on the left and an Atlas ICBM upper stage vernier motor on the right.

Graphite takes the heat of the solid AP propellant (left) which would melt the metal, whereas regenerative cooling keeps the Atlas nozzle from melting (right) – the liquid RP1 kerosene fuel flows around the nozzle capturing heat before being sprayed out into the combustion chamber, where it mixes with liquid oxygen.

The liquid fuel motor on the right, while small, is fundamentally the same as the larger versions that powered the Apollo and SpaceX rockets.

And some details from its predecessor:
“An LR101-NA Vernier rocket engine assemblage manufactured by ROCKETDYNE Corporation for installation onboard an Atlas SM-65 ICBM (Atlas “A”/XLR 89 NA-1). These engines were employed in various configurations to provide attitude (roll, pitch and yaw) control onboard the Mercury-Atlas, Atlas, Thor ICBM, Delta propulsion systems. A fixed-thrust, single-start, liquid bipropellant engine producing of maximum of 1000 pounds of thrust (nominal seal level), the engine design allows postoperative purging, regenerative cooling, thrust chamber gimbaling, and full-thrust runs of 325 seconds duration. It has a dry weight of 54 pounds and measures approx 28 x 27 ¼ x 20 inches (normal gimbaling arcs included). Designed propellant mixture is combination RP1 (highly refined liquid Kerosene) and LOX (liquid oxygen).

The engine consists of a thrust chamber assembly (a steel double-walled structure with a copper spiral regenerative cooling coils between the inner and outer walls), a pneumatically operated propellant valve with a valve position-indicating switch, an electrically fired igniter assembly, a pneumatically controlled oxidizer bleed valve, a fuel manifold pressure switch, a manifold gimbal assembly, propellant orifices, and pneumatic purge check valves. These components along with interconnecting electrical cabling and tubing assemblies are fixed in position on a welded tubular engine mount.

Gimbaling is facilitated via a pitch gimbal shaft, which provides for movement of the thrust chamber through a pitch-roll correct arc of 70 degrees on either side of the neutral position; and a yaw gimbal shaft which permits movement of the vernier thrust chamber through a yaw correction arc of 30 degrees (outboard) and 20 degrees (inboard) of the neutral position. In addition to performing the thrust direction gimbal function, the yaw shaft serves as a manifold for passage of fuel and oxidizer to the thrust chamber.”

7 responses to “Comparing Nozzles”

  1. Coool. That Rocketdyne Vernier engine is pretty sweet. Your next trick should be getting one of these: http://www.flickr.com/photos/bwjones/3161796685/

  2. it looks like Star Wars decoration 🙂

  3. Drag race! Which is faster.

  4. Loki off the pad, no question! And with no recovery, first back to the playa too… 😉

    Truax is prepping to taking on your three-Q cluster with four of his. This is from his garage in Saratoga:

    truax moteurs

    The Truax Moteurs Volksrocket… a garage hobbyist in Silicon Valley…

    From wikipedia:

    "The X-3 Volksrocket (other names: Arriba One, Skycycle X-3) was a reusable space tourism rocket planned by Robert Truax after Evel Knievel provided a $1,000 research grant for a pilot study. Truax was looking for volunteers with enough money to help fund the effort and who were crazy enough to want to fly aboard his rocket. He got thousands of volunteers, many of which were crazy enough but few of which had the financial resources. The rocket used surplus components and was tested through 1991."

    And the NYT obit in 2010:

    "When Evel Knievel failed to leap the Snake River Canyon in 1974, he rode a vehicle powered by Robert C. Truax’s rockets.

    His early research for the Navy laid the foundation for the liquid-propelled rockets that are the centerpiece of American space efforts, and he was a leader in developing the Thor, Viking and Polaris missile programs.

    When Wernher von Braun and other German rocket experts came to the United States, Mr. Truax led the team that debriefed them.

    The Encyclopedia Astronautica called him “one of the great originals of American rocketry.” In an interview, Rick W. Sturdevant, an Air Force historian, called him “an artist when it came to rocketry.”

    Mr. Truax was more modest: “I just like to go out and play with rockets.”

    And from a NYT Rocket Review in 1981:

    ”The astronaut doesn’t have to be anyone special,” Truax said. ”A woman in a bikini would be nice. It would cut down on weight and besides it’s going to be pretty warm in there.”

  5. Hi, I’m an admin for a group called Anti Gravity, and we’d love to have this added to the group!

  6. found a pic of a Mercury Atlas Launch with LR-101 gimbaled vernier providing vehicle attitude control

  7. So, I found a guy who was working on building a hobby rocket with one of these… Here’s the static test firing:

    Static Test Elcentro LR101

    and his estimate that "with 600 lbs of fuel in a 200 lb vehicle, it would be an S impulse class (5.5M N*S) and get up to 100km."

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