Urwumpe's expression of the ascent equation in post 111 lacks a term. In addition to the gravity loss term, drag loss term, and steering loss term, there should be a fourth term for back pressure losses.
Most trajectory codes, and in particular the industry-standard POST and OTIS codes, add this fourth term because it accounts for the difference between vacuum thrust and thrust at any given altitude as a delta-V loss rather than a specific impulse loss. When calculations are performed in this fashion, "Trajectory averaged Isp" isn't a helpful number. The difference between thrust at a given altitude and vacuum thrust is accounted for on the delta-V part of the budget rather than the Isp. It's a bookkeeping expedient - keeping all the deviations from ideal on one side of the equation.
RGClark's understanding of Mitchell Burnside Clapp's argument in post 136 is incomplete. Using the vacuum Isp is industry practice, as explained above, but all that the linked post really claims is that a variety of stages have in excess of 30,000 ft/s of delta-V, that 30,000 ft/s is "SSTO-class" delta-V, and that many of them use dense propellants. Indeed, the ones using dense propellants are generally smaller than the ones using hydrogen, and while the mass ratios of such stages need to be higher for lower Isp propellants, the increase in propellant density that typically accompanies lower Isp makes that easier to achieve.
Burnside Clapp does NOT argue that one should "Just use 30,000 ft/s." That's the whole point of argument linked in post 106 of this thread. Lower Isp propellants need somewhat less delta-V to orbit because of the reduction in gravity losses. It's about a 1000 ft/sec advantage. It's nothing to do with density (except for perhaps a modest benefit in reduced drag losses), but just a "accelerates faster earlier in the trajectory" effect, which causes the reduction in gravity loss. But lower Isp fuels are generally also denser ones, so you can see how the two concepts get linked together.
The conclusion of this line of reasoning is that while a hydrogen-based SSTO might be possible, a clear understanding of the engineering challenges of working with hydrogen and developing a vehicle that uses it might lead a designer to conclude that a dense-propellant, lower-Isp-based SSTO might be an easier engineering challenge, and have other operational advantages.
Whether an SSTO is itself a good idea is an entirely separate matter. TSTO's have advantages in gross weight and payload fraction, but the upper stage has to support stage 1 burnout g fully loaded, and the lower stage has to support all that weight at burnout g as well. These conditions impose non-trivial structural penalties. A dispositive answer is design, market, and technology dependent, and while not yet definitive, the evidence at the moment seems to favor a TSTO approach.
Most trajectory codes, and in particular the industry-standard POST and OTIS codes, add this fourth term because it accounts for the difference between vacuum thrust and thrust at any given altitude as a delta-V loss rather than a specific impulse loss. When calculations are performed in this fashion, "Trajectory averaged Isp" isn't a helpful number. The difference between thrust at a given altitude and vacuum thrust is accounted for on the delta-V part of the budget rather than the Isp. It's a bookkeeping expedient - keeping all the deviations from ideal on one side of the equation.
RGClark's understanding of Mitchell Burnside Clapp's argument in post 136 is incomplete. Using the vacuum Isp is industry practice, as explained above, but all that the linked post really claims is that a variety of stages have in excess of 30,000 ft/s of delta-V, that 30,000 ft/s is "SSTO-class" delta-V, and that many of them use dense propellants. Indeed, the ones using dense propellants are generally smaller than the ones using hydrogen, and while the mass ratios of such stages need to be higher for lower Isp propellants, the increase in propellant density that typically accompanies lower Isp makes that easier to achieve.
Burnside Clapp does NOT argue that one should "Just use 30,000 ft/s." That's the whole point of argument linked in post 106 of this thread. Lower Isp propellants need somewhat less delta-V to orbit because of the reduction in gravity losses. It's about a 1000 ft/sec advantage. It's nothing to do with density (except for perhaps a modest benefit in reduced drag losses), but just a "accelerates faster earlier in the trajectory" effect, which causes the reduction in gravity loss. But lower Isp fuels are generally also denser ones, so you can see how the two concepts get linked together.
The conclusion of this line of reasoning is that while a hydrogen-based SSTO might be possible, a clear understanding of the engineering challenges of working with hydrogen and developing a vehicle that uses it might lead a designer to conclude that a dense-propellant, lower-Isp-based SSTO might be an easier engineering challenge, and have other operational advantages.
Whether an SSTO is itself a good idea is an entirely separate matter. TSTO's have advantages in gross weight and payload fraction, but the upper stage has to support stage 1 burnout g fully loaded, and the lower stage has to support all that weight at burnout g as well. These conditions impose non-trivial structural penalties. A dispositive answer is design, market, and technology dependent, and while not yet definitive, the evidence at the moment seems to favor a TSTO approach.