That is no longer any DeltaGlider, it is now just a variation on Hermes, HL-20, Prometheus, heck, even the X-20 to an extent. It is just a payload on a rocket and no matter how hard you try to make it its own commercially viable package or whatever, it will still be just that: a payload on a rocket.
Even my 50+ meter long, 100 ton (impossible!) SSTO is more of a DeltaGlider, than a winged payload on a rocket.
Not DG 0 but idea of small shuttle
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PS
@ RGCLark
You can't just stick rocket propellant in the fuselage of a vehicle. A lot of space will be used by internal systems and vechicle structure itself. It's not an empty shell to fill with fuel and engine on one end.
Yes you can because the original design was for this to be empty space since it was to have a payload bay.
Ok, let's see now.
The stock DG in Orbiter masses 11 tons. I am not sure, but this might be considered to be unrealistically light for a vessel of this size.
Let's assume a mass ratio of 8.5: enough for 9.5 km/s of dV at SSME vacuum performance levels. This means a wet mass of roughly 94 tons, or a propellant mass of 83 tons.
Under SSME-like mixture ratio, LH2 makes up about 15% of the propellant mass, LOX 85%. So that is roughly 12.5 tons of LH2 and 70.6 tons of LOX.
Assuming a liquid oxygen density of 1 141 kg/m^3 and a liquid hydrogen density of 67.8 kg/m^3, and assuming ullage volume of 5%, that is a volume of ~65 m^3 and 193 m^3 of LOX and LH2, respectively.
If we assume the LOX tank is a sphere, and the LH2 tank is a cylinder which spherical end-caps, the comparison to the DG looks something like this:
...
Oops.
If we assume that both of these tanks have 2 mm wall thickness, then they may weigh maybe 1.4 tons. But this is not including internal stringers, insulation, piping, or other requirements.
The Delta IV upper stage has a mass ratio of between 8 and 9, and the Centaur (pressure-supported, collapses without stretch or internal pressure) is maybe between 10 and 11. These stages are also maybe a bit smaller than this, but not by much.
Also, it is quite likely that the wings required to lift that propellant would be a good deal bigger than those on the DG. It is certain that the resultant vehicle will weigh more than 11 tons.
And if you have ever put the DG next to the Shuttle in Orbiter, you would get pretty scared... because the DG is quite physically large already.
Now you are transitioning from the realm of "private jet" or "fighter aircraft" sized vehicles, into the realm of airliner-sized vehicles... and soon you can reach the realm of 747/An-225/A380/C-5 sized vehicles.
Maybe I have represented tanks a bit too wide here, but if you thin them down, your vehicle will get longer as well. Maybe better aerodynamics for ascent and reentry, but it doesn't help the whole physics problem much.
@ RGClark
quote from second page of website you've provided:
" The hold has a volume of 35 cubic meters, a diameter of 3 meters and a length of 5 meters."
let's add another 20 cubic meters of volume (rear section and wings).
With avarge 1.3 g/cm3 propellant density (kerosene/lox) 55 cubic meters gives us ~70 tons of propellant.
With empty weight of 12,100 kg!
Total dV is 6343 m/s not counting gravity losses
With 1MN engine we have around 5km/s dV.
Go figure yourself...
:thumbup:
This is an excellent way to design credible space vehicles. I use it for making rockets : starting by the tanks, then building the LV around.
I reached the same conclusions you did; with the listed payload and crew cabin volume amounts, it wasn't enough. I had to use the entire cylindrical fuselage and then subtract off a smaller crew cabin volume, which I took to be the same as the Dragon's habitable volume at 10 m^3.
I'll show the calculations under the thread An SSTO as "God and Robert Heinlein intended".
Bob Clark
And these 55 cubic meters don't include the tiny detail, that you need a higher pressure inside the tanks for delivering the fuel from the tank to the engines. Especially for high performance engines, you need still a pretty high tank head to prevent your turbopumps from cavitating, or force you to add mass for low pressure pumps that pump from the minimal tank head to the pressure needed for the high pressure pumps and heat exchangers.
If you have a tank head of 4 bar, this means your tank walls still need to contain a 4 times higher pressure as the crew cabin, and the crew cabin is already a heavy structural element. That is why you can't make tanks in any shape for spaceflight applications.
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http://www.orbithangar.com/searchid.php?ID=5240
Try it first and do some calculations before claimng something.