Suborbitals & ranges

Hurricane

Grinfeld Aerospace guy
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Well I saw that although most (real-life) suborbitals get really fast, they barely go far. How come? And is it possible to extend the range?
 
The higher you go, the range will increase, the decrease due to the rotation of the Earth. A combination for pitch and height will increase the range. As to the particulars of it all...no idea.
 
Well, it depends on the intended mission. SS1/2 for example, just need to go up and down, not downrange. In fact, they want to minimize the ground track, so they can keep a small restricted airspace for their flights. They are therefor optimized for a quick climb and descent. SS3, on the other hand, will be for long-range hops. That design will need to be drastically different, with great l/d for the mach 5+ region. the two styles of craft are very different.
 
And what about the X-15? Same story? It could go up as high as the Karman line, where there's almost no air to oppose its motion.
And basically can the X-15 go farther than 450 kilometers?
 
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Yeah, that's the general idea. However, it was optimized for research on materials and environmental conditions, not range. Put a larger lifting surface on it, like a larger wing, and you could "skip" along the upper atmosphere. Try it with a stock DG or a G42 on reentry. Just keep a shallow angle (and the wings in HPC position on the G42) and ride along.
 
Okay, got the idea. I can make it go farther :thumbup:
That's good to know, I will use that info! :tiphat:

~Thanks alot! :)
 
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