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TRW-Built Pintle Rocket Engine Promises to Lower Launch Costs; Performing Well in Initial Testing.


Business Editors

REDONDO BEACH Redondo Beach (rĭdŏn`dō), city (1990 pop. 60,167), Los Angeles co., S Calif., on the Pacific Ocean; inc. 1892. Once a commercial port for Los Angeles, it is a residential and resort city with a protected harbor and an excellent marina. , Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 25, 2000

TRW TRW The Real World (TV reality show)
TRW The Right Way
TRW Tactical Reconnaissance Wing
TRW The Retriever Weekly (University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD)
TRW Thompson Ramo Wooldridge Inc
 Inc. has taken a huge stride toward providing more affordable access to space with the successful initial static-fire testing of a low-cost booster engine A booster engine for steam locomotives is a small two-cylinder steam engine back-gear-connected to the trailing truck axle on the locomotive or, if none, the lead truck on the tender. A rocking idler gear permits it to be put into operation by the engineer.  based on TRW's pintle injection technology.

The 650,000-pound thrust Low Cost Pintle Engine (LCPE), one of the largest liquid rocket engines built since Saturn F-1 engines powered Apollo program flights in the 1970s, was designed as a simple, easy-to-manufacture, low-cost engine. The LCPE has parts made from common steel alloys using standard industrial fabrication fabrication (fab´rikā´shn),
n the construction or making of a restoration.
 techniques, employs ablative ablative (ăb`lətĭv') [Lat.,=carrying off], in Latin grammar, the case used in a number of circumstances, particularly with certain prepositions and in locating place or time. The term is also used in the grammar of some languages (e.g.  cooling techniques instead of more expensive regenerative cooling, and features the least complex type of rocket propellant pro·pel·lant also pro·pel·lent  
n.
1. Something, such as an explosive charge or a rocket fuel, that propels or provides thrust.

2.
 injector -- a single element coaxial pintle injector.

"Most engines are designed for maximum performance and minimum weight, but we deliberately set out to develop an engine that minimizes cost while retaining excellent performance," said Al Frew, vice president and general manager, TRW Space & Technology Division. "We believe this engine will cost 50 to 75 percent less than comparable liquid hydrogen boosters. By reducing engine costs, which make up almost half of the cost of a launch vehicle, we will reduce the cost of launch vehicles and access to space for government and commercial customers."

The LCPE was subjected this summer to hot fire testing at 100 percent of its rated thrust as well as at a 65 percent throttle condition at NASA's John C. Stennis Space Center The John C. Stennis Space Center (or SSC), located in Hancock County, Mississippi at the Mississippi/Louisiana border, is NASA's largest rocket engine test facility.  in Mississippi. TRW changed the pintle injector configuration three times during testing to explore the engine's performance envelope; engineers also replaced the ablative chamber once while the engine was on the test stand -- demonstrating the LCPE's ease of operation.

"The LCPE has demonstrated nominal performance and absolute combustion stability throughout its testing," said Kathy Gavitt, TRW's LCPE program manager. "This testing is an important first step in validating that a low-cost pintle engine can substantially lower the cost of future launch vehicles."

Engine testing is planned to continue throughout the year under a cooperative agreement between TRW and NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center The George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), the original home of NASA, is a lead center for propulsion, Space Shuttle propulsion, Shuttle external fuel tank, crew training and payloads, International Space Station (ISS) design and construction, for computers, networks, and .

The key element of the LCPE's design is its single element coaxial pintle injector, used to introduce propellants into the combustion chamber. TRW has used this design in nearly all of its bipropellant bi·pro·pel·lant  
n.
A two-component rocket propellant, such as liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, fed separately to the combustion chamber as fuel and oxidizer. Also called dipropellant.
 liquid rocket engines. This includes the Lunar Module Descent Engine (LMDE LMDE La Mutuelle des Étudiants (French national student health insurance provider) ) which safely landed 12 astronauts on the lunar surface between 1969 and 1972 and was critical in the rescue of Apollo 13.

Other notable features of the LCPE are:
- Scalability. The LCPE is scalable over a range of thrust levels and
propellant combinations. It can be readily adapted to a wide range of launch
vehicles, from the Bantam Lifter class (about 200 pounds to low-Earth orbit) to
Heavy Weight Lifter class (about 200,000 pounds to low-Earth orbit). The LCPE
can power the first stage of an EELV-class, multistage launch vehicle, and
scaled down versions can easily be used for the vehicle's second stage.

- Combustion Stability. The LCPE is inherently stable over a wide range of
operating conditions due to the unique injection and combustion flow fields
created by the pintle injector.

- Size. Incorporates the second largest rocket combustion chamber ever built,
with an outside diameter of 68 inches.

- Simplicity. A complete pintle injector contains only five parts (excluding
seals and attachment nuts, bolts and washers).

- Throttling Ability. LCPE has already demonstrated its ability to operate at a
65 percent throttle condition. Moveable pintle injector attributes include deep
throttle capability, such as the LMDE 10:1 throttling engine.


TRW has tested more than 50 different pintle injector engines, using more than 25 different propellant combinations with complete combustion stability and no need for acoustic cavities or baffles.

Previously, pintle injector engines were successfully tested with liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen at thrust levels of 16,000 and 40,000 pounds. TRW has flown more than 140 engines ranging in size from the 100-pound thrust liquid apogee engine used on NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory Chandra X-ray Observatory

U.S. X-ray space telescope. It was named after astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar and was launched into orbit in 1999. Its mirror, with an aperture of 1.2 m (4 ft) and a focal length of 10 m (33 ft), produces unprecedented resolution.
 to the 10,000-pound thrust Delta and LMDE engines.

TRW Space & Electronics Group builds communications, scientific and defense spacecraft for military, civil and commercial customers; produces, integrates and tests payloads; develops advanced space instruments; and integrates experiments into spacecraft. It is an operating unit operating unit

A type of operating company that engages in transactions with outsiders and that is owned by another business. For example, in 1995 the stockholders of Capital Cities/ABC approved a $19 billion merger with the Walt Disney Company, whereupon
 of TRW Inc., which provides advanced technology products and services for global automotive, aerospace and information systems markets. TRW's Web site is www.trw.com.
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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Sep 25, 2000
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