Australia and New Zealand turned out to be unusually rich in rocket startups - besides Rocket Lab, which is legally an American company, but launches its Electron rocket from the New Zealand cosmodrome, another company recently revealed itself, now Australian with a branch in Singapore, which has begun to test a full-size their missiles. Gilmour Space Technologies successfully tested a 7 ton hybrid engine.
Frame from video test
Space hybrid
The video shows the testing of the G-70 engine, which is planned to be used on the company's geophysical and space rockets. One engine allows you to create a geophysical rocket capable of lifting up to 130 kg to an altitude of up to 150 km. And to launch a satellite into orbit, you need a three-stage rocket from 8 G-70 at the first stage, 4 at the second and 1 at the third. According to Gilmour Space Technologies calculations, such a rocket will be able to take up to 380 kg to a low orbit. ')
Company website screenshot
A feature of the engine is that it is hybrid - the fuel is stored in solid form, and the oxidizer is supplied in liquid / gaseous form. This allows you to combine the advantages of solid-fuel and liquid-propellant rocket engines - the hybrid taxiway is simple and compact as a solid propellant rocket motor, and it can be restarted and controlled by a rocket, as on a liquid propellant rocket engine.
Hybrid rocket engine
The hybrid engine was successfully used on SpaceShipOne suborbital space planes, but in the second version, SpaceShipTwo, the developers faced its flaws - the engine turned out to be poorly scalable . Gilmour Space Technologies claims to have dealt with this problem. According to them, the G-70 is arguably the most powerful single-bore engine in the fuel block. The SpaceShipOne and SpaceShipTwo engines are more powerful, but obviously, according to Gimlour, use several openings.
Typical profiles of openings in a saber of a hybrid engine, source
In a solid-fuel engine, the fuel checker profile determines how the thrust will change over time . In a hybrid engine, the thrust is determined by the amount of oxidant supplied, but the profile of the checkers is still very important - it affects the efficiency of the engine. Gilmour Space Technologies is printing their checkers on a 3D printer. In the early engines used ABS plastic, now - a secret composition. The company is also going to patent its own design of a 3D printer for printing fuel checkers, because the usual new fuel can not work.
According to the company, the resulting engine can throttle thrust in the range of 10-100% and is highly stable burning.
Little about the company
Gilmour Space Technologies was founded by former banker Adam Gilmour with his wife and brother. First, they were engaged in simulators and replicas, creating simulators of an F / A-18 fighter-bomber, a spacecraft with 6 degrees of freedom, MCC and work in zero gravity, as well as replicas of the first American spacecraft Mercury and the Chinese ship Shengzhou. In 2014, this activity was frozen, and the company focused on hybrid rocket engines. In 2016, engines were tested for nitrous oxide and ABS plastic.
In the same year, the RASTA rocket with a hybrid engine successfully climbed 5 km.
In parallel, the engine was tested on the catalytic decomposition of hydrogen peroxide.
In 2017, the company collected investors' money and tested a hybrid engine for cubsat. There are plans to launch an ARIEL geophysical rocket in the second quarter of 2018 (according to the head of the company) or the first quarter of 2019 (according to information from the official website). And the ERIS orbital rocket is expected to be off the ground at the end of 2020.
Conclusion
What cosmic private traders are good at is a lot of them, and they are experimenting with different technologies. Electric drive of pumps , 15-part engine or starting from the stratospheric sphere , and now even more hybrid engines. Not all companies will be successful, but even those who are defeated will be helpful in testing interesting technical ideas in practice.