China's Space Program News Thread

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taxiya

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That sounds fishy to say the least. The RD-191 for example can only throttle down to 27% not 10%.

I guess I did not make myself clear. The whole idea is to use a common LOX/Methane first stage engine across all the rockets instead of the combined LOX/Kerosene and LOX/Hydrogen engines currently used or contemplated.
The LM-7/8 use the YF-100. The LM-5 uses the YF-100 and YF-77. The Long March 9 will use YF-130 engines. That is three engine types you need to manufacture and certify. This way you need a single engine type for the first stage of all those launchers. That is why I said "common first stage engine" not "common engine".

What SpaceX does with a common first and second stage is kind of beyond the point. SpaceX doesn't want to spend the engineering resources to develop a whole new rocket engine for the second stage which will be manufactured in small numbers and would require the use of different fuel. It is much harder to have ground handling facilities for hydrogen than methane. Just look at the boiling point of both. Methane has similar boiling temperature range to oxygen. Hydrogen is way, way lower. 20.28K for hydrogen. That is 20 degrees above absolute zero. Methane is 111.6K. Oxygen is 90.188K. The Chinese already have hydrogen production, ground handling, and the second stage engines already are in production. So the calculus isn't the same. LM-7 uses the same YF-75 engines on the LM-3A/B/C. The LM-5 uses the YF-75D, which is new, but it is capable of multiple restarts unlike their previous engine.

The move to a common first stage engine has nothing to do with saving fuel cost. It is all about driving down production costs through reducing the types of parts you manufacture. If you have those YF-130 engines only on a LM9 rocket which is launched like only once every couple of years how much do you think you will need to spend to maintain those production facilities, tools, and retain trained staff specialized in manufacturing those engines? The costs will be immense. It makes no sense. They need to rationalize the production chain in the future.

The 5m fairing production cost reductions because the diameter is same as LM-5 have nothing to do with sharing the tank design schematics. It has to do with sharing tools, production facilities, and logistics facilities to move things around. They have existing tooling dimensioned for that already.
What is fishy? It is right that RD-191 is down to 27% not 10%. And? Are you saying because Russia did not push it to 10% in its design in the 1990s, then Russia must not be able to do so? And more than that, you mean China must not be able to do so 20 years after Russia?

I clearly understood your meaning "common first stage engine", and that is why I objected. By using Methane for the first stage, what fuel will you use for upper stages of 7/8? CZ-7 2nd stage is Kerosene and 3rd stage is H2. CZ-8 2nd stage is H2. So by your proposal, there are three liquefied gas: Methane, H2 and O2 used instead of two: H2 and O2. That is a nightmare for the launch facility. It also made impossible to share the existing launch facility with current CZs, this is another point of your proposal.

I never talked about saving fuel cost.

I never talked about fuel tank of the rocket. I was talking about "storage tank" and "plumbing" of the launch facility. Here is what I said in post #7,247:
Thirdly, I don't think the proposed rocket can share anything with CZ-5. LH2 and Methane are just too different in characteristics to share the same facilities, storage tanks and plumbings of the launch facility for CZ-5 won't work with Methane rocket. Just wait and see if SpaceX will ever reuse NASA's launch facility for SLS for their Starship.

Last but not the least, from my interactions with you I got the feeling that you don't read carefully of other's post but keep repeating yourself on something that either missing the subject or unrelated to the post that you reply to. Nobody want to listen to a broken recorder.
 
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taxiya

Brigadier
Registered Member
Uncontrolled re-entry is actually a design feature of Long March 5B? After the last one re-entered the atmosphere out-of-control and sprayed houses in Cote d'Ivoire with debris another 20-ton object coming down hard.

What an embarrassment this rocket program is turning out to be.

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It is a "feature" as much as the 2nd stage of Falcon 9 hit a farm in Washington state. Stop your "I can shit but you can't fart" BS.
 

nlalyst

Junior Member
Registered Member
It is a "feature" as much as the 2nd stage of Falcon 9 hit a farm in Washington state. Stop your "I can shit but you can't fart" BS.
It's a 2nd uncontrolled re-entry in a row. It didn't appear to make any attempt at a de-orbit burn. Whatever issue the first rocket had was not addressed. I'm calling it a feature until they prove me wrong. Sorry to shatter your glass heart.

Spaceflight observer Jonathan McDowell told SpaceNews that the previous Long March 5B launch saw the most massive uncontrolled reentry in decades and the fourth biggest ever. “The Long March 5B core stage is seven times more massive than the Falcon 9 second stage that caused a lot of press attention a few weeks ago when it reentered above Seattle and dumped a couple of pressure tanks on Washington state.”

McDowell said he hoped China would have enhanced the core stage to perform a controlled deorbit after separating from Tianhe. “I think by current standards it’s unacceptable to let it reenter uncontrolled,” McDowell said.

“Since 1990 nothing over 10 tons has been deliberately left in orbit to reenter uncontrolled.” The Long March 5B core stage, without its four side boosters, is thought to have a “dry mass”, or when it is empty of propellent, of about 21 metric tons in mass.
 
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longmarch

Junior Member
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It's a 2nd uncontrolled re-entry in a row. It didn't appear to make any attempt at a de-orbit burn. Whatever issue the first rocket had was not addressed. I'm calling it a feature until they prove me wrong. Sorry to shatter your glass heart.
Get over it. There will be another one, and another one. If that makes you masturbate, so be it.
Didn't united states have the capability to shot down satellites? If you really care that much, shot it down.
 

taxiya

Brigadier
Registered Member
It's a 2nd uncontrolled re-entry in a row. It didn't appear to make any attempt at a de-orbit burn. Whatever issue the first rocket had was not addressed. I'm calling it a feature until they prove me wrong. Sorry to shatter your glass heart.
No worries, I have put you in my ignore list long time ago. I only realized your BS after seeing responses by other members. And I only made the reply not because there is a value to reason with you but rather I enjoy punching the bag.
 

longmarch

Junior Member
Registered Member
That is a better answer than mine for a troll who is not here for reasoning.
It's easy to tell. ”glass heart" and "vulnerable Chinese face"(from 075 thread why it's not named Beijing or Shanghai) are typical Taiwan 1450 vocabulary. They bring no value to the discussion and the only purpose is for their own masturbation.
Their days are numbered, yet they have the audacity to ridicule China on so called vulnerability.
 

nlalyst

Junior Member
Registered Member
@taxiya @longmarch
I am not the only here who finds the uncontrolled re-entry of a 20-ton LM-5B core intentional. NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine called it out as "dangerous". Spaceflight observer and astrophysicist at Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics , Jonathan McDowell pointed out that it constitutes a major regression in space program safety, as it has been several decades since an object of that size has underwent uncontrolled re-entry, all the worse because it was intentional. Solid arguments have been made in this thread to support that thesis, unlike your feeble attempts at whataboutism.

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The inconvenient truth sure hurts your little glass hearts, doesn't it? Well, I wouldn't expect better from a "Zhonghua goo-da, laowai ba-da!" rabble.
 
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