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One Step Closer to Reusable Rockets

FortKnox writes: "One of the larger hurdles that reusable rockets have seen is the destruction the heat causes when in use. Scientists have developed a new thermal plating that hopes to eliminate that problem. The plating is called 'Adaptable, Robust, Metallic, Operable, Reusable TPS', or ARMOR for short. With talk of returning to the moon or landing on Mars, reusable rockets would give NASA a little breath of relief in the funding department..."

7 of 18 comments (clear)

  1. Commercial availability? by Winged+Cat · · Score: 3, Funny

    Great. So, when is anyone not affiliated with NASA - and who is actually working on ways to drive down launch costs, not just throwing lots of money at the problem without much results - going to be able to get their hands on it?

    Never, you say? It's too expensive/complicated/restricted-for-national-secu rity
    to let us ordinary folks get our hands on it? Why, in the IT industry I come from, son, we have a word for that: "vaporware".

  2. Re:ARMOR and my windshield by PhuCknuT · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The ARMOR, just like current thermal tiles, is modular and easy to replace. What they are trying to do here isn't make an indestructable heat sheild, they are trying to make one that works better than the current one and is faster and cheaper to maintain.

  3. Armor? by LastToKnow · · Score: 2, Funny

    How about Metallic, Interesting, Thermal Harm Resistant Intermediate Layer

  4. Interesting Idea by gizmo_mathboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While this is a very interesting idea, I don't see how NASA will hope to implement this or the 2nd gen RLV initiatives.

    With their budgets not growing, lots of that budget earmarked for things other than direct space and aeronautical research. NASA has had to stop the research into hypersonic vehicles (X-43 project) among other projects.

    It is good to see that ideas are being created, it's too bad that they might not be implemented

  5. Wrong Category by Perdo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not "Science"

    "Marketing"

    You have to look for the key words.

    robust, temperature-thwarting, easily maintainable, economically viable, fast turnaround times, durable, increases the flight envelope of the vehicle, safer, reliable, less expensive, high flight rates, quick turn-around, three different features, almost a snap, bigger, lower density vehicles, step in the right direction, comprehensive, long-term plan, intentional, step-by-step approach.

    GAG!

    The current shuttle tiles may be in need of replacement but the way they are plaintively marketing ARMOR, you would think that it is competeing against a better idea from someone else. Perhaps something with some technical merit.

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  6. Funding relief? by sigwinch · · Score: 2
    With talk of returning to the moon or landing on Mars, reusable rockets would give NASA a little breath of relief in the funding department...

    In other words, the lucrative one-shot launch vehicles would be defunded. (Even the NASA shuttle requires so much refurbishment that it is practically one shot.) It is therefore a threat to the gov't gravy train for NASA project managers and prime contractors. Remember that these people habitually block X projects, and they're the ones who destroyed the DC-X.

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    1. Re:Funding relief? by Detritus · · Score: 2
      You forgot the Illuminati.

      Other than as a launch services customer, NASA has almost no financial involvement with current ELVs.

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