Rocket Lab announce Neutron

Rocket Lab announce Neutron

Author
Discussion

MartG

Original Poster:

21,088 posts

210 months

Monday 1st March 2021
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Rocket Lab are going big - Neutron is an '8 tonne class' reusable launch vehicle which will be man-rated. First launch targeted for 2024

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=agqxJw5ISdk

Quisling

539 posts

45 months

Monday 1st March 2021
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mmmm hat flavour

Beati Dogu

9,130 posts

145 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
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An interesting development from them. 40 meters high in total, so a bit shorter than a Falcon 9 booster. it looks a little wider than a Falcon 9 though. The fairing doesn’t flare out, so it appears to be 4.5 meters in diameter all the way. The Falcon 9 is 3.7 meters in diameter.

It’ll also have fold out legs and will land out on a sea platform like a Falcon 9. They plan to operate it from Wallops in Virginia, USA.

eharding

14,097 posts

290 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
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Beati Dogu said:
An interesting development from them. 40 meters high in total, so a bit shorter than a Falcon 9 booster. it looks a little wider than a Falcon 9 though. The fairing doesn’t flare out, so it appears to be 4.5 meters in diameter all the way. The Falcon 9 is 3.7 meters in diameter.

It’ll also have fold out legs and will land out on a sea platform like a Falcon 9. They plan to operate it from Wallops in Virginia, USA.
Scott Manley has some interesting speculation that they might be bidding to replace the expendable part-Russian Antares with a 100% made-in-merka reusable alternative.

Beati Dogu

9,130 posts

145 months

Wednesday 3rd March 2021
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Yes I saw that. It’s a good point.

GTO-3R

7,626 posts

219 months

Thursday 2nd December 2021
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Wow, this is going to be pretty special if it works like in the video with full recovery and non-detaching fairings. Love what Rocket Lab do smile

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0thW57QeDM

dukeboy749r

2,891 posts

216 months

Thursday 2nd December 2021
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Defo a swipe or three at a certain Mr. E Musk.

I wish them every success.

Pragmatic, forward-thinking and yet realistic (i.e. achievable with today's technology).

All power to them.

Beati Dogu

9,130 posts

145 months

Friday 3rd December 2021
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It's an interesting and clever concept. A skeletal upper stage protected by the clam shell fairings. Good luck to them.

anonymous-user

60 months

Friday 3rd December 2021
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I love this concept. A totally different way of solving a problem and I can't wait to see it develop. The fairing is extremely cool and I hope they might look at recovering hubble once it's out of use (I know this would be very, very difficult to secure it)!

I am not an Elon megafan, but I thought the swipes at stainless were maybe a bit unfair considering the very different vehicles Neutron and Starship are.

Edited by F20CN16 on Friday 3rd December 14:35

annodomini2

6,901 posts

257 months

Friday 3rd December 2021
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annodomini2

6,901 posts

257 months

Friday 3rd December 2021
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F20CN16 said:
I love this concept. A totally different way of solving a problem and I can't wait to see it develop. The fairing is extremely cool and I hope they might look at recoving hubble once it's out of use (I know this would be very, very difficult to secure it)!

I am not an Elon megafan, but I thought the swipes at stainless were a maybe a bit unfair considering the very different vehicles Neutron and Starship are.
It's spin as always, when you're build only a few material costs are insignificant compared to development costs.

If Elon achieves his goal of building a 1000 or more of them, then material costs are more significant.

Also composites need a lot more tooling, which is counterproductive to SpaceX's rapid iteration approach, whether or not you believe that is the right approach is debatable.

dukeboy749r

2,891 posts

216 months

Friday 3rd December 2021
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annodomini2 said:
F20CN16 said:
I love this concept. A totally different way of solving a problem and I can't wait to see it develop. The fairing is extremely cool and I hope they might look at recoving hubble once it's out of use (I know this would be very, very difficult to secure it)!

I am not an Elon megafan, but I thought the swipes at stainless were a maybe a bit unfair considering the very different vehicles Neutron and Starship are.
It's spin as always, when you're build only a few material costs are insignificant compared to development costs.

If Elon achieves his goal of building a 1000 or more of them, then material costs are more significant.

Also composites need a lot more tooling, which is counterproductive to SpaceX's rapid iteration approach, whether or not you believe that is the right approach is debatable.
I would have thought that a) |elon will also have to adopt composites, going forward and that b) it isn't a rapid iteration of the design that is driving Elon, it is the failure of engines and software and as such, the material he uses is, (forgive me) immaterial.

annodomini2

6,901 posts

257 months

Friday 3rd December 2021
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dukeboy749r said:
annodomini2 said:
F20CN16 said:
I love this concept. A totally different way of solving a problem and I can't wait to see it develop. The fairing is extremely cool and I hope they might look at recoving hubble once it's out of use (I know this would be very, very difficult to secure it)!

I am not an Elon megafan, but I thought the swipes at stainless were a maybe a bit unfair considering the very different vehicles Neutron and Starship are.
It's spin as always, when you're build only a few material costs are insignificant compared to development costs.

If Elon achieves his goal of building a 1000 or more of them, then material costs are more significant.

Also composites need a lot more tooling, which is counterproductive to SpaceX's rapid iteration approach, whether or not you believe that is the right approach is debatable.
I would have thought that a) |elon will also have to adopt composites, going forward and that b) it isn't a rapid iteration of the design that is driving Elon, it is the failure of engines and software and as such, the material he uses is, (forgive me) immaterial.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.space.com/amp/431...

Ian974

2,988 posts

205 months

Friday 3rd December 2021
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This does look like a great concept, and will be excellent to see it up and running.
A very different beast to how starship is developing, but they're boing going in the direction things should be.
It's remarkable that after such a short time a non recoverable first stage has gone from being the norm to almost seeming archaic.