NASA Press Release 00-169
October 24, 2000
Twin Engine Tests For X-33 Take Shape in Mississippi
Two unique engines designed to propel America's X-33 into high-speed, suborbital
flight in 2003 have been mounted side by side in a Mississippi test stand for qualification
firings, now slated for later this year.
At NASA's Stennis Space Center, MS, tandem test firings of X-33's Linear Aerospike
XRS-2200 engines will begin with short bursts and will eventually lead to full firings
for durations needed to send the unpiloted vehicle from a launch pad in California
to landings in either Utah or Montana.
X-33, being developed under a cooperative agreement between NASA and Lockheed
Martin, is a half-scale prototype of a commercially developed and operated, reusable
launch vehicle of the future, and is designed to demonstrate new, reusable single-stage-to-orbit
technologies. One goal of the project is to provide safe, reliable and affordable
access to space.
Fourteen single-engine test firings of an earlier version the unique Aerospike
engine, developed by the Rocketdyne Propulsion and Power Unit of the Boeing Company,
were successfully completed earlier this year.
The difference between the linear Aerospike engine and conventional rocket engines
is the shape of the nozzle. Unlike conventional rocket engines that use a bell nozzle
to constrict expanding gases, the Aerospike nozzle is V-shaped and called a ramp.
The hot gases are shot from chambers along the outside of the ramp's surface.
This unusual design allows the engine to be more efficient and effective than today's
rocket engines.
At least nine test firings of the twin flight engines are planned at Stennis
before they are delivered to Lockheed Martin's X-33 assembly facility in Palmdale,
CA.