Showing posts with label Henry Spencer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henry Spencer. Show all posts

Monday, October 3, 2022

The raptor engine can open up the space frontier - if only SpaceX would allow it.

Copyright 2022 Robert Clark

  SpaceX has decided that the Raptors will first be used on the Superheavy/Starship, and perhaps even to only to be used on these vehicles. That SpaceX wants to put the Raptors on SH/SS is understandable since they want a super heavy lift rocket for Mars flights. However, Elon Musk has also spoken about opening up the space frontier. Then using the Raptors only on the largest space vehicles is the opposite of what they should be doing. 

 SpaceX shows great insight in wanting to produce fully reusable space vehicles since throughout history reusable transport vehicles have always been used. But in their approach to the SH/SS they are missing an extremely important fact. By insisting the SH/SS must be the be-all-end-all for ALL spaceflight they are ignoring the fact transport vehicles going back even to the horse-drawn era have always come in different sizes.

 SpaceX seems to be operating under the assumption making only this largest transport vehicle will be a competitive advantage in regards to size of the cargo that can be carried, therefore lowering the cost per kilo to orbit. But actually this is fallacious. It would be like trying to argue it would be optimal to only allow Greyhound buses and tractor trailers on the roads with no smaller vehicles allowed. In actuality, the number of transport vehicles on the road of various sizes from small to large is why the amount of transport, both cargo and human is so large.

 One might attempt to argue perhaps air transport would be more relevant to the question of only allowing the largest of transport vehicles to fly to space. But even here the argument is just as fallacious: the amount of transport by the wide-body aircraft is a tiny proportion of the amount of air transport occurring:



 Instead of their current approach, the SpaceX plan should be to allow other companies to use the Raptor in their own space vehicles. It is a fact that the engine is the most expensive development of a space vehicle. SpaceX is intending to produce the Raptor in high volume to reduce their cost. The cost of the Raptor is trending down to only $1 million per engine. By allowing space companies to purchase the Raptor would greatly reduce their development cost for their own rockets. 

 Calculations for Smaller Launchers. 

 It's puzzling why for so many years it was said SSTO's were not feasible or not with significant payload with current technology. Actually, high payload SSTO's are well within current tech and have been since the 70's with the advent of the staged-combustion, high-performance SSME hydrogen-fueled engines in the U.S. and the kerosene-fueled RD-180 and RD-170 engines in Russia. 

We now have the advent of the Raptor staged-combustion, high performance methane-fueled engine. This also makes possible SSTO with high payload: any of the current or past kerosene-fueled engines could become SSTO's when switched out to methane-fueled using the Raptor engine. The advantage is the Raptor engine in high volume production would be low cost.

 The Atlas I.

 This was the original rocket from the 60's that first sent John Glenn to orbit. At the time the engines were not advanced enough for SSTO. Because of the limited engines, extraordinary lengths were endeavored to reduced weight, including what were called "balloon tanks". These were tanks that maintained their structural integrity in simply being pressurized, to the extent they could not support their own weight if left unfueled or unpressurized. From the Astronautix web page:

SLV-3 Atlas / Agena B.
Family: Atlas. Country: USA. Status: Hardware. Department of
Defence Designation: SLV-3.
Standardized Atlas booster with Agena B upper stage.
Specifications
Payload: 600 kg. to a: 19,500 x 103,000 km orbit at 77.5 deg
inclination trajectory.
Stage Number: 0. 1 x Atlas MA-3 Gross Mass: 3,174 kg. Empty Mass:
3,174 kg. Thrust (vac): 167,740 kgf. Isp: 290 sec. Burn time: 120 sec.
Isp(sl): 256 sec. Diameter: 4.9 m. Span: 4.9 m. Length: 0.0 m.
Propellants: Lox/Kerosene No Engines: 2. LR-89-5
Stage Number: 1. 1 x Atlas Agena SLV-3 Gross Mass: 117,026 kg.
Empty Mass: 2,326 kg.
 Thrust (vac): 39,400 kgf. Isp: 316 sec. Burn
time: 265 sec. Isp(sl): 220 sec. Diameter: 3.1 m. Span: 4.9 m. Length:
20.7 m. Propellants: Lox/Kerosene No Engines: 1. LR-105-5
Stage Number: 2. 1 x Agena B Gross Mass: 7,167 kg. Empty Mass: 867
kg. Thrust (vac): 7,257 kgf. Isp: 285 sec. Burn time: 240 sec. Isp(sl): 0
sec. Diameter: 1.5 m. Span: 1.5 m. Length: 7.1 m. Propellants: Nitric
acid/UDMH No Engines: 1. Bell 8081

http://www.astronautix.com/a/atlasslv-3agenab.html

 You see the Stage 1 had a surprisingly high mass ratio of 50 to 1(!). However, the Atlas I was unusual in that it had a drop engine, listed here as Stage Number 0, that provided most of the lift-off thrust. The Stage Number 1 listed here had what was called a sustainer engine that flew the rest of the flight but did not have enough thrust for lift-off. So we'll remove that and replace it with the Raptor 2 sea level engine. This upgraded Raptor has an increased sea level thrust of 230-tons, with only slightly reduced vacuum Isp of ~ 350s. The Raptor 2 at 1,500 kg mass weighs about 1,000 kg more than the engine original used on the Atlas I Stage Number 1, so call the stage dry mass as 3,326 kg. 

 Normally methane-LOX propellant has a density of 800 kg/m^3 compared to 1,000 kg/m^3 for kerosene-LOX. But with supercooling the density of methane-LOX is about that of kerosene-LOX so we'll leave the propellant mass amounts the same in the calculations below.

 Then using a delta-v to orbit of ~9,150 m/s we can get ~5 tons to orbit for this Raptor powered Atlas I:

350*9.81Ln(1 + 114.7/(3.3 + 5)) = 9,250 m/s.

The Falcon 9 1st and 2nd stage.

 For the Falcon 9 1st stage:

TypeFalcon 9 FT Stage 1
Length42.6 m (47m w/ Interstage)
Diameter3.66 m
Inert Mass~22,200 kg (est.)
Propellant Mass411,000 kg (According to FAA)
FuelRocket Propellant 1
OxidizerLiquid Oxygen
LOX Mass287,430 kg
RP-1 Mass123,570 kg
LOX Volume234,700 l
RP-1 Volume143,900 l
LOX TankMonocoque
RP-1 TankStringer & Ring Frame
MaterialAluminum-Lithium
Interstage Length4.5 m (est.)
GuidanceFrom 2nd Stage
Tank PressurizationHeated Helium
Propulsion9 x Merlin 1D
Engine ArrangementOctaweb
 
   The 9 Merlin engines had a total sea level thrust of 775 tons-force. We'll replace them with three  Raptor 2 sea level engines of total 690 tons-force sea level thrust. It will be about 300 kilos increased weight for the engines so we'll use a dry weight of 22.5 tons. Then using the 350s Isp we get a ~8 ton payload:

350*9.81Ln(1 + 411/(22.5 + 8)) = 9,175 m/s. sufficient for LEO.

 For the Falcon 9 2nd stage:

TypeFalcon 9 FT Stage 2
Length12.6m (Separated Length)
Diameter3.66 m
Inert Mass4,000 kg (est.)
Propellant Mass107,500 kg (est.)
FuelRocket Propellant 1
OxidizerLiquid Oxygen
LOX Mass75,200 kg (est.)
RP-1 Mass32,300 kg (est.)
LOX TankMonocoque
RP-1 TankMonocoque
MaterialAluminum-Lithium
GuidanceInertial
Tank PressurizationHeated Helium
Propulsion1 x Merlin 1D Vac
Engine TypeGas Generator
Propellant FeedTurbopump
Thrust934kN
Engine Dry Weight~490kg
Burn Time397 s
Specific Impulse348s
Chamber Pressure>9.7MPa (M1D Standard)
Expansion Ratio165

  We'll only need a single Raptor 2 here to swap out the Merlin Vacuum engine. The Raptor weighs about 1,000 kilos more, so call the new dry mass 5,000 kg. Then this could get 3,000 kg to LEO:

350*9.81Ln(1 + 107.5/(5 + 3)) = 9,160 m/s.

 Note for both these cases the payload fraction will be 2% - 3%, which is in the range common for expendable rockets, countering the myth SSTO's can't carry significant payload. Actually, for both these cases the payload would be somewhat more because the simple rocket equation estimate doesn't take into account take-off thrust/weight ratio which is high in these two cases, which will increase the actual payload.

 The capability of an SSTO to carry significant payload is still controversial, however. So we'll look at a two-stage-to-orbit version of a Raptor powered version of the F9. Note here the upper stage only fires at high altitude so we can use the vacuum version of the Raptor with a ~380s vacuum Isp. Then we can get ~34 tons to LEO:

350*9.81Ln(1 + 411/(22.5 + 112.5 + 34)) + 380*9.81Ln(1 +107.5/(5 + 34)) = 9,160 m/s, sufficient for orbit with a 34 ton payload. This is a 50% improvement over the current F9 expendable payload of 22 tons.

For a ~200-ton gross mass vehicle.

 We will be basing cost estimates on the first version of the Falcon 9, now called v1.0, a ~300 ton gross mass vehicle. However, for cost reasons we're considering launchers as single stage launchable by a single Raptor, so we'll take our stage as approx. 200-tons gross mass. Take the propellant load of the stage as ~200 tons. For both the 1st and 2nd stages of the current Falcon 9 with the Merlins swapped out to use Raptors, we saw above both stages had mass ratios of about 20 to 1. So assume the mass ratio as about 20 to 1 with this new launcher, with an ~10 ton dry mass. Then the rocket equation gives:
350*9.81Ln(1 + 200/(10 + 5)) = 9,140 m/s, sufficient for a payload of 5 tons to LEO.

Cost Estimates.

 SpaceX shocked the space industry by developing the original version of the Falcon 9, now called Falcon 9 v1.0, at only a $300 million development cost:

Falcon 9.
In 2011, SpaceX estimated that Falcon 9 v1.0 development costs were on the order of US$300 million.[39] NASA estimated development costs of US$3.6 billion had a traditional cost-plus contract approach been used.[40] A 2011 NASA report "estimated that it would have cost the agency about US$4 billion to develop a rocket like the Falcon 9 booster based upon NASA's traditional contracting processes" while "a more commercial development" approach might have allowed the agency to pay only US$1.7 billion".[41]

 This was only a tenth of the development cost of a usual government-financed launcher of this size, approx. 300 tons gross mass. Note too developing a new engine makes up the lion-share of the development of a new rocket. Look for example at this breakdown of of the development costs of the Ariane 5 rocket:

Development budget

Again, Ariane 5, from 'Europäische Tragerraketen, band 2', Bernd Leitenberger:

Studies and tests 125
solid boosters 355
H120 first stage 270
HM60 (Vulcain) engine and test stands 738

other elements of the first stage and boosters 95
upper stage and VEB 200
ground support in Europe 80
Buildings and other structures in Kourou (launch pad) 450
Test flights 185
Total 2498
ESA and CNES management 102

https://space.stackexchange.com/questions/17777/what-is-the-rough-breakdown-of-rocket-costs

 For our scenario we would not be using solid rockets, nor using an upper stage. For the Ariane 5, the ESA also built entire new launch facilities in Kourou, Guyana in equatorial Africa, while we'll assume using existing NASA facilities for our launch. Of the remaining costs, you see the Vulcain engine development cost was more than half the remaining costs, and far more than the Ariane 5 core stage itself. 

 So without new engine development, the development of a new 300 ton gross mass rocket might be less than a $150 million cost. So for our ~200-ton gross mass vehicle, estimate it as 2/3rds of that, so ~$100 million development cost. And for a 100-ton gross mass rocket perhaps 1/3rd of that so only $50 million. Note, we'll be following the SpaceX low cost commercial-space approach to rocket development, to be sure.

  As an example of a smaller launch vehicle commercial-space development cost, the SpaceX Falcon 1 cost about $90 million, but this was with the Merlin engine development cost. Without that, the development might have been less than half of that, or less than $45 million. Note too, the Falcon 1 development cost included the development of the upper stage and its separate engine. Then following the Ariane 5 costing model, we might estimate the development cost of the first stage only without engine development cost, as a only a quarter of the total development cost, so only ~$25 million. 

 As another example of development cost of a smaller rocket, consider the DC-X suborbital demonstrator rocket. This had a development cost of $60 million. It used off-the-shelf hydrogen-fueled RL-10A engines, saving on engine development costs. The DC-X was at about 9,000 kilo hydrogen-oxygen propellant load. Since kerosene-LOX or supercooled methane-LOX as propellant is three times as dense this would correspond to a vehicle of similar dimensions but of 3 times larger propellant load so ca. 27,000 kilos, about the size of the Falcon 1.

 What about the cost of a launch to the customer? Note that when a launch company prices its launches it includes in that an amount to cover its development cost after some number of launches. The actual production cost of a launcher will be several times less than the cost charged to the customer for a launch. 

 In both the Falcon 1 and the Falcon 9 v1.0 cases the initial price SpaceX charged was about 1/10th the development cost, though this proportion does go down as the number of rockets is increased. For the original Falcon 9 v1.0 the price charged was about $27 million, about 1/10th the $300 million development cost and for the Falcon 1 the price charged was $8 to $9 million, also about 1/10th the development cost of $90 million.

 So for the approx. 200-ton gross mass vehicle the price for the stage without the engine cost might be 1/10th of $100 million, or $10 million. And the cost with the Raptor engine added on? 

Customer Pricing for the Raptor Engine.

 The $1 million estimated cost of the Raptor when produced in volume will actually be the production cost to SpaceX. Remember the price for the engine SpaceX will charge the customer will include some amount to cover development cost. We don't know that development cost for the Raptor so we cant use the 1/10th estimate. Plus, this will be when SpaceX is producing the engine in high volume where that initial pricing estimate will likely not be valid.

 For lack of a better estimate we'll compare the customer pricing for the current version of the Falcon 9 to SpaceX's production costs of a single rocket:

INNOVATION
SPACEX: ELON MUSK BREAKS DOWN THE COST OF REUSABLE ROCKETS
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has lifted the lid on why reusing Falcon 9 boosters makes long-term economic sense.
...
In terms of the marginal costs, the costs associated with producing just one extra rocket, Musk also recently shed some further light on the figures. In an interview with Aviation Week in May, Musk listed the marginal cost of a Falcon 9 at $15 million in the best case. He also listed the cost of refurbishing a booster at $1 million. This would fit with Musk's most recent claim that the costs of refurbishment make up less than 10 percent of the booster costs.

 So the price of the Falcon 9 of $60 million is about 4 times that of the production cost. Then based on that we might expect the price to the customer of $4 million, bringing the price of 200-ton gross mass 5-ton payload mass single stage to $14 million.

 However, that Raptor wikipedia article also says at mass-production of 500 engines per year the production cost might drop to only $250,000 per engine. In that case a 4 times markup would make the customer price $1 million, giving a price of $11 million for the stage.

Reusable Launcher.

 These though would be the expendable prices. According to Tim Dodd, the "Everyday Astronaut", the Raptor engine is expected to be reusable 50 times:



 Then if the maintenance cost is small compared to the launch cost, at the $11 million price point, that would be approx. $220,000 per launch. 

 And the price per kilo for a reusable version? That would be dependent on the how much the extra mass for reusability systems subtract from the payload. 

Heat Shield and Landing Legs.

  We'll envision this as a VTVL (vertical take-off vertical landing) SSTO. Then we need to add heat shield, and landing legs. For weight of the heat shield, from the Apollo era it was about 15% of the weight of the reentry vehicle. However, SpaceX's PICA-X is about half the weight so about 7.5% of the landed weight, approx. the dry weight.


 Besides that, non-ablative thermal protection is now available at similar light-weight to PICA-X:

TPS Materials and Costs for Future Reusable Launch Vehicles.

 For the landing legs, that is commonly estimated as 3% of the landed weight:

Landing gear weight (Gary Hudson; George Herbert; Henry Spencer) 

 However, with modern composite materials we can probably get it to be half that. So call it 1.5% of the landed weight, which is approx. the stage dry weight.

Propellant for landing.
 I remember thinking when reading of the debate about reusable vehicles between proponents of horizontal winged and vertical propulsive landing that all this debate was about a measly 100 m/s delta-v. as for example discussed here:

Horizontal vs. vertical landing (Henry Spencer; Mitchell Burnside Clapp)

 The reason is whether you use wings or not almost all the speed of orbital velocity is going to be killed off aerodynamically on return. For even for vertical landing, the stage entering broadside will be slowed to terminal velocity, approx. 100 m/s. This is only about 1.3% that of orbital velocity of 7,800 m/s.
This was confirmed by a graphic just released by SpaceX about the BFR’s Starship upper stage reentry:


 This shows for the a vertically landed stage, it only has to fire the engines at about Mach 0.25, 80 m/s. So it only has to kill off 80 m/s propulsively. But with the stage just needing to kill off a 80 m/s velocity with a 3,300 m/s Raptor sea level exhaust velocity, about 330s Isp, by the rocket equation the mass ratio to do this is e[80/3300] = 1.025. Subtracting 1 from this is the ratio of the propellant required to the dry mass, about 2.5%. All together that's 11.5% of the dry mass, or only about 1 ton lost due to reusability.

 Then at that $220,000 cost per flight for a 50 use reusable  launcher, at a 4,000 kilo payload as reusable, the per kilo cost would be $220,000/4,000kg = $55/kilo.


   Robert Clark
   Adjunct Professor
   Dept. of Mathematics
   Widener University
   Chester, PA USA
 

Thursday, November 7, 2013

The Coming SSTO's: Falcon 9 v1.1 first stage as SSTO, Page 2.

Copyright 2013 Robert Clark

 Though in the first test flight of the new version of the Falcon 9, the F9 v1.1, they did not stably "land" the first stage, SpaceX is optimistic they can solve the problem to get a reusable first stage:

SpaceX Hit Huge Reusable Rocket Milestone with Falcon 9 Test Flight (Video).
By Mike Wall, Senior Writer   |   October 17, 2013 02:01pm ET
Combining information from the Falcon 9 v1.1's maiden flight and the ongoing Grasshopper tests should help bring a rapidly reusable rocket closer to reality, SpaceX officials said.
"SpaceX recovered portions of the [Falcon 9 v1.1's first] stage and now, along with the Grasshopper tests, we believe we have all the pieces to achieve a full recovery of the boost stage," they wrote in the Oct. 14 update.
http://www.space.com/23230-spacex-falcon9-reusable-rocket-milestone.html

 SpaceX also plans to transition the half-scale Grasshopper VTVL test vehicle to a full scale Falcon 9 first stage:

Final flight of Grasshopper v1.0 sets new record.
By Brian Dodson
October 14, 2013
http://www.gizmag.com/grasshopper-retires-altitude-record/29384/

 This article says this "Grasshopper 2", as it were, would have all 9 engines of the regular F9 first stage. However, discussions on other forums have said it would only have 3 engines. That would make sense since on stage return, you are using at most 3 engines, and moreover this way, you would not be risking an expensive 9 copies of the Merlins during these Grasshopper test flights.

 Still, in point of fact there would be an advantage of using all 9 engines on this first stage Grasshopper, and with a full propellant load. In November, 2012 Elon Musk gave a lecture in London at the Royal Aeronautical Society.




 About 30 minutes in, he gave the propellant fraction of the new Falcon 9 v1.1 first stage as around 96%, or perhaps 95.5%. The 96% propellant fraction number gives a 25 to 1 mass ratio. But at an Isp of 311 s for the Merlin 1D, the rocket equation gives a delta-v of 311*9.81ln(25) = 9,800 m/s. Since the delta-v to orbit is only about 9,100 m/s, this would allow a significant amount of payload. Then using the 9 engines and the full propellant load on the F9 first stage would allow in fact not just a VTVL test vehicle, but in fact a fully reusable and fully orbital vehicle.  Amusingly, about 36 minutes into Elon's lecture someone asks a question about what he sees as the next big breakthrough in rockets after full reusability. Elon thinks for awhile and can't come up with an answer. He finally jokes maybe warp drive. Ironically, he already has the next big advance: a reusable SSTO.
 
In the blog post "The Coming SSTO's: Falcon 9 v1.1 first stage as SSTO" I had already discussed the F9 v1.1 first stage being used as a SSTO. But there I actually used the side boosters of the Falcon Heavy, which are based on the F9 v1.1 first stage, since they were supposed to have such a high mass ratio, at 30 to 1. However, this information in Elon's lecture on the first stage of the F9 v1.1 suggests it itself would have a surprisingly high mass ratio.
 We'll enter this data into Dr. John Schilling's launch performance calculator to estimate the payload it could carry. On the SpaceX page on the Falcon 9 v1.1 the vacuum thrust is given as 6,672 kN. The Merlin 1D has a vacuum Isp of 311 s. We need to know the propellant mass of the F9 v1.1 first stage.

  I found the propellant loads for the Falcon 9 v1.1 first stage and second stage in this environmental impact report: 

Draft Environmental Impact Statement: SpaceX Texas Launch Site. 
http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/ast/environmental/nepa_docs/review/documents_progress/spacex_texas_launch_site_environmental_impact_statement/media/SpaceX_Texas_Launch_Site_Draft_EIS_V2.pdf  

  They're given on page 66, by the PDF file page numbering:

First and Second Stages  
The first stage of the Falcon 9 is approximately 12 ft by 150 ft, and includes nine Merlin 1D engines. The Merlin engine produces 146,000 lbs of thrust and contains a pump-fed gas generator cycle, turbine exhaust roll control, and hydraulic thrust-vector control. The first stage consists of aluminum LOX and RP-1 tanks that hold approximately 62,000 gallons (gal) of LOX and 38,000 gal of RP-1. The second stage is approximately 12 ft by 41 ft, not including the fairing and payload, and uses one Merlin vacuum engine. The fairing (the top portion of the vehicle where the payload is encapsulated) would be 17 ft by 35 ft, and a smaller version may also be used. The second stage consists of approximately 15,000 gal of LOX and 9,000 gal of RP-1 in tanks with a common bulk head.  

 The conversion factor between gallons and liters is 1 gallon to 3.7854 liters. So the amount of LOX in liters is 62,000*3.7854 = 234,700 liters, 234.70 m³. And the amount in liters of RP-1 is 38,000*3.7854 = 143,800 liters, 143.8 m³. The density of LOX is 1140 kg/m³ and the density of RP-1 is 820 kg/m³. So the total mass of propellant is 1140*234.7 + 820*143.8 = 385,500 kg. This is in the range of what has been estimated for instance on Ed Kyle's site of ca. 389 metric tons (mT): 

Space Launch Report:  SpaceX Falcon 9 v1.1 Data Sheet. 
http://spacelaunchreport.com/falcon9v1-1.html#components  

 However, there is a significant difference from the estimates and the actual propellant load of the second stage. Using the same conversion factors and densities, the total propellant for the second stage is 92,670 kg, whereas Kyle gives it as approx. 64 mT.  

 Take, optimistically, the propellant fraction of the F9 v1.1 first stage as 96%, corresponding to a mass ratio of 25 to 1. Then the dry mass is 16,040 kg, which I'll round to 16,000 kg.  In the calculator input the vacuum values for the Isp and thrust, as it takes into account the reduction at sea level. Select "No" for the "Restartable Upper Stage" option, otherwise the payload will be reduced. Select Cape Canaveral as the launch site at a launch inclination of 28.5 degrees to match the latitude of the launch site. Then the calculator gives an estimated payload of 5,147 kg: 

Mission Performance:
Launch Vehicle:   User-Defined Launch Vehicle
Launch Site:   Cape Canaveral / KSC
Destination Orbit:  185 x 185 km, 28 deg
Estimated Payload:   5147 kg
95% Confidence Interval: 1242 - 9908 kg

 This is surprisingly high for a stage using engines without an especially high Isp. However an SSTO reaches its best performance when using altitude compensation. Let us suppose we use altitude compensation so that the engines on the first stage have the same vacuum Isp as the Merlin Vacuum at 340 s. 
 Note that because of the higher Isp, the thrust is also increased. On that SpaceX page on the Falcon 9 v1.1, the thrust of the single Merlin Vacuum on the upper stage is given as 801 kN. So 9 would have a thrust of 7209 kN, which I'll round to 7,210 kN. Select "Optimal" in the calculator for the "Trajectory". Then the calculator gives the result:

Mission Performance:
Launch Vehicle:   User-Defined Launch Vehicle
Launch Site:   Cape Canaveral / KSC
Destination Orbit:   185 x 185 km, 28 deg
Estimated Payload:   12068 kg
95% Confidence Interval:   7319 - 17788 kg
 This is remarkable as being near the payload cited by SpaceX for the full two stage Falcon 9 v1.1 of 13,150 kg.  

 But for a fair comparison we should see also how high the payload would get for the two stage F9 when altitude compensation is also given to the first stage. The calculation here is made difficult by the fact that we don't know the propellant fraction of the upper stage, so we can't calculate the dry mass from the known propellant mass of 92,670 kg.
 For the upper stage much smaller than the first stage, the mass ratio would not be as great. It is known that as you scale up a rocket the mass ratio improves. The reverse is also true, when you scale down a stage the mass ratio becomes worse. The acceleration at burn out for just an empty upper stage, and payload would also be rather high. Then I'll take the mass ratio for the upper stage at only 10 to 1, giving a 9,200 kg upper stage dry mass. Let's calculate first what the calculator gives as the payload for the present case using the standard Merlin 1D at 311 s Isp. The calculator gives:
Mission Performance:
Launch Vehicle:   User-Defined Launch Vehicle
Launch Site:   Cape Canaveral / KSC
Destination Orbit:  185 x 185 km, 28 deg
Estimated Payload:   13831 kg
95% Confidence Interval: 10061 - 18407 kg
 Rather close to the actual value of 13,150 kg. Now we'll calculate it for the case where the first stage has been given altitude compensation to get a 340 s Isp. We'll change the Isp input to 340 s and also increase the thrust to 7,210 kN as before. Then the calculator gives:


Mission Performance:
Launch Vehicle:   User-Defined Launch Vehicle
Launch Site:   Cape Canaveral / KSC
Destination Orbit:  185 x 185 km, 28 deg
Estimated Payload:   17056 kg
95% Confidence Interval: 12781 - 22223 kg
 This is a significant increase but not nearly as dramatic as the increase for the SSTO case. For the SSTO case the payload more than doubled. But for the TSTO case it increased by less than 25%.

 This could mean the SSTO could approach that of the TSTO on a cost per kilo basis. Elon Musk has said the Falcon 9 first stage takes up about three-quarters of the cost of the Falcon 9:
Musk lays out plans for reusability of the Falcon 9 rocket
October 3, 2013 by Yves-A. Grondin 
Performance hit for reusable rockets:
Musk also addressed the performance hit that results from reserving propellant for landing the first stage.
“If we do an ocean landing (for testing purposes), the performance hit is actually quite small, maybe in the order of 15 percent. If we do a return to launch site landing, it’s probably double that, it’s more like a 30 percent hit (i.e., 30 percent of payload lost).”
...
Musk believes that the most revolutionary aspect of the new Falcon 9 is the potential reuse of the first stage “which is almost three-quarters of the cost of the rocket.”

http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2013/10/musk-plans-reusability-falcon-9-rocket/
 This would put it at about $40 million out of the $54 million for the full rocket. Then the cost per kilo for the SSTO would be $40,000,000/12,068 = $3,314 per kilo, while for the TSTO it would be $54,000,000/17,056 kg = $3,166 per kilo.

 The benefits of the SSTO would be even more dramatic in the reusable case. In the Nasaspaceflight.com article Elon says the loss in payload for the F9 for returning just the first stage to the launch site was about 30%. This is interesting because he said in another interview the loss in payload for returning both stages would be a loss of about 40%:

Elon Musk on SpaceX’s Reusable Rocket Plans.
By Rand Simberg
February 7, 2012 6:00 PM

Despite the dangers, Musk is clearly a fan of the rocket-powered approach. He told PM that SpaceX has come up with a solution to make both the lower and upper stages of the Falcon 9 reusable. (The Dragon capsule that will fly atop the rocket has already demonstrated that it can be recovered in the ocean after it splash-lands with a parachute, though SpaceX is building vertical-landing capability into that as well.)
The key, at least for the first stage, is the difference in speed. "It really comes down to what the staging Mach number would be," Musk says, referencing the speed the rocket would be traveling at separation. "For an expendable Falcon 9 rocket, that is around Mach 10. For a reusable Falcon 9, it is around Mach 6, depending on the mission." For the reusable version, the rocket must be traveling at a slower speed at separation because the burn must end early, preserving enough propellant to let the rocket fly back and land vertically. This also makes recovery easier because entry velocities are slower.
However, the slower speed also means that the upper stage of the Falcon rocket must supply more of the velocity needed to get to orbit, and that significantly reduces how much payload the rocket can lift into orbit. "The payload penalty for full and fast reusability versus an expendable version is roughly 40 percent," Musk says. "[But] propellant cost is less than 0.4 percent of the total flight cost. Even taking into account the payload reduction for reusability, the improvement is therefore theoretically over a hundred times."

http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/space/rockets/elon-musk-on-spacexs-reusable-rocket-plans-6653023 


 These two quotes together could mean the payload loss from making the upper stage also reusable is 10%, assuming Elon was being consistent between the two quotes. Then a question arise: would the payload loss from the making the SSTO reusable also be just 10% of the payload? 

 This doesn't seem likely, for if you changed the relative sizes of the first and upper stages while keeping the payload the same, then the extra added components for the upper stage such as heat shield, landing legs, and propellant reserve for landing should also change. It should not stay as the same 10% of the payload, regardless of the size of the stage. So we'll need to do use some other sources to see how much payload would likely be lost under the reusable SSTO case.

Payload Lost for a Reusable SSTO.

 We need a heat shield, landing legs, and reserve propellant for the landing. This interesting discussion between noted space-historian Henry Spencer and a former manager for both the DC-X and X-33 programs, Mitchell Burnside Clapp, is about the relative benefits of horizontal versus vertical landing of RLV's:

Horizontal vs. vertical landing (Henry Spencer; Mitchell Burnside Clapp).
http://yarchive.net/space/launchers/horizontal_vs_vertical_landing.html 

 Burnside Clapp conservatively estimates the propellant that needs to be kept on reserve for the landing amounts to about 30 seconds of engine firing. Spencer optimistically estimates it might be as low as 10 seconds. I'll estimate it as 20 seconds. Assume the engine used for the landing has similar sea level Isp as the Merlin at 282 s. But this is not for the full firing of all engines as would be needed for takeoff of a fully loaded rocket. 

 We'll assume we only need enough thrust for the dry mass of the stage, as the needed reserve propellant is a small proportion of this. Taking the dry mass of the first stage as 16,000 kg, 157,000 N, the flow rate of such an engine would be (flow rate) = (thrust)/(exhaust velocity) = 157,000N/2370m/s = 57.5 kg/s. And the propellant for a 20 second burn would be 1,150 kg, 7% of dry mass.

 For the heat shield, it will be the PICA-X material of SpaceX. The mass for this heat shield  used for the Dragon has been estimated in the range of 226 kg. However, the video SpaceX has released of a reusable Falcon 9 shows a heat shield on the upper stage that extends partially down the side of the stage. Then I'll estimate the mass as double that of the Dragon at 550 kg.

 For the landing gear the example of the lighweight gear for the B-58 suggests it can be as low as 1.5% of the landing weight:

Landing gear weight (Gary Hudson; George Herbert; Henry Spencer).
http://yarchive.net/space/launchers/landing_gear_weight.html 


 With lightweight composites this might be reduced to 1% of the landed weight, 160 kg. The total of all three of these extra systems for reusability would then be 1,860 kg, about 12% of the 16,000 kg dry weight. 

 This would need to be subtracted off from the delivered mass to LEO. Then the reusable F9 v1.1 first stage would have a payload to LEO of 10,200 kg.

Comparsion of Costs of Reusable SSTO, Partially Reusable TSTO, and Fully Reusable TSTO.

  First, under the partially reusable case of just the first stage being reusable, this would subtract off 30% of the payload, so from 17,056 kg to 11,940 kg. Now assume the first stage is reusable 10 times and this cuts the cost of that stage by a factor of 10, so to $4 million per flight. Then the upper stage being expendable would be $14 million, i.e. $54 million - $40 million, and the total cost would be $18 million per flight, at a cost per kilo of $1,500 per kilo.

 Now compare to the reusable SSTO case. Again assume 10 uses at a cost of $4 million per flight. Use the reusability loss estimate above that lowers the payload to LEO to 10,200 kg. Then the cost per kilo would be only $390 per kilo(!)

 Perhaps a fairer comparison though would be to the fully reusable TSTO case. This would cut the payload by 40% so from 17,056 kg to 10,230 kg. Since we're using the full rocket 10 times, assume the cost is cut to $5.4 million per flight. This would be a cost per kilo of $527 per kilo. So the reusable SSTO would carry about the same payload but at a better cost per kilo.

 Admittedly though this conclusion is based on very rough estimates for the propellant reserve needed for landing and the mass needed for the heat shield for a long rocket stage compared to that of a capsule.


   Bob Clark


Update, October 18, 2014:

 The calculations here were assuming the Falcon 9 v1.1 had payload to LEO of 13,150 kg. However, as discussed in the post "Golden Spike" Circumlunar Fights, Page 2 this payload is actually that of the partially reusable version. The actual payload of the expendable version is ca. 16,600 kg. 

Then assuming altitude compensation increases the payload of a TSTO by 25%, the Falcon 9 v1.1 with altitude compensation on the first stage would have a payload of ca. 20,000 kg. So in the last section with comparisons of the price per kilo of a reusable SSTO and TSTO, the fully reusable TSTO with 40% loss should have a payload of 12,000 kg. This would still mean the reusable SSTO would have a lower price per kilo than the fully reusable TSTO.


UPDATE, October 25, 2014:

 SSTO's achieve their best usefulness with altitude compensation. Low cost methods of giving already existing engines altitude compensation are discussed here:

Altitude compensation attachments for standard rocket engines, and applications.
http://exoscientist.blogspot.com/2014/10/altitude-compensation-attachments-for.html

 

Lightweight thermal protection for reentry of upper stages.

 Copyright 2025 Robert Clark   In the blog post “Reentry of orbital stages without thermal protection, Page 2”,  http://exoscientist.blogspo...