bring_it_on
I really should change my personal text
- Joined
- 4 July 2013
- Messages
- 3,234
- Reaction score
- 2,599
That should push the price upwards by quite a bit.
That would make more sense - so "combined cycle" in that there would be a rocket booster stage followed up by solid fuel ramjet. Though doubling the range with a ramjet still seems...improbable. That's the only reason I considered a turbojet. I believe Raytheon was working on a PDE for PrSM but are those theoretically efficient enough to double range?Probably a ramjet, considering PrSM is still used as a rapid response weapon.
Wrong thread.As I recall sometime in the early eighties,didn't Lockheed Martin propose using the,first stage of a trident carrying cluster munitions as a counter airfield weapon?
So are we talking air-turbo-rocket of something?
Sorry incomplete thought process courtesy of a busier than usual 12 hour work shift. As I recall Lockheed called the system AXE and used the first stage of Trident and the guidance system from a Lance I I..Wrong thread.As I recall sometime in the early eighties,didn't Lockheed Martin propose using the,first stage of a trident carrying cluster munitions as a counter airfield weapon?
Assuming those are to scale, the PrSM is actually longer than the ATACMs. 5.8m for PAC-2, so about 4.6-4.7m for PrSM.Two per pod was a US Army requirement so LM and Raytheon would have had basically the same physical dimensions as they were working with existing pods, and designing to the same performance specifications.
Apparently ramjet. Presumably some form of solid fuel integrated rocket ramjet configuration would qualify as "combined cycle":What is “combined cycle” in this context? A turbine engine?
Presumably some form of solid fuel integrated rocket ramjet configuration would qualify as "combined cycle":
Presumably some form of solid fuel integrated rocket ramjet configuration would qualify as "combined cycle":
Never heard that before.
That almost sounds more like an air-breathing hybrid rocket.Presumably some form of solid fuel integrated rocket ramjet configuration would qualify as "combined cycle":
Never heard that before.
Transitions from non-airbreathing rocket to airbreathing ramjet. So, if you squint a bit....
Here's one example of that usage on DTIC, form the 1980s. The full report isn't there, but the title is "Combined Cycle Ramjet Engine" and the abstract reads "The metallic wall of the combustion chamber of a combined rocket-ramjet engine is lined with solid ramjet fuel overlaid with rocket fuel. After the consumption of the rocket fuel in the boost portion of the flight the solid ramjet fuel burns and ablates protecting the metallic combustion chamber wall from high temperatures during the cruise phase of the missile flight." Some someone in DoD thought that this is a reasonable usage once upon a time.
Yeah, it's little out of step with how we would usually use combined cycle today but not absurd. Either that, or there's yet another propulsion option they haven't disclosed.
By that definition an SA-6 is "combined cycle", but ok sure. Presumably this is a solid fuel ramjet like meteor? I'm surprised they already tested one; I didn't think any US manufacturers had any experience in that technology. Also had no idea they were already to the point of testing the terminal seeker in a round. Does this mean they will skip a step? I previously had thought the next spiral of PrSM was to be terminal seeking and only after that range extention.
Wut?By that definition an SA-6 is "combined cycle", but ok sure. Presumably this is a solid fuel ramjet like meteor? I'm surprised they already tested one; I didn't think any US manufacturers had any experience in that technology.
Feels nice to be right...Probably a ramjet, considering PrSM is still used as a rapid response weapon.
Feels nice to be right...Probably a ramjet, considering PrSM is still used as a rapid response weapon.
Wouldn't the dimensions change and go over deployable footprint from existing platforms if such dual propulsion is implemented?
150km....
Likely become like the Excaliber Shell....from a 155mm gun. Impressive, though I can't imagine it will ever be the standard round.
Meanwhile
Army nixes 1,000-mile cannon program | InsideDefense.com
The Army has ended its effort to develop a cannon that can fire 1,000 miles, which had been one of its 35 priority modernization programs, according to service acquisition executive Doug Bush.insidedefense.com
I thought they would probably use a sub-calibre projectile with rocket or CWDE engine, but optimistically even a quarter of that range would have been barely believable. Are they still working on the rail gun?They never said, but I thought it was probably going to be a very high pressure, high caliber gun with solid fuel ramjet ammo. I still don't see how you get a thousand miles out of that, at least not for half a million per round which was the stated goal.
I didn't realize SLRC hadn't been killed off yet. It always struck me as having overly ambitious goals in terms of cost and range.