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USLI FRR Presentation. Vanderbilt University Aerospace Club. Agenda. Changes made since CDR Launch Vehicle Design Features and Dimensions Motor Selection Mass Statement Recovery System Information and Testing Payload Status and Testing Payload Integration Requirements Verification Status
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USLI FRR Presentation Vanderbilt University Aerospace Club
Agenda • Changes made since CDR • Launch Vehicle Design Features and Dimensions • Motor Selection • Mass Statement • Recovery System Information and Testing • Payload Status and Testing • Payload Integration • Requirements Verification Status • Educational Outreach
Changes Made Since CDR • Vehicle Criteria • Carbon fiber added to reinforce fins • Payload Criteria • Kerosene and Cryogen tank positions have reversed (to reduce amount of tubing needed) • Reduced number of thermocouples from two to one • Electronics components have been adapted for flight use – instead of ground based testing. Circuit diagrams updated accordingly
Launch Vehicle Design/Dimensions • Length: 120 in. • Nominal diameter: 6 in. • Sections • Lower body tube • Coupler body tube • Upper body tube • Nosecone
Key Design Features • Payload Bay Access Panel • Payload equipment needs to be accessed on the launch pad • Bolted to rocket after cryogen and kerosene are inserted securely into rocket • Payload Hardware • Cryogen Container • Evaporation creates the working pressure for the fuel • Kerosene Container • Injected into fuel line • Designed for both positive and negative G injection • Payload Hardware Retention • Steel brackets bolted to wooden frame after containers are set in place
Key Design Features • Pathway for Fuel line and Instrumentation • Holes have been bored out of centering rings and bulk head • Steel piping used for fuel containment from kerosene tank to aft of rocket • Flexible tubing used to connect fuel line to ramjet • Additional Centering Ring • Needed for additional beam to record thrust from ramjet • Designed to maximize length inside of rocket
Key Design Features • Aerodynamic sleeve • Folded sheet metal – greatly streamlines pylon assembly and reduces overall drag
Motor Selection • CesaroniPro-75 L1115 • Impulse: 5015 N-s • Burn Time: 4.48 s • Max Thrust: 1713.25 N • Thrust to Weight: 7.9 • Projected Altitude: 5082 ft • Rail Exit Velocity: 77 ft/s • Max Velocity: 567 ft/s • Max Acceleration: 199 ft/s^2 • CG/CP/Margin: 74.7 in./101 in./4.36
Thrust-to-Weight and Rail Exit Velocity • Thrust-to-weight ratio is 7.9 • Rail exit velocity is 77 ft/s
Recovery System • Dual deployment using redundant MAWD altimeters • 48” drogue • descent rate of 42.82 ft/s • 144” main at 700 ft. • descent rate of 11.39 ft/s • KE’s—57.4 ft-lb, 10.27 ft-lb, and 5.74 ft-lb at landing.
Full-Scale Flight Test • Full-scale flight test delayed due to weather • Launch planned for 3/27/2012. • Additional report on launch results will be provided. • Rocket and payload are completely ready
Recovery System Tests • Successful ground-based test
Recovery System Tests • Altimeter functionality tested • Pressure chamber • Continuity • Successfully ignited electric matches • Full scale test launch
Payload Status • Construction of both ramjets complete • Flame holder • Wire mesh (“turbulator”) • Fuel injector • Strain pylons fully instrumented, secured, and waterproofed • Thermocouple probe interference fitted into combustion chamber and epoxied with high temp epoxy • Payload bay construction complete • Cryogen container retained • Fuel vessel retained
Payload Status Thermocouple Fuel Injector Flame Holder Turbulator
Payload Test Results • Many phases of testing • Fuel testing, flame holder positioning, injection rate, etc • Measured thrust in reasonable agreement with gas dynamic predictions • Kerosene proved to produce more thrust than alcohol • Remote ignition of Kerosene accomplished
Two levels shown are for low and high wind velocity, respectively. Zero setting not shown
Payload Integration • Coupler body tube contains cryogen and fuel containers, and payload electronics • Two mounting brackets for each vessel constructed from bulkheads • Fuel vessel and cryogen vessel have switched positions • Minimized amount of tubing needed to connect the two within the payload bay • Payload electronics and DAQ housed on a board to be mounted on the threaded rods via rail guides • RDAS, thermocouple and strain conditioner boards, G-switch, triggering circuitry, power supplies • Ramjet mount completed during construction of fin can, rigidly attached to bulkhead
Cryogen container and fuel vessel mounted within the body tube Payload electronics (DAQ) board in position to be mounted within payload bay Ramjet mounting bracket. Left: connection of bracket to bulkhead Right: pylon mounted to bracket
Rubber conduits for instrumentation wires Ramjet in final position on rocket body
Interfaces • External: • Shear pins to nosecone/upper bodytube and upper bodytube/payload bay • Screw switches to MAWD altimeters • Screw switch to RDAS • Screw switch to Cryogen battery • Bolts to payload bay panel • Ramjet to rigid mounting ring • Motor to motor tube • Igniter to motor • Rocket to launch pad • Internal: • Batteries to MAWD altimeters • MAWD altimeters to electric matches • Electric matches to ejection charges • Battery to RDAS • Battery to cryogen solenoid • RDAS to cryogen solenoid • Cryogen solenoid to fuel tank • Fuel tank to ramjet injectors
Status of Requirements Verification • Vehicle Requirements • All are met, except for height restriction on forward arming switches • Payload Requirements • All have been met • See FRR report for details
Educational Engagement • March 15th - Winning student teams from Bailey, Wright, and Cora Howe visited Vanderbilt for Rocket Day with the Vanderbilt Engineers
Questions? • ???