T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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292.1 | passed | ENGGSG::FLIS | | Thu May 28 1987 13:38 | 7 |
| On the news this morning it was stated that the test was successful
and that the good results puts the schedual in a better light.
This tells me that the results from the test were needed and that
it wasn't a wasted test on old hardware.
jim
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292.2 | | BOEHM::DENSMORE | get to the verbs | Fri May 29 1987 08:19 | 1 |
| It was a horizontal test FWIW. Are vertical
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292.3 | .2 continued | BOEHM::DENSMORE | get to the verbs | Fri May 29 1987 08:21 | 5 |
| I gotta get more caffeine in me :-| The end of the last reply is...
Aren't vertical tests planned/called for?
Mike
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292.4 | On its side | VINO::DZIEDZIC | | Fri May 29 1987 08:44 | 7 |
| No. It would "cost too much" to build a vertical test stand, and
anyway, Morton Thiokol says they can get all the information they
need from a horizontal firing.
(Although I guess the vertical test planned for occurs sometime
in June of 1988 when the first shuttle launch is planned.)
|
292.5 | RE 292.4 | EDEN::KLAES | The Universe is safe. | Fri May 29 1987 10:29 | 6 |
| Oh, I'd really trust a statement from Morton Thioklol on SRBs!
(Note - the sarcasm is to MT, not you)
Larry
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292.6 | Referencing Morton Thioklol... | LILAC::MKPROJ | REAGAN::ZORE | Fri May 29 1987 13:29 | 8 |
| RE: -.1
Agreed. It's getting so I don't trust anyone anymore when money
is involved. Some people would sell thier mother to increase corporate
profits or make the corporation look good. In my book MT falls
in this category.
Rich
|
292.7 | vertical test | ENGGSG::FLIS | | Mon Jun 01 1987 13:52 | 7 |
| Shortly after the accident, it was determined that a Vertical test
would be required before the next shuttle flight. I have not heard
that this has been cancelled. All agree that it would be very
expensive and the Rogers commision said test it anyway.
jim
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292.8 | I don't think vertical testing is planned | VMSDEV::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Mon Jun 01 1987 14:01 | 6 |
| My recollection is that NASA decided not to go with the vertical
test. If they had gone with it, they would not be scheduling the
shuttle launch for as soon as a year from now.
Burns
|
292.9 | | MONSTR::HUGHES | Gary Hughes | Mon Jun 01 1987 17:48 | 8 |
| I think .8 is correct. Oddly enough, the Titan boosters are test
fired vertically, using an old F-1 test stand. Since the Titan-4
boosters, at 10 by 122 feet, are not much smaller than the SRBs
at 12 by 146 feet I wonder why there is so much reluctance to test
the SRBs vertically. The F-1 stand was fairly recently modified
to test the Titan boosters.
gary
|
292.10 | F-1's aren't so big... | VMSDEV::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Mon Jun 01 1987 17:52 | 6 |
| re .9: Just out of curiosity, why is an F-1 test stand so big?
Did they have the whole Saturn sitting out there on top of them
for tankage?
Burns
|
292.11 | | MONSTR::HUGHES | Gary Hughes | Tue Jun 02 1987 11:20 | 9 |
| re .10
Don't know. I assume they had one lying around that did not belong
to a contractor (in which case it would have been destroyed in
accordance with their contracts) and since it could withstand at
least 1.5 million pound-weight of thrust it could cope with the
Titan solids. I think it is at Ames.
gary
|
292.12 | don't they need to test it in a cold environment? | CRVAX1::KAPLOW | There is no 'N' in TURNKEY | Tue Jun 02 1987 18:51 | 7 |
| What is the validity of a single SRB test anyway? 49 of the last
50 worked. A single test, at non-freezing temperature doesn't tell
NASA anything that wasn't previously known. If they want to prove
that the joint has been fixed, it will take repetitive tests, and
tests at the 'edge of the operating envelope', i.e. below
freezing. The only other practical way to test the SRBs is to use
them on non-manned non-critical payloads.
|
292.13 | | MONSTR::HUGHES | Gary Hughes | Wed Jun 03 1987 09:42 | 20 |
| re .12
Not only was the test not in a cold environment, it had joint heaters
in place and operating on of the field joints, graphite overwraps
on two of the field joints and changes to the exhaust nozzle inlet
ring to reduce corrosion. The purpose of the firing was to gather
baseline data on the old SRB design. I can't help but wonder that
they made too many 'minor changes' to invalidate that.
On thinking further about vertical vs horizontal testing, I think
it is probably not important. The stresses on the motor case would
not vary greatly in either position, i.e. the gravity components
would be fairly small compared to stresses produced by the motor
firing.
It would be far more interesting to simulate the flexing that occurs
between main engine start and SRB start and immediately after SRB
start.
gary
|
292.14 | | MONSTR::HUGHES | Gary Hughes | Wed Jun 03 1987 09:43 | 5 |
| further re .12
Can the shuttle fly unmanned??
gary
|
292.15 | re .14 | PASTIS::ANDRADE | | Wed Jun 03 1987 09:52 | 3 |
| re .14
NO, it cant't. Not without very extensive changes...
|
292.16 | MLV? | IMGAWN::BIRO | | Wed Jun 03 1987 11:02 | 26 |
| re.14
that is an interesting idea, the shuttle can not fly unmannded
but the MLV or what every you want to call it could. I think
at one time I actually saw a drawing of an unmaned version.
It still would require a lot of tooling, testing etc, but it
could possible give us an unmanned MLV in a few years instead
of 7 to 10. Given the right codition of temperature, rain and
lighting storms the MLV would be a very relable unit, the
shuttle has had a very good record for successful launches
and the unmaned version could fill the space gap untill a true
HLV. Not every lauch of the Shuttle needs to be manned, when
you are simple sending put building supplies for a space station
as for the test, I though it was strage that they tested all
the heaters etc in a warm temp, but I am sure they did not have
a enviromental chamber big enought. Did they do any thermal
stressing of the joint before launch, ie spray them with
'cold spray' or did they freeze the boster before testing
I dont think so , at least it was not mention, but someting
like that would sure give me a better feeling about the
safty of the unit.
john
|
292.17 | | MONSTR::HUGHES | Gary Hughes | Wed Jun 03 1987 11:31 | 21 |
| Well, they could just run the test ou{doors in a Utah winter. Thats
cold enough for most people.
The shuttle, manned or unmanned, is above what I would consider
a medium launch vehicle (MLV) in launch capability. Various shuttle
derived vehicles have been proposed for the new Advanced Launch
System (aka Heavy Launch Vehicle).
If it is true that the shuttle absolutely requires a human in the
control loop that means it would be impossible to bring it down
after say a fatal depressurisation. I find this a little hard to
beleive, but not impossible given the event of the last year and
a half.
I'm not suggesting that launching an unmanned shuttle would be useful
any kind of production launch (Titan 4/Centaur G-Prime can fly almost
anything a shuttle can) although it could be a viable test. If I were
an astronaut, I'd feel a lot better if I knew it had worked once
before.
gary
|
292.18 | verifying the fix. | WIMPY::MOPPS | | Wed Jun 03 1987 13:37 | 61 |
| Sence I happen to work in the field of reliability testing, (Though
skewed toward electronic and statistical rather than mechanical or
one shot probabilities.) I have a real problem with this sort of
testing in the first place. I happen to feel there was a combined
effect present that this test totally ignores, as well as the obvious
"tinkered" configuration (horizontal, hardware changes, temp at
the joints, load suspention.) I have un resolved questions in my
mind concerning SRB mounting at the incident temp and the flex of
the propellent and configuration. Unless I am wrong, the SRB is
mounted via just 2 connect rings. This leaves a verrry long
un supported section of two motor segments (3 joints total I believe)
to be independent of vehicle dynamics. If at warm temps the solid
fuel compound is very much more elastic than at cold, pressure in
the vessel is uniformly distributed adding support to the structure.
In the shuttle failure event, we see two observations of joint
venting one at launch for a few sec, and again just before the
final collapse of the structure. Remember the fuel is the primary
reason the SRB does not normally blow up. It acts as insulation
to keep combustion temps from heating the case and as a structural
member by transmutation of internal pressure to the case. (Ie:
Take a full unopened coke in a can and stand on it. Try to dent
the side. You cannot unless you rupture the can. The liquid
distributes the dynamic load. Take an empty undented coke can.
The average person can stand on one! top to bottom. However if
the side is dented, the thing collapses.)
I feel the dynamics of the fuel in pressure distribution have been
ignored. Once again the symptom is being treated because that was
the most visable (if not spectacular in a depressing sense :-().
The "basic" question I ask is why did the fuel fail in its mission
in a two fold manner, that is in both pressure distribution *and*
thermal insulation. Sorry, but a slightly leaky joint does not
fit the following model. Ignition smoke from joint (fuel failure
to transmit heat and pressure from case) "fixes itself" thru dynamics
to MAX Q. After MAX Q, dynamics change fissure reappears - venting,
death. Fuel fails mission again. This model fits the observed
facts. A hole in a pressure vessel such as the SRB is always a
hole unless fuel or residue can perform a sort of dam. If the internal
dynamics for this dam remain constant, great. But since the
foundations of the dam are constantly being eroded, how can they
remain constant. Changes around the dam such as joint flex, after
MAX Q would certainly hasten this demise. The SRB had better than
30% of its "life" left at failure and therefore should have had
an equal amount to heat and pressure capability left, it had just
been throttled up bringing pressure to a max and again change the
dynamics to the dam.
The test in question is actually a mote point. The "FIX VERIFY" test
is one such has been suggested: launch, or static firing at cold temps
with the capability of flexing the joints via the two SRB suspention
points. Otherwise I feel we not only will have pasted another
bandaid to our national space banner, but we risk a future shuttle
launch to the "empty coke can symptom".
{Insert NO BANDAID sysmbol here}
Les
PS: You can remove one or more spokes from a wheel and still have
a wheel. The squeaky one still gets the grease whether the wheel
needs spokes or not.
|
292.19 | Joints are exposed right away | VMSDEV::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Wed Jun 03 1987 13:55 | 18 |
| re .18: The fuel is not designed to be part of what keeps a joint
from leaking. I don't know about whether it is intended to be
structural, but I doubt it.
My reason for saying this is that the fuel in some segments is
designed to burn simultaneously from the center out and from the
bottom up. This means that the joint at the bottom of these segments
is exposed directly to the full combustion pressure almost immediately.
They do this by not coating the fuel with inhibitor at the bottom of
the segment which they wish to burn this way. Thus, the flame invades
the joint between fuel segments and starts burning up the uninhibited
section, but not down the inhibited segment. This is part of how they
make the thrust profile change. I would guess that when the thrust
reduces at MAX Q, this is because one of those segments (which has been
burning on two fronts) has burned out.
Burns
|
292.20 | | MONSTR::HUGHES | Gary Hughes | Wed Jun 03 1987 14:28 | 59 |
| re .18
I may have missed something as I found it very hard to follow your
points, but I won't let that stop me making some comments :-)
The SRB does have only two attach points, one of which has been
redesigned. The new attach ring was on ETM-1A (the motor just fired)
but you can bet that the SRB is well strapped down during a static
test and they probably do not use the flight attach points. SRBs
exhibit a 'twanging' phenomenon during flight where they oscillate
presumably as a result of ignition stresses (the twanging decreases
with time).
As for the propellant protecting the casing, that is true for simple
single segment core burning engines but may not be true for the
SRBs. There are segmented propellant configurations that rely upon
the ends of the segments burning as well as the core. In that event
you must design the casing to not rely upon temperature insulation
from the propellant. The propellant provides little if any structural
strength. If you consider a single segment progressive core engine
(or even a neutral burning 'star' core) the time of maximum combustion
pressure will be at burnout when the propellant is no longer one
piece. So, the combustion chamber alone must be able to withstand
the maximum chamber pressure.
If we look at thermal protection, even if the propellant segment ends
are inhibited from burning some of the hot gas in the chamber will leak
through the interface between the segments. The combustion chamber at
that point must be able to withstand the full flame temperature. In the
SRB this means the joint area. The combustion pressure in the SRB will
be high enough to force the segments together so that the amount of hot
gas reaching the chamber wall will be very small, under most (but not
all) circumstances. If the SRB flexes or twangs, obviously the segments
could seperate briefly at various places. The propellant is case bonded
and would be much more effective at thermal insulation away from the
segment interfaces.
Polybutadiene propellants do not go brittle at the temperatures
encountered, even with high solids loading used in these propellants.
The segments may shrink however, which would increase the gap between
segments slightly.
I don't think the propellant failed in any way.
My guess is that the joint area was never adequate but had been
relatively protected by the propellant in previous flights and the
degree of that protection was not understood. The combination of
factors for the Challenger launch were such that the segment joints
finally had to perform the job they were designed for and were not
up to the task. In my opinion the major technical factors were low
temperature causing joint components to malfunction, the same low
temps could have caused some propellant shrink thus increasing the
stress on the joints and the higher than usual wind shear leading
to even more stress on the joints.
There have been a few 'near misses' with the SRBs in the past but
NASA managed to keep quiet about those.
gary
|
292.21 | | MONSTR::HUGHES | Gary Hughes | Wed Jun 03 1987 15:15 | 13 |
| re .19
Thanks, I didn't know if the SRB burned any segment ends, but the
thrust-time curve sure looks like it. Grain geometries where a core
and one or more segment ends burn are sometimes called bates cores.
Also, the core shape and size varies throughout the engine. It is
tapered cylindrical for most of the core, starting from the bottom.
The top part is a wagon wheel design (almost a star). The top segment
looks like it would burnout before the rest of the engine thus exposing
that segment to exhaust gasses earlier in the burn.
gary
|
292.22 | | WIMPY::MOPPS | | Wed Jun 03 1987 15:57 | 39 |
| Just reread note 142 and some others as well as Gary's discussion
in 292.20. I did not get the impression that the joints were directly
exposed to the actual flame of combustion until now. I was under
the impression that the stacking process had some how baffelled
the actual joint area between each segment with inert material (putty
In the AP articles). The point I poorly made I guess is that the
observable data of the disaster does not really fit the fix. If
I poke a hole in my pressureized "coke can" I must do something
to stop the coke from spuing out, or I will keep seeing the stuff
come out. Certainly 5500 degree (AP again) flame within the SRB
visable at launch would not just dissappear for more than a minute
and then reappear just prior to breakup. I am glad to see that
someone agrees with me that laying one of these things on its side
and clamping it down to keep it from getting away just does not
fit the failure nor does it fit the mode of operation (twang).
I do apologize to everone for the hasty writting of .18 but I could
not contain my silence on the SRB reliability and wanted to vent
some smoke concerning the whole SRB. I am guilty of haste. I am
not guilty of silently sitting back. If I had been asked if I would
have maintained the grounding of the shuttle this long based on
the currently public data, I would have to say no. I would have
resumed launches of military payloads long ago with existing hardware
at anytime the launch site temp was 5 degrees warmer than that of
the coolest successful launch. Does the current research into the
joint redesign fix the problem? no. I am in 100% agreement with
Gary. Some little understood effect, present at more than the launch
of 51L caused the disaster. Strapping a SRB to the ground does
my uninformed opinion prove nothing. Causeing a joint to fail at
will with a SRB strapped down or having a successful trial under
the suspected conditions with fixes installed. I would prefer
replacation in this case as only 50% of the SRB's under the
suspected conditions failed and less than 1% have failed for all
causes. Given these type of stats, Making something fail on command
should prove you knew what was wrong, had it in control, and then
could prove the fix addressed the true cause via non distructive
means.
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