bmks270 said:
nortex97 said:
Thx. But when can a rocket start actually throttling down? Don't they generally have to go to something like 50% power for a few seconds?
Also, woah.
Depends on the engine design.
Usually the power level will be determined by a flow metering valve. Wherever they set the valve is what power it will come to. They can have it start up at any power level. And they usually reduce throttle to lower maxQ (maximum dynamic pressure) but then increase the throttle again.
Not all rockets throttle. Solids for example just go, no throttling control.
Isn't it a lot more complicated than that though? Since Raptor is a full-flow staged combustion engine which is basically two closed cycle, cross feeding, gas-gas propellant paths.
If you throttled the fuel valve to the main chamber, it quickly moderates chamber thrust but the decrease in flow of the gaseous fuel line decreases flow through the turbine for the oxidizer power head. If you do that, the oxidizer flow is moderated which means the chamber thrust decreases even more in which case the control valve has to compensate so the throttle valve likely has a dance it does to change throttles to prevent control oscillation.
I am sure SpaceX has the timeline for changes in throttle figured out to keep operation smooth between throttle changes. But because this process is so delicate, won't you be increasing the probability of a mishap by starting the engines with a pre moderated fuel flow to begin with? They may already do this.
Genuinely curious about this.