rotorworks
New member
- Jun 6, 2004
- 14
Looking for others thoughts on the defunct Roton. The design was definately ambitious, but had they the money would it have worked? (Ignoring that just about anything will work if you continue to throw money at it).
What Im particularly interested in is the rotor recovery system. According the various remains of info on the net, NASA tested rotor recovery as a posible system for both the Mercury and Gemini programs, and I have seen about two seconds of footage on a documentary, but as yet been unable to find any tech papers on this, any one got a lead?
Scattered info seems to indicate that this was tested as an airbrake successfully at MACH 3.5, but whether this was thie limit it would work at, or just as fast as they tested it I have been so far unable to establish.
Anyway I beleive most of the Roton guys went to XCOR, and bought most of the documentation and data reguarding it.
One thing that always struck me with this idea, was that the blades would be exposed to very high temps, and this may be a problem for rotor blades which have a fairly small surface area, however Roton seemed to indicate that the blades would be in an effectively cool area, when coned up, and that advanced TPS wouldnt be required.
What Im particularly interested in is the rotor recovery system. According the various remains of info on the net, NASA tested rotor recovery as a posible system for both the Mercury and Gemini programs, and I have seen about two seconds of footage on a documentary, but as yet been unable to find any tech papers on this, any one got a lead?
Scattered info seems to indicate that this was tested as an airbrake successfully at MACH 3.5, but whether this was thie limit it would work at, or just as fast as they tested it I have been so far unable to establish.
Anyway I beleive most of the Roton guys went to XCOR, and bought most of the documentation and data reguarding it.
One thing that always struck me with this idea, was that the blades would be exposed to very high temps, and this may be a problem for rotor blades which have a fairly small surface area, however Roton seemed to indicate that the blades would be in an effectively cool area, when coned up, and that advanced TPS wouldnt be required.