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  • Last Week’s Awards Event
  • Masten Space Systems Qualifies for $1 Million Prize
  • Level 2 Flight Attempt Open Thread
  • Xoie and Miscellaneous Level 2 Update
  • Tank Update
  • 750-3 Engine Module Development Update
  • LLC Flight Review and Update
  • XA-0.1E public debut via Spacevidcast.com
  • Masten Space Systems Successfully Completes Lunar Lander Challenge
  • Successful Lunar Lander Challenge Level 1 Flight!!!
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    Last Week’s Awards Event

    mmealling on 11/8/2009 at 6:08 am — General

    Masten Space Systems and Armadillo Aerospace at NGLLC prize ceremony

    From left to right, George Nield, Associate Administrator of Commercial Space Transportation, FAA; Charles Bolden, NASA Administrator; Doug Comstock, Director, Innovative Partnerships Program, NASA; David Masten, CEO, Masten Space Systems; Phil Eaton, VP, Operations, Armadillo Aerospace; U.S. Rep. Ralph Hall (R-TX); Peter Diamandis, Chairman and CEO, X PRIZE Foundation and Mitch Waldman, VP, Advanced Programs & Technology, Northrop Grumman. Photo Credit: (NASA/Carla Cioffi)

    Masten Space Systems Qualifies for $1 Million Prize

    admin on 10/30/2009 at 2:01 pm — General

    Masten Space Systems Qualifies for $1 Million Prize

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


    Mojave, California – October 30, 2009 – Masten Space Systems successfully qualified for first place in Level Two of the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge Wednesday. Flying a brand new vehicle named XA-0.1E (nicknamed Xoie), Masten demonstrated their ability to build, debug and fly a vehicle on a very short timeline.

    “To come from not flying at all last year to qualifying for level one AND level two of the LLC this year shows how far our technology has progressed,” Masten Space Systems CEO David Masten said. “After a short vacation we will start modifying Xoie for commercial payloads and begin work on Xoie’s successor.”

    Xoie is a larger, lightweight version of Masten’s Level One vehicle Xombie and features an aluminum structure, larger tanks and a more powerful engine. Originally designed for only 750 pounds of thrust, Xoie’s engine produces over 1000 pounds of thrust. “Our engines go to 11! Now we go build the 2500 pound version,” stated MSS propulsion engineer Jonathan Goff. A visibly exhausted but happy Ian Garcia, guidance engineer, said, “We wrote our flight control system from scratch and it just does what I tell it to do! Making it work for supersonic flight is going to be a fun challenge.”

    Masten’s qualification flight came at the final Lunar Lander Challenge flight window on Friday morning. During previous windows on Wednesday and Thursday the vehicle experienced communications and plumbing issues. After a small fire on Thursday afternoon the team spent most of the night engineering a solution to a small leak. The solution worked and the team successfully flew the required profile on Friday morning.

    “We are now working with interested parties to begin payload integration for low altitude commercial flights in early 2010,” said Michael Mealling, Vice President of Business Development. “If you want to book space on our early commercial flights the time to do that is now. We’re seeing significant interest from research scientists, companies looking to increase their Technology Readiness Levels, and aerospace systems companies building unique quality assurance techniques.” Recently, the Department of Defense awarded Masten Space Systems a Small Business Innovation and Research (SBIR) contract to use its vehicles as a network communications testbed.

    “We are building up a good head of steam. Next year is going to be full of bigger, faster, and higher,” said Masten. “Winning contests is fun, but we won’t rest until we’re flying a fleet of vehicles into space carrying all sorts of commercial payloads.”

    About Masten Space Systems
    Masten Space Systems is a Mojave, CA based aerospace company developing fully reusable vertical takeoff, vertical landing (VTVL) launch vehicles, rocket-related products, and engineering services. The company’s 6000 square foot production facility and 200,000 square foot testing facility is located on the Mojave Air and Space Port. The company designs and builds aerospace solutions that focus on durability, long operational lifetimes, and minimal per-flight maintenance. For more information on the company see http://masten-space.com

    Contact:
    Masten Space Systems
    Michael Mealling
    +1-888-488-8455 x 102
    mmealling@masten-space.com
    http://www.masten-space.com

    Level 2 Flight Attempt Open Thread

    mmealling on 10/28/2009 at 4:50 am — General

    This is where we will update things for most of this morning. Bigger events will get their own posts.

    2nd Leg Video from today:


    Xoie on Pad A after successfully flying both legs of the Challenge.
    Xoie after 2nd leg. Really close to center. Now just needs to... on Twitpic

    The X goes on the pad (note the patch made to the concrete. Previous tests on Xoie had dug a hole through the concrete)


    Xoie in the garage, ready for action. Loading happening now. ... on Twitpic

    We aren’t 100% sure what the quality of this will be since the link wasn’t setup until yesterday but XPRIZE is live broadcasting from this mornings flight:
    Live Videos by Ustream

    Direct link: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/northrop-grumman-lunar-lander-challenge

    Xoie and Miscellaneous Level 2 Update

    mmealling on 10/25/2009 at 4:35 pm — General

    Ed: This was taken from an ARocket update by Joel Scotkin on October 8. Some of the information is now outdated.

    Xoie (XA0.1e) Major Components
    Xoie (XA0.1e) Major Components

    RTK
    The Novatel RTK differential GPS worked amazing well. Real 2cm positioning was the main competitive advantage we thought we could nail for the LLC flights, and was clearly worth the investment. Our flights are fully pre-programmed at this point (though the pilot can override or trigger landing if needed).

    Xoie
    Xoie is pretty much just tanks and attachment points. Same engine module design as on Xombie, but Jon had everything hard coat anodized so its by far the sexiest engine module we’ve ever done – jet black jacket and inner chamber, blue and red anodized fittings. Dry, substantially lighter than Xombie. Fully fueled Xoie is going to wind up in the high 800lb range – its going to be a slow takeoff, even with the engine dial turned to 11, but once in the air we expect plenty of duration margin. (Ed: Since Joel wrote this, we’ve run the engine up to 1000lbf. It has plenty of takeoff thrust.) At this point we just need to finish plumbing and wiring – should be in the air next week.

    Xoie Engine Module
    Xoie Engine Module

    Level 2. All that said, we’ve got a lot of work to do in the next three weeks. Ian wants to nail down the gimbal oscillation we hit when descending light, one of the onboard computers likes to overheat and thermally throttle down in the Mojave sun (they run in a sealed box with no ventilation because of the dust, so things can get pretty crispy), Ken’s built a whole bunch of dedicated circuit boards to replace our handmade wiring (the new computer box is looking really clean), we want to add a flightline observer driven “soft abort to safe landing” button in addition to the “kill the whole vehicle” button, etc. And lots of leak checks as the plumbing comes together.

    Should be quite a show in the Mojave area last week of October – scheduled for six days, three teams. Best of luck to everyone.

     

    Tank Update

    mmealling on 10/20/2009 at 5:13 am — General

    (This is from an ARocket post by Joel)

    Mr. Tank
    Mr. Tank

    For Xoie we needed bigger tanks than on Xombie, but smaller than the 36inch tanks we had in house that were originally for a four-engine design. So we kicked off two science projects. We knew we really needed to squeeze for both weight and pressure to get Xoie off the ground. For the LOX tank we went really high tech – Alustar Aluminum (5059) spun into 25.5 inch hemis. Had to have it custom shipped (by air!) from the Netherlands. This is the current state of the art aluminum alloy (mostly used for yachts and high performance marine construction), and seemed to have all the properties we needed. After welding we sent our first tank off to be burst, with a design goal of an 1,100 psi burst – didn’t pop all the way to 1,400! That was a good day – we thought we were done thinking about the tanks. Then the next two (the ones we wanted to actually use) failed their basic hydro at 850 psi. That was a bad day.

    Tanks with shades
    Tanks with shades

    After a lot of back and forth with our welders, we decided to go to the instant replay, and had everything x-rayed. Turned out the 2nd and 3rd welds (done at different times from the first one) had simply not had the penetration needed. We worked with them to change the welding process a little, and also made x-ray before hydro a standard part of our new tank process. Fortunately we’d started with 12 hemispheres, so we had a little bit of margin. The current batch x-rayed clean, passed hydro with flying colors, and one of them is now on Xoie.

    IPA Tank with Skirt
    IPA Tank with Skirt

    For the IPA, we went a different route. Our fallback was two aluminum tanks, but we really wanted to see if we could push the weight down. So we found a supplier to build us an all composite carbon fiber IPA tank. I was worried that we were really pushing the state of the art here, but turns out this isn’t that big a deal, and we’ve got a gorgeous black spun tank sitting on Xoie right now, maybe 15 lbs lighter than the equivalent aluminum. The fiberglass attachment skirt actually came in a little heavier than we’d planned, so we should be able to shave a few more pounds off the next version as well.

     

    750-3 Engine Module Development Update

    jongoff on 10/10/2009 at 4:49 am — General

    (This is a combination of Joel’s ARocket post and some more details from me — Jon)

    750-3 Engine Development
    At the time of my last detailed update, back in June, we had just flown our 60 second hover on our first aluminum chamber (the -2AS). A while after the flight, we disassembled the engine, and noticed that a critical weld joint had cracked and was leaking a little. The chamber also showed some sign of thermal warping. It hadn’t buckled, but it looked like it was getting hotter than we wanted. Shortly thereafter, the brazed aluminum chamber (the -2AB) also showed similar problems after an even smaller number of firings. We had never had an engine actually buckle in flight, and weren’t sure if it would damage other hardware, so we decided it was time to revisit our cooling design.

    Our initial cooling design for the 750-1 and -2 engines had been closely derived from the cooling design for the 500lbf engines. We had figured that this would be overkill for the lower-pressure we were using in the 750’s, and when we had time and more thermal data, we’d go back and tweak the design to get a better balance of cooling efficiency versus pressure drop. The thermal warping in the two aluminum chambers made this a high priority, so earlier in the summer, I sat down with Brooks Clarke, one of our interns, and dove into making a much more thorough thermal analysis model. We ended up using a spreadsheet with all the fluids equations to drive a parametric thermal FEA model to simulate the heat flow, with some perl scripts to link the two. It wasn’t fully automated, but the scripting made it so that I could come up with high level scenarios and have Brooks do the number crunching.

    First LLC Flight Engine Flash
    Xombie’s green flash

    The end result was that we were able to come up with a cooling channel geometry that looked substantially better than our old geometry, but with only 40% the original pressure drop. When we measured the pressure drop, that part of the calculation was within a few psi of what the model predicted, though the thermal stuff is harder to model. In addition to the change in cooling channel geometry, I had also thinned out the wall substantially, rolling all those changes into two aluminum 750-3 chambers.

    Unfortunately we ran into a buckling issues on these two engines. The first aluminum one failed due to some debris (a shard from an igniter o-ring) blocking the IPA injector ring in one section, leading to mixture ratio excursions and hot spots. The second one failed between firings, which led us to make some changes to make our shutdown sequence more thermally benign.

    While we were testing these two chambers, we had started a third engine, to try out a new chamber construction method that used an o-ring joint between the head cap and the rest of the chamber, instead of a weld or braze joint. This was the engine we ended up flying with for our first LLC window, last month. We had been interchanging copper and aluminum chambers (our machinist can almost crank out a copper one in a day at this point), and had gone back to the copper for the first LLC attempt, figuring it would deal with the heating issues better. Unfortunately, it also had buckling problems, in-flight (as you can see from the green-plume-of-death in the picture to the right). This was surprising, because the copper chamber had been fired a bunch by the time we flew, including a long-duration flight the day before, but we made a critical error in not inspecting it before the Sep 16 LLC flight. We’re not sure, but there’s a chance that the buckling had already started before the flight.

    In spite of the buckling problems, some of the changes worked well enough that we didn’t want to just roll back to the original 750-2 design. The aluminum saddle worked great. The o-ring sealed head-cap and chamber design had shown no issues at all, and removed a tricky (and time consuming) welding step (particularly on the aluminum chambers). The pressure drop was indeed much better.

    Xoie's Engine Module
    Xoie’s Engine Module

    Things seem a lot happier now. We realized that after we changed our cooling groove pattern (to both improve cooling flow and reduce pressure drop) that we hadn’t really re-characterized the engines. We think what was really happening was that the rules of thumb we had come up with for our mixture ratio controller (that we had used for our the earlier designs) were no-longer correct, and we were running extremely lean. And at the same time our cooling is worse at lower throttles, because less fuel is flowing through the cooling channels. Those factors together combined to soften the chamber wall and allow the pressure in the regen channels to completely dimple in the chamber until it burst through.

    We had two aluminum versions of the no-weld chamber design come in a few days after our first LLC window. Ben drilled new locations for the thermocouples in our testing jacket so it could better measure cooling groove temperature at multiple locations, and gathered a whole bunch of new data. I did some more detailed analysis on the chamber buckling strength, and we decided to make the chamber walls a little thicker again for our next rev. We also decided that we really wanted the aluminum weight savings for Xoie (our Level 2 vehicle), and so went back to aluminum for the Xombie chamber, instead of waiting for new copper chambers to be machined.

    So far, everything is looking really good – the chamber on the Level 1 vehicle (which had been used for testing the last few weeks) shows no sign of any heat issues. In fact, we’re used to using force (and a gear puller) to remove or insert a fired chamber into the jacket – this is the first one that slides in and out as smoothly as a brand new one, which is a really good sign.

    The 750 is now misnamed, as well. As Ben put it last week after testing – “our engine goes to 11″. We originally designed the 750 for about 250 psi chamber pressure with 400 psi tanks. We didn’t quite get the pressure drop we wanted, but we got close, so we decided to focus on the other end – better tanks. At 550 psi we can run at 900+ lbs thrust, which is good because we takeoff weight has been the concern for a fully-fueled Xoie (for Xombie duration was the bigger focus).

    All told, while the last few months of engine development have been rather involved, at the end of the process I think we have a much better engine than we started with. Thermally the design is showing a lot more robustness, we’ve put several minutes on our latest aluminum chambers with no sign of damage, we’ve cut the pressure drop substantially, made the chambers a lot easier to fabricate, and now have better design tools and a lot more design intuition to back them up.

    LLC Flight Review and Update

    mmealling on at 4:41 am — General

    (Much of this is from an email Joel Scotkin sent to ARocket on Thursday)

    We had a tremendous day yesterday, and the team did an absolutely phenomenal job. We’ve been a little bit quiet during the competition period, but (especially given all the press around yesterday – Bloomberg turned our office into a broadcast studio with XoiE in the background) it seemed like a good time to post an update on the last couple months of development.

    Flight day:

    First of all, yesterday’s flights. The whole morning went off without a hitch. I was pretty nervous at 6:30 am – winds were pushing 30 knots. Ben faked confidence that “on calm mornings, it gets windy when the sun comes up, and on windy ones it calms down in the sun.” I didn’t believe him at all, but did get the judges to agree that high winds would be a valid condition for a “temporary weather hold” if needed. Fortunately, we didn’t need it – Ben was right or lucky. Setup went much more smoothly than last time, much of the morning spent letting the judges do their final survey, painting the X-Prize logo on the pads, etc. Beyond starting with the vehicle completely detanked and depressurized, it pretty much felt like a normal test day.

    When the clock started, operations went much faster than our first attempt a couple of weeks ago. We still had one hiccup – we have a cascade fill helium cart with six helium tanks of various levels of remaining pressure, and miscalculated the total pressure we could get with the leftover tanks on the cart – had to swap out tanks right as we started loading. We’ve got plenty of tanks – for a timed competition we should have just stuck six full tanks on the cart and worried about it later. Lost 10+ minutes there, especially because the helium fill is more or less the critical path – overheating the composite tanks is a real worry as Armadillo noted. We’re using a chiller we borrowed from XCOR – the helium runs through a coil in a dewar of liquid nitrogen, lets the fill go much faster.

    The Level 2 landing pad with the Mojave boneyard behind it.
    The Level 2 landing pad with
    the Mojave boneyard behind it.

    Both flights went off so smoothly they practically felt routine. The wind calmed down just before our first flight (I think the tower radioed us 17 knots, but it was intermittent – definitely less for the flight itself). On the first leg we landed practically in the feet marks from our first attempt. The return flight (which we had never run before) was only interesting in that I knew the flight had a small dogleg turn (it doesn’t quite go in a straight line between the pads), and on the outbound flight the dogleg was on the far side of the middle pad from where I was. Ian hadn’t thought to mention that on the return flight it followed the mirror image of that path instead of going the same route - it looked pretty much like the rocket was heading straight for Ben, Ian and myself. Real moment of relief when it cut over to the pad on cue!

    Total time (subtracting out judges holds) was about 1 hour 38 minutes, from our allotted 2:15. Would have been enough margin for a third leg. Level 2 will take longer for fuel and LOX loading, but doesn’t look like time will be a problem. I don’t think we’ve gotten final measurements yet, but the preliminary was 20.2 cm for the first flight and 11 cm for the second.

    The Level 2 landing pad with simulated lunar surface.
    The Level 2 landing pad with simulated lunar surface.

    After lunch the judges came out and looked at our new Level 2 pad, measured and approved it. Our contractor got creative – the pad looks great. The surface has a cool “lunar surface” texture to it, the boulders are big granite stones he hauled in and set, and they put some cool impact rims around the craters.

    Should be quite a show in the Mojave area last week of October - scheduled for six days, three teams. Best of luck to everyone.

    XA-0.1E public debut via Spacevidcast.com

    mmealling on 10/9/2009 at 12:30 pm — General

    Ben and Michael were guests on Spacevidcast’s show last night. Michael did the typical pointy haired marketing thing but Ben stole the show by taking his laptop on a tour of the shop and the first ever public viewing of Xoie (”XA0.1E”):

    Masten Space Systems Successfully Completes Lunar Lander Challenge

    mmealling on 10/8/2009 at 2:34 pm — General

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Masten Space Systems Successfully Completes Lunar Lander Challenge

    XA01.B Takes off on the second leg of the Level 1 Challenge

    XA01.B Takes off on the second leg of the Level 1 Challenge


    Mojave, California – October 8, 2009 – Masten Space Systems successfully completed level one of the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge X Prize Wednesday. The 715lb vehicle originally named XA0.1B – referred to as “Xombie” – completed two flights to qualify for the $150,000 Level One prize of the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge.

    The flight trajectory involved taking off from a pre-designated launch pad, ascending to an altitude of 53 meters, flying 50 meters horizontally to another pad, and landing as close as possible to the pad’s center. The small Masten Space team then refueled Xombie before making an identical flight back to the original pad. Average landing accuracy for the two flights was 16cm (6.3 inches) from the target on each pad.

    Qualifying for level one of the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge X Prize is a huge demonstration of the company’s ability to turn a vehicle around quickly and efficiently as it works towards a high flight rate commercially. “We flew two fairly boring flights within two hours. I suspect we could have done it half a dozen more times if we had the fuel available. We should be offering that same operational efficiency to our customers very soon,” said David Masten, CEO.

    Xombie’s propulsion system is a proprietary regeneratively cooled isopropyl alcohol and liquid oxygen rocket engine. The engine was originally designed for 750 pounds of thrust but is now running at around 900 pounds. “Xombie’s current engine is a variation to those we’ve used in the past,” said propulsion engineer Jonathan Goff. “We expect to continue to use this line of engines well into the future and make them available commercially.”

    “Being able to complete level one means we’re ready to start scaling up the vehicles and pushing the flight envelope” said Ian Garcia, Masten’s flight software engineer. “I’m really looking forward to going higher and faster until we hit space.”

    In addition to flying “Xombie,” the Masten team is assembling and testing another vehicle – XA0.1E – for two Level Two attempts later this month. “XA0.1E – or ‘Xoie’ as she’s called – is lighter and has larger propellant tanks to handle the additional flight time required for Level Two,” said project manager Ben Brockert. “Now that Xombie is done we can focus exclusively on Xoie. Being able to compete for both Level 1 and Level 2 in the same month with two different vehicles will be a seriously cool accomplishment.”

    Masten expects to begin offering payload slots on low altitude commercial flights by 2010. “Using the same technologies and operational procedures demonstrated in the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge, we can offer affordable payload options for research, Technology Readiness Level acceleration, or quality assurance applications,” said Michael Mealling, Vice President of Business Development. “Along with our recent Department of Defense SBIR contract, this flight signals the advance of Masten Space Systems into a new stage of business.”

    “Ultimately, we are looking to open up the final frontier by making space travel as safe, simple and ubiquitous as flying an airplane,” said Masten. “This is just one small step on that path.”

    About Masten Space Systems
    Masten Space Systems is a Mojave, CA based aerospace company developing fully reusable vertical takeoff, vertical landing (VTVL) launch vehicles, rocket-related products, and engineering services. The company’s 6000 square foot production facility and 100,000 square foot testing facility is located on the Mojave Air and Space Port. The company designs and builds aerospace solutions that focus on durability, long operational lifetimes, and minimal per-flight maintenance. For more information on the company see http://masten-space.com

    About The Lunar Lander Challenge
    The Lunar Lander Challenge is a two-level, two million dollar competition requiring a vehicle to simulate trips between the Moon’s surface and lunar orbit. The vehicle is required to rise to a height of 50 meters, translate to a landing pad 50 meters away, land safely, and then return, following the same path. Two levels have been defined: one with smooth landing pads and total flight time of 90 second, the other with a replica lunar surface and 180s flight time. The prize purse is provided by NASA’s Centennial Challenges program which provides cash prizes to independent inventors for significant advances in technologies of interest to NASA and the nation. Support of the XPRIZE program beyond the prize purse is provided by Northrop Grumman Corporation, a world leader in providing technologically advanced, innovative products, services and solutions in systems integration, defense electronics, information technology, advanced aircraft, shipbuilding and space technology. For more information see http://space.xprize.org/lunar-lander-challenge


    Contact:
    Masten Space Systems
    Michael Mealling
    +1-678-640-6884
    mmealling@masten-space.com
    http://www.masten-space.com

    Successful Lunar Lander Challenge Level 1 Flight!!!

    mmealling on 10/7/2009 at 11:45 am — General

    We successfully flew the Lunar Lander Challenge Level 1 flight. We are still waiting on the official judges ruling on our qualification to win the $150,000 prize but so far it looks good. We will be posting media links and selective tweets here over the rest of today. Videos will be posted separately when they become available.

    XPRIZE video of both flights:

    Videos & Pictures:

    • From our friends at Orbital Expeditions:
    • Dave at this morning’s safety briefing:
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