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Need help with a rocket motor ID



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 4th 07, 01:58 AM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Dave Kearton
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Posts: 1,453
Default Need help with a rocket motor ID

wrote in message
...
On Sat, 03 Feb 2007 02:47:10 GMT, "William R Thompson"
wrote:

I could go on, but I won't. I am the only person in the world
completly happy with both systems, and who thinks they are both
equally screwed up.

Henry H.




We all understand the difficulty of migrating from one system to another.

Australia's change to metrics started on the 14th Feb '66 with the change to
decimal currency - dollars and cents. All Aussies over 45 can still
remember the TV jingle. A currency based on multiples of 10 makes more
sense than one based on 12s (unless your family tree doesn't branch)
Once that was achieved, switching to Celsius from Farneheit in the mid '70s
wasn't such of a chore.

At one point, for a couple of years in the early '80s, as I recall, it was
illegal to posess for sale rulers with imperial units on them. It was
a ridiculous and draconian measure - but effective in getting some of the
older farts to consider using metric units.

Road signs and speeds followed next, closely followed by weights and
measures in general. All up, the conversion for the general public
was completed by the mid '80s, I'd imagine it was completed a lot faster in
specialist industries.


One thing that I find quirky with the US metric experience is your parochial
spelling of metric units. Whereas the rest of the world has adopted
the original spelling of Litre, Metre etc, why does the US prefer to use
the 'er spelling ?




--

Cheers

Dave Kearton


  #2  
Old February 4th 07, 01:20 AM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Henry_H@Q_cyber.org[_1_]
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Posts: 31
Default Need help with a rocket motor ID

On Sat, 03 Feb 2007 02:47:10 GMT, "William R Thompson"
wrote:

"Dave Kearton" wrote:

William R Thompson wrote:


One obvious question--can you find out if those
nuts are metric or SAE?


I'll ask the question and see what happens, if it's a confused mixture
of metric and imperial, does that mean it's a NASA rocket?


Only if it's from a project that NASA wanted to kill.

NASA has recently announced (see

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2...metricmoon.htm

that all manned operations on the moon will use metric measurements.
This is probably NASA's way of telling the American public that
we won't return to the moon after all, not if we have to go without
our 3/8 inch socket wrenches.


In 1963 I was designing ducting for the Saturn V/S-1C.

"Everyone knows" that for the same bolt cross sectional area the
weight goes down as you increase the number of bolts. (I. E. use a lot
of small bolts for light weight.)

I used 1/4" but I was told that "our Germans" in Huntsville didn't
like that, they liked 3/8 inch. Being the kind that asks, asked.

Two reasons.

1) 3/8 is the "same" size as a 10 mm bolt and they knew how big that
was.

2) 3/8 big enough that the mechanics couldn't break them when they
ovr torqued them.

I am willing to meet people half way (sometimes). I used 5/16s
exclusively.

(I later heard that at P&W the jet engine shop rebelled and they got
the chief engineer to agree to send every designer out on the foor
where they had a rig set up with 10-56 screws, which was what everyone
wanted ot use for case flanges and stuff.

They said anyone who could torque them without wringing them off could
design with them. No one could. )

This is not the first time that NASA "metricated." And, if fact, I am
not sure that NASA has evre been any different than the US as a whole.
Congress authorized (but did not require) the use of the metric system
in the mid 1800s. That is the same as NASA always was. (One time
Congress was going to require my MOTHER to learn how much a kilo of
butter was. That was going TOO far. )

The Saturn V had 10 meter (first and second stages) tanks, for
example.

The first time NASA put out rules that said that everything had to be
expressed in "SI" I happened to have wandered off and was working on
AF programs.

When I started back on NASA proposals I was told SI was off. I asked
what happened and I was told "Isp choke.".

What?

They said that we went to NASA for a presentation and the program
manager was livid when he found that the charts did not have thruster
Isp on them. He said "Isp on ALL charts." Our guys said "Isp is not a
SI unit." NASA said "well, put it on in SI units." Our guys said "Isp
is not an SI concept." He said "No more SI on this program." And they
withdrew the everything SI rule.

When I got to the ISS that was a hot debate. I said "Show me where
this rule is written down, I want to see what it says. BUt I could
never find it. There was a "everyone knows" rule that said that "for
astronaut safety" you couldn't do anything thta made the astronauts
talk about SI units. At least in our end of the station.

When we got to talk to Russians we found out that they had about as
many opinions per person as we did. All there data had Isp in seconds
adn they didn't know exhaust velocites. Other stuff was in all sorts
of "*******ized" units. I never saw a presure in pascals, for example.
I think they mostly used "kilobar" or "kg/cm**2."

One guy was very adamant that the program should use SI and I told him
I would support him on that if they would agree to convert too.And at
the design review for the FGB I challanged them on that, and they
produced a document (the originals, actually. They were not big on
coping machines.) that gave evreything on the whole program in SI. BUt
I couldn't find anyone at the working level that knew that the
document existed or what it said.

I could go on, but I won't. I am the only person in the world
completly happy with both systems, and who thinks they are both
equally screwed up.

Henry H.










--Bill Thompson

  #3  
Old February 3rd 07, 02:47 AM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
William R Thompson
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Posts: 150
Default Need help with a rocket motor ID

"Dave Kearton" wrote:

William R Thompson wrote:


One obvious question--can you find out if those
nuts are metric or SAE?


I'll ask the question and see what happens, if it's a confused mixture
of metric and imperial, does that mean it's a NASA rocket?


Only if it's from a project that NASA wanted to kill.

NASA has recently announced (see

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2...metricmoon.htm

that all manned operations on the moon will use metric measurements.
This is probably NASA's way of telling the American public that
we won't return to the moon after all, not if we have to go without
our 3/8 inch socket wrenches.

--Bill Thompson


  #4  
Old February 10th 07, 07:39 AM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Bob Harrington
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Posts: 681
Default Need help with a rocket motor ID

"Dave Kearton" wrote in
:

William R Thompson wrote:
"Dave Kearton" wrote:

Thanks Bill & Henry,


It's sounding more interesting all the time.


One obvious question--can you find out if those
nuts are metric or SAE?

--Bill Thompson




I'll ask the question and see what happens, if it's a confused
mixture of metric and imperial, does that mean it's a NASA rocket ?.


;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-)



Depends... was the motor found in a fresh crater on Mars? =}
  #5  
Old February 10th 07, 07:39 AM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Bob Harrington
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 681
Default Need help with a rocket motor ID

"Dave Kearton" wrote in
:

William R Thompson wrote:
"Dave Kearton" wrote:

Thanks Bill & Henry,


It's sounding more interesting all the time.


One obvious question--can you find out if those
nuts are metric or SAE?

--Bill Thompson




I'll ask the question and see what happens, if it's a confused
mixture of metric and imperial, does that mean it's a NASA rocket ?.


;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-)



Depends... was the motor found in a fresh crater on Mars? =}
  #6  
Old February 3rd 07, 12:42 AM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Dave Kearton
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,453
Default Need help with a rocket motor ID

William R Thompson wrote:
"Dave Kearton" wrote:

Thanks Bill & Henry,


It's sounding more interesting all the time.


One obvious question--can you find out if those
nuts are metric or SAE?

--Bill Thompson




I'll ask the question and see what happens, if it's a confused mixture of
metric and imperial, does that mean it's a NASA rocket ?.


;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-) ;-)



--

Cheers

Dave Kearton


  #7  
Old February 3rd 07, 12:34 AM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
William R Thompson
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 150
Default Need help with a rocket motor ID

"Dave Kearton" wrote:

Thanks Bill & Henry,


It's sounding more interesting all the time.


One obvious question--can you find out if those
nuts are metric or SAE?

--Bill Thompson


 




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