LR105

The LR105 is a liquid-fuel rocket engine that served as the sustainer engine for the Atlas rocket family.[1][2][3] Developed by Rocketdyne in 1957 as the S-4,[4][5][6] it is called a sustainer engine because it continues firing after the LR89 booster engines have been jettisoned, providing thrust during the ascent phase.[7]

Description

The LR105 is a liquid-propellant engine using RP-1/LOX. The engine operates on a gas-generator cycle, where a small portion of the propellant is burned in a gas generator to drive the turbopumps, which supply the engine with fuel and oxidizer.

The engine was designed to be throttleable, meaning its thrust could be adjusted during flight to optimize performance. The LR105 also features regenerative cooling, where RP-1 fuel is circulated through cooling channels in the engine's nozzle and combustion chamber before being injected into the combustion process, preventing overheating and improving efficiency.

Versions

The LR105 engine underwent several upgrades over its operational life, leading to multiple variants:[1][8][9][10][3]

See also

References

  1. Mark Wade. LR105-3 Encyclopedia Astronautica, 2019, retrieved 2024-10-12^
  2. Convair SM-65 Atlas National Museum of the US Air Force^
  3. Kimble D. McCutcheon. U.S. Manned Rocket Propulsion Evolution - Part 5: The Atlas Missile Aircraft Engine Historical Society, 2022, retrieved 2024-10-12^
  4. Roger E. Bilstein. Stages to Saturn: A Technological History of the Apollo/Saturn Launch Vehicle DIANE Publishing, August 1999^
  5. Mark Wade. S-4 engine Encyclopedia Astronautica, 2019, retrieved 2024-10-12^
  6. Mark Wade. Rocketdyne Encyclopedia Astronautica, 2019, retrieved 2024-10-12^
  7. Bryan Swopes. Rocketdyne LR105-NA-5 2024-08-27, retrieved 2024-10-12^
  8. Mark Wade. LR105-5 Encyclopedia Astronautica, 2019, retrieved 2024-10-12^
  9. Mark Wade. XLR105-5 Encyclopedia Astronautica, 2019, retrieved 2024-10-12^
  10. Mark Wade. LR105-7 Encyclopedia Astronautica, 2019, retrieved 2024-10-12^