gf0012-aust;270910]metallurgy, compound tech and fuel management have come an extraordinarily long way since the A12 was first run up.
We're over 60 years down the track.
you seem to be unaware that the fuel efficiency of some of the hypersonic engines improves the faster they travel
we're not talking about normal thrust, fuel states, fuel fractions here....
The A-12 is not an Hypersonic platform. The A-12 maxed out at a certain sustained speed due to a number of physicaly limits.
I'm am very well aware of what kind of challanges and what type of engine is requirerd for hypersonic speed.
A Ramjet or Scramjet engine if you like.
The insane challanges With fitting such engine on a Hypersonic platform is very Clear.
You can't sustain flight With only one type of Engine. You need two. So far we are using solid rocket fuel engine to accellerate the platform up to needed Ramjet speed regime.
Solid Rocket fuel and JP-7 fuel.. yep, we got two Ultra high cost compound right there.
Seriously, we are not anywhere near developing a combined Rocket engine/Ramjet engine.. let alone an jet engine/Ramjet engine.
How about making the Ramjet engine workable first?
So what are we left With, a hypersonic platform With two different kind of engines. Might as well design an Space ship and fly it to Outer space, cause it is the exact same High-Tech and physical challanges NASA allways faced back in the Space Shuttle days. And everything about Space is Ultra high cost.
Wait.. ins't NASA is also engaged in the X-51 waverider program. How is that program going so far?
you're wrong on the issue of ultra high costs. we were dealing with compound ceramics which could be made with 3D printers and were a 1/10 of the price to fab up the prev metals based solution (we were using 3D printers in 2005 and fabbing up complex heat resistant components even then.
Really.. give the DARPA consortium behind the X-51 waverider program a Call and explain to them how its done then.
The critical design review (CDR) of the X-51 vehicle, completed in January 2007, cost around $70m
As i said, past PowerPoint and drawing Board is where the challanges turns into real $.
2013. How much has the Hypersonic R&D cost so far?
Bear in mind that the majority of hypersonic developments stemmed from private funding - the appetite to willingly spend money without return is already demonstrated
Privat funding yes, Which does not make it any less costly. You still have to make it work.