RS-56

American kerolox rocket engine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

RS-56 (Rocket System-56) was an American liquid-fueled rocket engine, developed by Rocketdyne. RS-56 was derived from the RS-27 engine,[1] which itself is derived from the H-1 engine used in the Saturn I and Saturn IB.

Country of originUnited States
First flight1991
ManufacturerRocketdyne
PredecessorRS-27A
Quick facts Country of origin, First flight ...
RS-56
RS-56 engines on an Atlas II
Country of originUnited States
First flight1991
ManufacturerRocketdyne
PredecessorRS-27A
StatusRetired
Liquid-fuel engine
PropellantLOX / RP-1
CycleGas-generator
Performance
Thrust, sea-levelRS-56-OBA: 207,000 lbf (920.8 kN)
RS-56-OSA: 60,500 lbf (269.0 kN)
Chamber pressure4.8 MPa (48 bar)
Specific impulse, vacuumRS-56-OBA: 299 s (2.93 km/s)
RS-56-OSA: 316 s (3.10 km/s)
Specific impulse, sea-levelRS-56-OBA: 263 s (2.58 km/s)
RS-56-OSA: 220 s (2.2 km/s)
Burn timeRS-56-OBA: 172
RS-56-OSA: 283 sec
Dimensions
LengthRS-56-OBA: 11.3 ft (3.43 m)
8.9 ft (2.7 m)
DiameterRS-56-OBA: 8.0 ft (2.45 m)
10.0 ft (3.05 m)
Used in
Atlas II
Close

Two variants of this engine were built, both for use on the Atlas II first stage. This was the last Atlas rocket to use the "stage-and-a-half" technique, where it ignited all three engines at liftoff and then jettisoned the two side engines and their support structure during ascent.

The two RS-56-OBA engines, with high thrust but moderate efficiency,[2][3] were integrated into a single unit called the MA-5A and shared a common gas generator. They burned for approximately 164 seconds before being jettisoned, when acceleration reached approximately 5.0–5.5 g.

The central sustainer engine on the first stage, an RS-56-OSA, would burn for an additional 125 seconds. It featured less thrust but better efficiency at high altitudes than the RS-56-OBAs.[2][3][1][4]

References

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