On rockets that are ground launched, use of bladders is rare. Gravity tends
to keep the liquids and gases separate.
How should I meter the flow? Should I use an orifice or venturi? How canI insert the pressure gauges and thermocouples everywhere? How do the
I would recommend against trying to put your pressurizer inside your fuel
tank like that. Better to have it in a separate cylinder with a
valve/regulator to the top of the fuel tank so it can be adjusted and
worked on separately.
On basic rocket plumbing, older materials are still good and easy to
understand. I like How to Design, Build and Test Small Liquid-Fuel Rocket
Engines, by Rocketlab. A few scanned copies are floating around the
internet.
On Thu, May 19, 2016 at 2:54 PM, Wensberg, Dana A. (2018) <
dana.wensberg@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
New to the forum. Forgive me if this is not how things work.
My general questions are:
How can one make or obtain a tank for propellant when you want to use
inert gas to pressurize it. Should I purchase a bladder and try to jam it
into an old chemistry cylinder? Or should I have the thing professionally
made (for like $2500 a piece). The rocket size is about 5 inches in
diameter with a design thrust of around 2000 lb. Kerosene and LOX
How should I meter the flow? Should I use an orifice or venturi? How can
I insert the pressure gauges and thermocouples everywhere? How do the
pressure gauges work?
Any help would be greatly appreciated?.
Regards,
Dana
--
Justin Corwin
outlawpoet@xxxxxxxxx
http://programmaticconquest.tumblr.com
http://outlawpoet.tumblr.com