Country of origin | Britain |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Bristol Siddeley |
Application | 1st stage booster |
Predecessor | Armstrong Siddeley Stentor |
Successor | Gamma 301 |
Liquid-fuel engine | |
Propellant | Hydrogen peroxide / kerosene |
Mixture ratio | 8:1 (approx.) |
Configuration | |
Chamber | 4, gimballed in opposed pairs |
Performance | |
Thrust (SL) | 16,400 lbf (73 kN) |
Black Knight tail showing engines
|
|
Application | 1st stage booster |
---|---|
Predecessor | Gamma 201 |
Successor | Gamma 8 |
Liquid-fuel engine | |
Propellant | Hydrogen peroxide / kerosene |
Mixture ratio | 8:1 (approx.) |
Configuration | |
Chamber | 4, gimballed in opposed pairs |
Performance | |
Thrust (SL) | 17,000–21,600 lbf (76–96 kN)-21,000 lbf (93 kN) |
Specific impulse | 250 seconds (2.5 km/s) |
Burn time | 120 seconds |
Gamma 2 rocket engine, used for the second stage
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|
Application | 2nd stage |
---|---|
Predecessor | Gamma 301 |
Successor | Larch (rocket engine) |
Liquid-fuel engine | |
Propellant | Hydrogen peroxide / kerosene |
Configuration | |
Chamber | 2, extended |
Performance | |
Thrust (SL) | 14,523 lbf (64.60 kN) |
Burn time | 110–120 seconds |
Gamma 8 rocket engine on Black Arrow 1st stage
|
|
Application | 1st stage booster |
---|---|
Predecessor | Gamma 301 |
Liquid-fuel engine | |
Propellant | Hydrogen peroxide / kerosene |
Configuration | |
Chamber | 8, gimballed in pairs |
Performance | |
Thrust (SL) | 52,785 lbf (234.80 kN) |
Burn time | 125 seconds |
The Armstrong Siddeley, later Bristol Siddeley Gamma was a family of rocket engines used in British rocketry, including the Black Knight and Black Arrow launch vehicles. They burned kerosene fuel and hydrogen peroxide. Their construction was based on a common combustion chamber design, used either singly or in clusters of up to eight.
They were developed by Armstrong-Siddeley in Coventry, which later became Bristol Siddeley in 1959, and finally Rolls-Royce in 1966.
Engine static testing was carried out at High Down Rocket Test Site, near The Needles on the Isle of Wight (50°39′38.90″N 1°34′38.25″W / 50.6608056°N 1.5772917°W). (Spadeadam in Cumbria wasn't used for testing until Blue Streak, after Gamma).
Use of kerosene / hydrogen peroxide engines has been a particularly British trait in rocket development, there being few comparable engines (such as the LR-40) from the USA.
The combustion of kerosene with hydrogen peroxide is given by the formula
where CH2 is the approximate formula of kerosene (see RP-1 for a discussion of kerosene rocket fuels). This compares with the combustion of kerosene and liquid oxygen (LOX)
showing that the exhaust from kerosene / peroxide is predominantly water. This results in a very clean exhaust (second only to cryogenic LO2/LH2) and a distinctive clear flame. The low molecular mass of water also helps to increase rocket thrust performance.