reply to post by solidshot
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On a technical note, it's the vaporization/expansion of the water that provides the cooling effect
which make the incoming air DENSER and thus helps the combustion process. Takes advantage
of the 2nd law of thermodynamics...(i.e. Entropy/Equilibrium/Conservation of Energy in a system).
To skirt some fine Early 90's Technical Operations lines, I'm gonna say that one method we used to
cool high performance systems was to use pressurized Methane AND FINELY INJECTED Water Vapor
which creates an initial cooling effect of the RAPIDLY EXPANDING methane and then using a
"special" catalyst create Carbon Monoxide which was used as a LUBRICANT/Secondary coolant
for critical parts in the turbine systems and then recombine the resulting Hydrogen gas
with oxygen to form ANOTHER water cooling cycle on incoming rammed air. Performance gains
were an ASTOUNDING 20%+. The combustion/ignition chamber design we used soon came out on
a very famous Big-3 truck that we see today. It's the specialty fuel and coolant injection designs
that made ALL THE DIFFERENCE in terms of performance gains. Tens of THOUSANDS of total
hours of computational fluid dynamics testing was the KEY ingredient! Think many racks and racks
of Motorola 68030 cpu's running at MUCH LESS than 100 mhz do the work what ONE Windows
AMD Opteron/Firestream cpu/gpu box will do today!
Just to give you a hint or three, we're talking about 205,000 lbs of thrust on a 110,000 lbs craft
over the 170,000 +/- lbs of thrust on straight liquified fuels. And as the craft got lighter, and
and the aerodynamic sheathing sleeker, that initial thrust numbers increase counted BIG TIME
for the up-curved-based final velocity gain!
My colleagues now say that the Beatles song of "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds"
is a most apt description of just how heady and high those days were in terms
of rocking the aero-performance envelope!
edit on 2013/9/26 by StargateSG7 because: hint hint!