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Pratt & Whitney XLR-129

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American rocket engine design
Cut-drawing of XLR-129 demonstrator engine

The XLR-129 was an American rocket engine design that would have used liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen propellants. It was developed by Pratt & Whitney and initially was to develop 250,000 lbf (1,100 kN) of thrust. It featured an expanding nozzle in order to tune performance over a wide range of altitudes.

The XLR-129 was designed to be reusable and was initially paid for by the US Air Force, for a 1960s program called ISINGLASS, which was to be a manned rocket plane that was intended for surveillance overflights. For the Space Shuttle an attempt was made to increase the thrust to 350,000 lbf (1,600 kN), but in the end Rocketdyne's Space Shuttle Main Engine was used instead.

The XLR-129 program was never completed, no complete engine was ever produced, but many systems were developed and tested.

References

  1. "The Space Review: A bat outta Hell: The ISINGLASS Mach 22 follow-on to OXCART".
  2. "Ch9".
  3. "Air Force Reusable Rocket Engine Program XLR129-P-1. Volume 1". US Air Force. January 1971. Archived from the original on 2012-03-12. Retrieved 2010-05-22.

External links

Pratt & Whitney aircraft engines
Radial engines
H piston engines
Free-piston gas turbines
Turbojets
Turbofans
Turboprops/Turboshafts
Propfans
Rocket engines
Aeroderivative gas
turbine engines
Subsidiaries
Key people
Joint development aeroengines
See also: Pratt & Whitney Canada aeroengines


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