Difference between revisions of "Titov V(2001)"
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Development of the [[spaceplane]] proceeded in two stages. The first stage was to develop the orbiter, which would get to orbit by staging a drop tank. The Lockheed Starclipper was taken as a design starting point, though the final configuration of the [[Orion(2001)|Orion II/III]] was different in many details. | Development of the [[spaceplane]] proceeded in two stages. The first stage was to develop the orbiter, which would get to orbit by staging a drop tank. The Lockheed Starclipper was taken as a design starting point, though the final configuration of the [[Orion(2001)|Orion II/III]] was different in many details. | ||
− | The '''Titov V''' was not; it unabashedly shows its origins as the borrowed [ | + | The '''Titov V''' was not; it unabashedly shows its origins as the borrowed [http://www.astronautix.com/lvs/staipper.htm Lockheed Starclipper]. |
− | |||
Both designs wound up being horizontal takeoff, assisted by a steam catapult. This was driven partly by customer demand – airlines wanted an airplane that could reject a takeoff or return to base at any point, not a flame-belching vertical-takeoff behemoth that needed to get supersonic before it was possible to abort and return to land. This also allowed easier adaptation | Both designs wound up being horizontal takeoff, assisted by a steam catapult. This was driven partly by customer demand – airlines wanted an airplane that could reject a takeoff or return to base at any point, not a flame-belching vertical-takeoff behemoth that needed to get supersonic before it was possible to abort and return to land. This also allowed easier adaptation | ||
to the later two-stage concept, as no engines would have to be removed to make that work. The Titov used a different nomenclature as the Orion II/III; the drop tank was Blok A (Titov A), the booster Titov B, and the orbiter Titov V (third letter in the Cyrillic alphabet). | to the later two-stage concept, as no engines would have to be removed to make that work. The Titov used a different nomenclature as the Orion II/III; the drop tank was Blok A (Titov A), the booster Titov B, and the orbiter Titov V (third letter in the Cyrillic alphabet). | ||
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Both spaceplanes use air-breathing propulsion to stretch the glide or perform a go-around. The Titov V places a subsonic commercial jetliner engine in the tail, protected by a cover which opens below Mach 1. This will change you over to the jet engine's fuel tank. | Both spaceplanes use air-breathing propulsion to stretch the glide or perform a go-around. The Titov V places a subsonic commercial jetliner engine in the tail, protected by a cover which opens below Mach 1. This will change you over to the jet engine's fuel tank. | ||
− | There are some differences between the spaceplanes; as already noted, the Orion can cruise supersonically. The Orion has a dedicated passenger version; the Titov has a single model that drops in a passenger module for passenger service. A dedicated version with windows would make little sense in a lifting-body, where windows would give views of the hydrogen tanks. Due to the configuration, the Titov V can launch with a booster AND a drop tank at the same time. Nicknamed the | + | There are some differences between the spaceplanes; as already noted, the Orion can cruise supersonically. The Orion has a dedicated passenger version; the Titov has a single model that drops in a passenger module for passenger service. A dedicated version with windows would make little sense in a lifting-body, where windows would give views of the hydrogen tanks. |
+ | |||
+ | Due to the configuration, the Titov V can launch with a booster AND a drop tank at the same time. Nicknamed the “'''kludge'''” by American analysts, the configuration is rarely used, mainly for military quick-reaction flights to high orbits. Both spaceplanes dock with station V using a “virtual” docking port that allows the craft to move into position nose-first, but has no physical reality. At Station V, docking arms and cradles (not animated!) would hold the spaceplane in position (or move it to a location off the centerline) and a boarding access arm would snake up to the hatch on the side of the craft. The side hatch is also a legal docking port. The other craft would have to have a flexible collar to mate to the spaceplane's less-than-perfectly-flat exterior face. But this does not seem to be a major problem with 2001 technology. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Both spaceplanes are commercial successes, including export sales. China makes Titovs under license; other countries have airlines and sometimes militaries that operate Orions | ||
(Western Europe, Australia) or Titovs (Eastern Europe, India). | (Western Europe, Australia) or Titovs (Eastern Europe, India). | ||
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+ | [[Category: Articles]] | ||
{{Wo2001}} | {{Wo2001}} |
Latest revision as of 11:48, 16 October 2022
The Titov V is a spacecraft included in the add-on World of 2001.
Alternative history[edit]
Development of the spaceplane proceeded in two stages. The first stage was to develop the orbiter, which would get to orbit by staging a drop tank. The Lockheed Starclipper was taken as a design starting point, though the final configuration of the Orion II/III was different in many details.
The Titov V was not; it unabashedly shows its origins as the borrowed Lockheed Starclipper. Both designs wound up being horizontal takeoff, assisted by a steam catapult. This was driven partly by customer demand – airlines wanted an airplane that could reject a takeoff or return to base at any point, not a flame-belching vertical-takeoff behemoth that needed to get supersonic before it was possible to abort and return to land. This also allowed easier adaptation to the later two-stage concept, as no engines would have to be removed to make that work. The Titov used a different nomenclature as the Orion II/III; the drop tank was Blok A (Titov A), the booster Titov B, and the orbiter Titov V (third letter in the Cyrillic alphabet).
Operation[edit]
Orion II/III and Titov V operate the same way: the spaceplane is launched with a drop tank or booster stage, catapulted off and up from a steam catapult. A wing-borne flight phase gets the combination above the atmosphere with low drag losses. The engines throttle back to maintain a comfortable acceleration level (3.5 G's for Titov V). Propellants are fed to the upper stage so its engines can help push. The booster / drop tank carries most of the propellant and does most of the work, staging at around Mach 20.
You can switch viewpoint and fly the booster home at this point, making a high-mach 180-degree turn. At the end of this, you'll be much slower; stretch the glide and turn on the airbreathing engines once they are usable. Internal tanks fly the spaceplane the rest of the way to orbit, serve for on-orbit maneuvering, and perform the de-orbit maneuver. The “stage” of the vehicle can be incremented on-orbit, disabling the big engines which are very overpowered for orbital maneuvering. All engines (except the jets) share the same LOX/LH2 propellant tanks; there is no separate RCS or de-orbit tank. Save some! The Titov V uses the Soviet folding-wing concept to reduce re-entry heat loads. After re-entry at high angles of attack, the wings will fold down automatically once below Mach 5, dramatically improving the glide.
Both spaceplanes use air-breathing propulsion to stretch the glide or perform a go-around. The Titov V places a subsonic commercial jetliner engine in the tail, protected by a cover which opens below Mach 1. This will change you over to the jet engine's fuel tank.
There are some differences between the spaceplanes; as already noted, the Orion can cruise supersonically. The Orion has a dedicated passenger version; the Titov has a single model that drops in a passenger module for passenger service. A dedicated version with windows would make little sense in a lifting-body, where windows would give views of the hydrogen tanks.
Due to the configuration, the Titov V can launch with a booster AND a drop tank at the same time. Nicknamed the “kludge” by American analysts, the configuration is rarely used, mainly for military quick-reaction flights to high orbits. Both spaceplanes dock with station V using a “virtual” docking port that allows the craft to move into position nose-first, but has no physical reality. At Station V, docking arms and cradles (not animated!) would hold the spaceplane in position (or move it to a location off the centerline) and a boarding access arm would snake up to the hatch on the side of the craft. The side hatch is also a legal docking port. The other craft would have to have a flexible collar to mate to the spaceplane's less-than-perfectly-flat exterior face. But this does not seem to be a major problem with 2001 technology.
Both spaceplanes are commercial successes, including export sales. China makes Titovs under license; other countries have airlines and sometimes militaries that operate Orions (Western Europe, Australia) or Titovs (Eastern Europe, India).
Keyboard controls[edit]
U | Set a launch azimuth for the autopilot (the scenario provides one already) |
O | Start the autopilot. |
J | Jettison the next stage or payload. Jettisoning the payload only works when the bay doors are open. |
-3 Booster stage only | |
-2 Booster stage with orbiter (next stage will skip to Stage 1) | |
-1 Booster, drop tank, AND orbiter (Titov only) | |
0 Drop tank and orbiter | |
1 Orbiter with main engines | |
2 Orbiter, main engines disabled (OMS engines enabled) | |
3 Orbiter on airbreathing engines | |
K | Open/close the payload bay doors |
P | Open/close the side personnel hatch |
E | EVA from the spacecraft (only if the personnel hatch is open) |
G | Lower/raise the landing gear |
B | Toggles the wheel brakes |
CTRL+J | Join a nearby payload to a suitable attach point. (Only if point is within 20 meters distance and 20 degrees of alignment) |
The World of 2001 |
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Spacecraft: Aquarius | Aquarius Id | Aries | Bondarenko | Centaur-O | Draco | Gagarin | Herculis | Komarov | Komarov-bis | Merkur | Moonbus | Orion | Patsayev | Polaris 1-XE | Rocketbus | Skorpion | Taurus | Titov V | Titov G Space stations: Cytherean Station One | Space Station III | Space Station IV | Space Station V Surface bases: Aberporth | Baikonur | Brest | Canberra | Cape Canaveral | Clavius Base | Cuxhaven | Hainan | Kadena AB | Korolevgrad | Lunar Observatory | Moscow | Phobos Base | Port Lowell | Prime Base | Serenitatis Base | Tchalinko | Tranquility Museum | Tycho | Washington |