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X-33 Program Status
December 21, 1999
RELEASE: 99-303
X-33 Linear Aerospike Engine Undergoes
First Full-Power Test at Stennis Space Center
A new type of rocket engine that will propel the X-33 experimental launch
vehicle was tested to full power for the first time Dec. 18.
The 18-second test of the XRS-2200 Linear Aerospike Engine was
conducted on the A-1 test facility at NASA's John C. Stennis Space
Center in south Mississippi.
Initial test data indicates satisfactory engine performance throughout the
test. After the test, visual inspection showed some minor pinhole-sized
erosion isolated to the interior wall of one of the engine's 20 thrust cells.
The erosion was within the normal range for development testing and will
not preclude further testing. This was the last planned test for 1999.
Engine testing is scheduled to resume next year.
The XRS-2200 Linear Aerospike Engine was developed and
assembled by Boeing Rocketdyne Propulsion & Power in Canoga Park,
Calif.
The engine will power the X-33, a half-scale, sub-orbital technology
demonstrator of a proposed, commercially-developed, reusable launch
vehicle called VenturStarTM. The X-33 is being developed under a
cooperative agreement between NASA and Lockheed Martin Skunk
Works in Palmdale, Calif. Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville,
Ala., manages the X-33 program for NASA.
"The Stennis and Boeing/Rocketdyne test team have done an
outstanding job, and I'm extremely pleased in achieving this critical
milestone of the first-full power test," said NASA's Pat Mooney, X-33
project manager at Stennis Space Center.
Once testing of the first engine has been successfully completed, two
flight engines will be tested. After successful flight acceptance test of the
engines, the two flight engines will be shipped to Lockheed Martin Skunk
Works in Palmdale to be mounted on the X-33 vehicle.
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