Fishing through some of the recent threads here, I had an idea (and my head still hurts).
Some pretty big payloads can be air-dropped on pallets out of a military cargo aircraft and the can cruise pretty high. A C-130J has a 42,000 lb payload and a service ceiling of 28,000 ft, a C-27J Spartan has a 25,000 lb payload and a service ceiling of 30,000 ft. Has anyone ever come up with a scheme for, or tried, a microsatellite launcher carried to altitude and then air-dropped out the back of a cargo aircraft for mid-air ignition?
It's not hard to imagine a couple of schemes that might work. True, you give up some altitude and speed compared to something like a B-52 or OSC's L-1011, but you gain a great deal of flexibility in terms of the shape and configuration of the launcher, all without any modifications to the carrier aircraft whatsoever. Has it ever been tried or seriously examined?
Cheers,
Matthew
Some pretty big payloads can be air-dropped on pallets out of a military cargo aircraft and the can cruise pretty high. A C-130J has a 42,000 lb payload and a service ceiling of 28,000 ft, a C-27J Spartan has a 25,000 lb payload and a service ceiling of 30,000 ft. Has anyone ever come up with a scheme for, or tried, a microsatellite launcher carried to altitude and then air-dropped out the back of a cargo aircraft for mid-air ignition?
It's not hard to imagine a couple of schemes that might work. True, you give up some altitude and speed compared to something like a B-52 or OSC's L-1011, but you gain a great deal of flexibility in terms of the shape and configuration of the launcher, all without any modifications to the carrier aircraft whatsoever. Has it ever been tried or seriously examined?
Cheers,
Matthew