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bearnard123 wrote:Have you heard about the new special type of rocket fuel that is made from plastic waste?
bearnard123 wrote:Have you heard about the new special type of rocket fuel that is made from plastic waste? One company uses particular kinds of plastic to remake them in rocket fuel. The new kind of fuel has already been tested and the result is pretty good
bearnard123 wrote:The new type of fuel ( remade from plastic has already been tested. The result of the test was pretty successfull, and has shown that the new type of rocket fuel is 1% - 3% better than kerosene by its energy characteristics. Frankly to say, I am not sure if this kind of fuel can be used for long space journeys.
flyingturtle wrote:I don't think it will ever pay off. A Falcon 9 launch uses as much fuel as a fully tanked Boeing 777. The kind of kerosene used for fireworks and rocketry is not that expensive, and not such a scarce resource. If we wanted to save fossil fuels, there are more sensible avenues.
bearnard123 wrote:Also, I wanna add that there is an alternative kind of rocket that has a term ``hybrid rocket`` The term ``hybrid`` was given to it because it combines solid Hydroxyl Terminated Polybutadiene (HTPB) fuel and 90% Hydrogen Peroxide (H202) liquid oxidiser.
MadAstronaut wrote:Wow, rocket fuel made from plastic waste is something really new for me. I don't understand why people negatively perceive everything. Our aerospace industry develops, and it's amazing. It's too early for me to make any conclusions about the effectiveness of this fuel, I need to spend time finding more information about it, but I think it's a rather good replacement for traditional solid fuel.
tommy1808 wrote:bearnard123 wrote:The new type of fuel ( remade from plastic has already been tested. The result of the test was pretty successfull, and has shown that the new type of rocket fuel is 1% - 3% better than kerosene by its energy characteristics. Frankly to say, I am not sure if this kind of fuel can be used for long space journeys.
reminds me of https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syntin
bearnard123 wrote:I consider this kind of fuel a good invention, however as I have already said it is only useful for some small launches and it is not good for some long space journeys. Also, according to the words of scientists who worked on ecosence fuel, this fuel is eco friendly, so this fact makes it even better
MadAstronaut wrote:bearnard123 wrote:I consider this kind of fuel a good invention, however as I have already said it is only useful for some small launches and it is not good for some long space journeys. Also, according to the words of scientists who worked on ecosence fuel, this fuel is eco friendly, so this fact makes it even better
The impossibility of using this fuel for long launches is a big drawback. Don't you know if scientists tried to modify this fuel to make it suitable for long space flights?
JayinKitsap wrote:Practicality is important, all aviation requires the highest reliability from its engines. Why fool around with anything other than virgin fuels to ensure that reliability. There are plenty of processes - like cement kilns, marine freighters, large boilers, even on land stationary gas turbines where variability in the fuel does not affect safety. Use the recycled or less pure fuels there where is does not impact safety.
In aviation all the aluminum is virgin, let the recycled aluminum go into cans.
bearnard123 wrote:JayinKitsap wrote:Practicality is important, all aviation requires the highest reliability from its engines. Why fool around with anything other than virgin fuels to ensure that reliability. There are plenty of processes - like cement kilns, marine freighters, large boilers, even on land stationary gas turbines where variability in the fuel does not affect safety. Use the recycled or less pure fuels there where is does not impact safety.
In aviation all the aluminum is virgin, let the recycled aluminum go into cans.
The type of the fuel I`ve mentioned in this thread has already been tested and the results of the test were quite good. Also, the Skyrora XL rocket uses fuel made from waste plastic.
MadAstronaut wrote:bearnard123 wrote:JayinKitsap wrote:Practicality is important, all aviation requires the highest reliability from its engines. Why fool around with anything other than virgin fuels to ensure that reliability. There are plenty of processes - like cement kilns, marine freighters, large boilers, even on land stationary gas turbines where variability in the fuel does not affect safety. Use the recycled or less pure fuels there where is does not impact safety.
In aviation all the aluminum is virgin, let the recycled aluminum go into cans.
The type of the fuel I`ve mentioned in this thread has already been tested and the results of the test were quite good. Also, the Skyrora XL rocket uses fuel made from waste plastic.
As I know, Skyrora XL is the only spacecraft of this company that uses this eco-fuel. I hope that Skylark L, SkyHy, Skylark Nano will also be reconstructed to use Ecosene for flights.
bearnard123 wrote:MadAstronaut wrote:bearnard123 wrote:The type of the fuel I`ve mentioned in this thread has already been tested and the results of the test were quite good. Also, the Skyrora XL rocket uses fuel made from waste plastic.
As I know, Skyrora XL is the only spacecraft of this company that uses this eco-fuel. I hope that Skylark L, SkyHy, Skylark Nano will also be reconstructed to use Ecosene for flights.
I guess it depends on how rockets that use this kind of petrol will perform. Probably some new rockets will be made that use this new type of fuel remade from plastic