
NASA and Aerojet Rocketdyne Sign Contract to Restart Production of the RS-25 Engine for the Space Launch System
"SLS is America's next generation heavy lift system," said
The
The first flight test of the SLS is slated for 2018, and it will be configured for a 70-metric-ton lift capacity and carry an uncrewed Orion spacecraft. As SLS evolves, it will be the most powerful rocket ever built and provide an unprecedented lift capability of 130 metric tons.
"The RS-25 engines designed under this new contract will be expendable with significant affordability improvements over previous versions," added
The new engines will incorporate simplified, yet highly reliable, designs to reduce manufacturing time and cost. For example, the overall engine is expected to simplify key components with dramatically reduced part count and number of welds. At the same time, the engine is being certified to a higher operational thrust level.
In addition to the design simplification, ongoing Value Stream Mapping (VSM) analyses have identified significant cost and schedule benefits by eliminating inefficiencies, redundancies or waste in the production process flow. VSMs were proven effective during the shuttle program and those lessons learned are being applied to the RS-25 restart.
A video news release is available with additional information here.
CONTACT:Glenn Mahone ,Aerojet Rocketdyne , 202-302-9941 Glenn.Mahone@Rocket.com Mary Engola,Aerojet Rocketdyne , 571-289-1371 Mary.Engola@Rocket.com
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