SpaceX
Conducts First Three-Engine
Firing of Falcon 9 Rocket
Space Exploration Technologies
Corp. conducted the first
three-engine firing of its
Falcon 9 medium to heavy lift
rocket at its Texas Test
Facility outside McGregor, on
March 8, 2008. At full power the
engines generated over 270,000
pounds of force, and consumed
1,050 lbs of fuel and liquid
oxygen per second. This
three-engine test again sets the
record as the most powerful test
yet on the towering 235-foot
tall test stand. A total of nine
Merlin 1C engines will power the
Falcon 9 rocket.
The test
series continues with the
addition of two engines for a
total of five, then finally the
full compliment of nine engines.
With all engines firing, the
Falcon 9 can generate over one
million pounds of thrust in
vacuum - four times the maximum
thrust of a 747 aircraft.
“The
incremental approach to testing
allows us to closely observe how
each additional engine
influences the entire system,”
said Tom Mueller, Vice President
of Propulsion for SpaceX. “This
ensures that we obtain as much
data, knowledge and experience
as possible as we approach the
full nine engine configuration.
To date we have not encountered
any unexpected interactions
between the engines.”
The Merlin 1C
next generation liquid fueled
rocket booster engine is among
the highest performing gas
generator cycle kerosene engines
ever built, exceeding the Boeing
Delta II main engine, the
Lockheed Atlas II main engine,
and on par with the Saturn V F-1
engine. It is the first new
American booster engine in a
decade and only the second
American booster engine since
the development of the Space
Shuttle Main Engine thirty years
ago.