indy1687
Aerospace
- Mar 10, 2005
- 16
Hi,
I am thinking about building a liquid rocket engine as a project. I have come up with a plan to cast the thrust chamber out of aluminium in the "full-mould" process. For those of you who do not no the process, its basical; you make the mould out of expanded polystyrene, cover the mould with sand in a moulding box and pour your molten metal on to the runner connected to the mould and the polystyrene should turn into CO2 and water vapour by the heat.
So my qustion is, is this a risky plan?, not in terms of casting but of the final thrust chamber, would it be safe to use?.
Finaly would I be better off to turn a thrust chamber on a lathe?.
Thank you for your time.
I am thinking about building a liquid rocket engine as a project. I have come up with a plan to cast the thrust chamber out of aluminium in the "full-mould" process. For those of you who do not no the process, its basical; you make the mould out of expanded polystyrene, cover the mould with sand in a moulding box and pour your molten metal on to the runner connected to the mould and the polystyrene should turn into CO2 and water vapour by the heat.
So my qustion is, is this a risky plan?, not in terms of casting but of the final thrust chamber, would it be safe to use?.
Finaly would I be better off to turn a thrust chamber on a lathe?.
Thank you for your time.