Under the MB-XX program two engines were developed: the MARC-60 (MB-60) and the MB-35. Please note that the below table uses specifications as listed in 2003, and the MARC-60 engine has since then evolved.
^The MB-35 features a stowed nozzle extension that is extended during flight, similar to the one found on the RL10[2]
History
The MARC-60's (then MB-60) development program was announced on 14 February 2000 by Boeing'sRocketdyne division and Japan'sMitsubishi Heavy Industries, as a part of the MB-XX family of cryogenic upper stage rocket engines.[1] The aim of the MB-XX program was to develop an engine with "robust operating margins, high reliability, increased thrust, and high specific impulse at an affordable cost".[2] The MB-XX family of engines was intended to be used on new or upgraded upper stages of Boeing'sDelta IV and MHI'sH-IIA families of launch vehicles. Potential applications also included Lockheed Martin'sAtlas V.[2] Both Delta IV and Atlas V are now operated by United Launch Alliance.
Development of the MB-XX family of engines was started in early 1999.[2] From 2000 to 2001, market forces drove the focus of the MB-XX program from the 267 kN (60,000 lbf) MB-60 to the 156 kN (35,000 lbf) MB-35. The MB-35 was not a new design, instead the existing MB-60 design was tuned to operate at the lower thrust level.[3] The MB-35 was designed to be a modern, drop-in replacement for the Aerojet RocketdyneRL10.[2]
Component-level testing of the MB-XX demonstrator was completed in 2004, and a system-level demonstrator engine was successfully hot-fired in September 2005.[4]
In 2013, NASA was evaluating MARC-60 as the engine of choice for the Space Launch System'sExploration Upper Stage (EUS). The study explored the possibility of utilizing two MARC-60 engines in place of four RL10 engines, as well as the possibility of the stage using a single J-2X engine.[5] Under the plan, the engine's control unit would have been provided by NASA.[6] The proposal also resulted in the engine being renamed to MARC-60, as Rocketdyne had changed hands multiple times after the MB-60's (Mitsubishi Boeing-Rocketdyne) inception in 1999.[7] In 2016 NASA announced that the EUS would be powered by four RL10C-3 engines, dropping both MARC-60 and J-2X.[8]
See also
RL60, a LOX/LH2 expander cycle engine of same thrust and weight class
RL10, the closed expander cycle LOX/LH2 engine that was supposed to be replaced by MB-35, the down-scaled version of MARC-60