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{{Unreferenced|date=November 2006}}
{{Unreferenced|date=November 2006}}
Founded in 1985 by George Koopman, [[Bevin McKinney]] and [[James C. Bennett|Jim Bennett]], veterans of Starstruck Inc<ref>David P. Gump. (1990). Space Enterprise: Beyond NASA. Praeger Publishers, New York. pp 28-31</ref>, the '''American Rocket Company''', or '''AMROC''', was a company that developed hybrid rocket motors.
Founded in 1985 by George Koopman, [[Bevin McKinney]] and [[James C. Bennett|Jim Bennett]], veterans of [[Starstruck Inc|Starstruck (company)]]<ref>David P. Gump. (1990). Space Enterprise: Beyond NASA. Praeger Publishers, New York. pp 28-31</ref>, the '''American Rocket Company''', or '''AMROC''', was a company that developed hybrid rocket motors.


It had over 300 [[Hybrid rocket|hybrid rocket motor]] test firings ranging from 4.5&nbsp;kN to 1.1 MN at the Air Force Astronautics Laboratory at Edwards Air Force Base (now part of the Phillips Labs) and [[NASA]]'s [[Stennis Space Center]]'s E1 test stand where it test fired the world's only successful 250,000 pound force (1.1 MN) thrust liquid oxygen/polybutadiene hybrid rocket motor.
It had over 300 [[Hybrid rocket|hybrid rocket motor]] test firings ranging from 4.5&nbsp;kN to 1.1 MN at the Air Force Astronautics Laboratory at Edwards Air Force Base (now part of the Phillips Labs) and [[NASA]]'s [[Stennis Space Center]]'s E1 test stand where it test fired the world's only successful 250,000 pound force (1.1 MN) thrust liquid oxygen/polybutadiene hybrid rocket motor.

Revision as of 21:37, 19 May 2010

Founded in 1985 by George Koopman, Bevin McKinney and Jim Bennett, veterans of Starstruck (company)[1], the American Rocket Company, or AMROC, was a company that developed hybrid rocket motors.

It had over 300 hybrid rocket motor test firings ranging from 4.5 kN to 1.1 MN at the Air Force Astronautics Laboratory at Edwards Air Force Base (now part of the Phillips Labs) and NASA's Stennis Space Center's E1 test stand where it test fired the world's only successful 250,000 pound force (1.1 MN) thrust liquid oxygen/polybutadiene hybrid rocket motor.

Its 5 October 5, 1989 launch of the SET-1 sounding rocket was unsuccessful due to frozen moisture from the air forming an ice plug under the main Liquid Oxygen Valve allowing only 30% of the flow needed for launch.

The company became insolvent and was shut down in May 1996. Its intellectual property was acquired in 1999 by SpaceDev, and its lineage is part of SpaceShipOne (AMROC worked on an N2O-HTPB engine for its SLIMSET sounding rocket effort).


References

  1. ^ David P. Gump. (1990). Space Enterprise: Beyond NASA. Praeger Publishers, New York. pp 28-31