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McGregor - March 4, 2000 - Beal Aerospace fired up Satruday the largest liquid rocket engine built since the Apollo program of the 1960s. The 810,000-pound vacuum thrust hydrogen peroxide/kerosene engine, designated the BA-810, is the Stage 2 engine for Beal�s forthcoming BA-2 heavy-lift launch vehicle, scheduled for inaugural launch in 2002. The engine made a 21-second firing at the company�s engine test facility in McGregor, Texas before a large crowd of company employees, industry and government VIPs, news media and other guests. Today�s test was the third firing of the engine. Beal engineers completed 30 seconds of testing on the engine in two previous tests in preparation for today�s firing. The engine consumes almost 3,000 pounds of propellants per second of operation and generates the equivalent of 6.7 million horsepower. A new thrust chamber was fitted for today�s tests. The chamber used in the previous two tests is undergoing analysis at Beal�s engineering and assembly facility in Frisco, Texas, near Dallas, and will return to the stand for future tests. "This is a remarkable achievement for our program," said company founder and CEO Andrew Beal. "Our program started small in 1997, with a vision to build a more reliable, more economic means to space for the international satellite community. "After a steady stream of successes in our engine development and composite-tank programs, we�re beginning to generate a lot of attention. Building the largest liquid engine in 30 years is an extraordinary achievement � particularly for a private company." The engine marks several milestones in the aerospace community:
The McGregor test facility also houses a five-ton-per-day hydrogen peroxide concentrator, designed and built by company engineers. Headquartered in Frisco, Texas, near Dallas, Beal Aerospace designs, is building and will launch heavy-lift vehicles for the international satellite community.
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