
This initial version of the Roton had been designed with the small communications satellite market in mind. Thus multiple engines would be needed at the base as well as at the rotor tips. One problem found during research at Rotary was that once the vehicle left the atmosphere additional thrust would be necessary. However, the blades could be used to soft land the vehicle, so its landing system carried no additional cost. Thus, there was no overall gain from this method during ascent. Ĭalculations showed that the helicopter blades modestly increased the effective specific impulse ( I sp) by approximately 20–30 seconds, essentially only carrying the blades into orbit "for free". Once the air density thinned to the point that helicopter flight was impractical, the vehicle would continue its ascent on pure rocket power, with the rotor acting as a giant turbopump. Gary Hudson's and Bevin McKinney's initial concept was to merge a launch vehicle with a helicopter: spinning rotor blades, powered by tip jets, would lift the vehicle in the earliest stage of launch. Hudson and McKinney were joined by co-founders Frederick Giarrusso, Dan DeLong, James Grote, Tom Brosz, and Anne Hudson, who together launched the company in October 1996. The resulting article resulted in a commitment of funding from billionaire Walt Anderson, which was combined with an initial investment from author Tom Clancy and allowed the company to get started. A full-scale test vehicle made three hover flights in 1999, but the company exhausted its funds and closed in early 2001.īevin McKinney had been thinking about the idea of a launch vehicle using helicopter blades for several years, when Wired magazine asked Gary Hudson to write an article on the concept. The fuselage for their vehicles was made by Scaled Composites, at the same airport, while the company developed the novel engine design and helicopter-like landing system. The company gathered considerable venture capital from angel investors and opened a factory headquartered in a 45,000-square-foot (4,200 m 2) facility at Mojave Air and Space Port in Mojave, California.

The Roton was intended to reduce costs of launching payloads into low earth orbit by a factor of ten. In 1996, Rotary Rocket Company was formed to commercialize the concept. The design was initially conceived by Bevin McKinney, who shared it with Gary Hudson. Rotary Rocket Company was a rocketry company that developed the Roton concept in the late 1990s as a fully reusable single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) crewed spacecraft.
