preburner shown during a 2015 sub-system test on a test stand at
Stennis Space Center. In the full-flow rocket engine, the preburner exhaust is fed into a turbine and then into the main combustion chamber. Several variants of the staged combustion cycle exist. Preburners that burn a small portion of oxidizer with a full flow of fuel are called , while preburners that burn a small portion of fuel with a full flow of oxidizer are called . The RD-180 has an oxidizer-rich preburner, while the RS-25 has two fuel-rich preburners. The SpaceX Raptor has both oxidizer-rich and fuel-rich preburners, a design called
full-flow staged combustion. Staged combustion designs can be either or . In the single-shaft design, one set of preburner and turbine drives both propellant turbopumps. Examples include the
Energomash RD-180 and the
Blue Origin BE-4. In the twin-shaft design, the two propellant turbopumps are driven by separate turbines, which are in turn driven by the outflow of either one or separate preburners. Examples of twin-shaft designs include the
Rocketdyne RS-25, the
JAXA LE-7, and
Raptor. Relative to a single-shaft design, the twin-shaft design requires an additional turbine (and possibly another preburner), but allows for individual control of the two turbopumps. Hydrolox engines are typically twin-shaft designs due to greatly differing propellant densities. In addition to the propellant turbopumps, staged combustion engines often require smaller boost pumps to prevent both preburner
backflow and turbopump
cavitation. For example, the RD-180 and RS-25 use boost pumps driven by
tap-off and
expander cycles, as well as
pressurized tanks, to incrementally increase propellant pressure prior to entering the preburner.
Full-flow staged combustion cycle Full-flow staged combustion (FFSC) is a twin-shaft staged combustion fuel cycle design that uses both oxidizer-rich and fuel-rich preburners where the entire supply of both propellants passes through the turbines. Benefits of the full-flow staged combustion cycle include turbines that run cooler and at lower pressure, due to increased mass flow, leading to a longer engine life and higher reliability. As an example, up to 25 flights were anticipated for an engine design studied by the
DLR (German Aerospace Center) in the frame of the
SpaceLiner project, Further, the full-flow cycle eliminates the need for an interpropellant turbine seal normally required to separate oxidizer-rich gas from the fuel turbopump or fuel-rich gas from the oxidizer turbopump, thus improving reliability. Since the use of both fuel and oxidizer preburners results in full
gasification of each propellant before entering the combustion chamber, FFSC engines belong to a broader class of rocket engines called . the methalox Zenith engine developed for the first stage of the
Stoke Space Nova vehicle in 2024, and Mjölnir by New Frontier Aerospace in 2025. The first
flight test of a full-flow staged-combustion engine
occurred on 25 July 2019 when SpaceX flew their Raptor
methalox FFSC engine on the
Starhopper test rocket, at their
South Texas Launch Site. As of April 2026, the Raptor is the only FFSC engine that has flown on a launch vehicle. ==Applications==