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Old August 31st 06, 09:17 PM posted to sci.space.history
Rusty
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Default LockMart Wins CEV Contract - NASAWATCH


Rusty wrote:
LockMart Wins CEV Contract - NASAWATCH

http://www.nasawatch.com/

http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/new...thewritestuff/

-Rusty




NASA Official Announcement


http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2006..._contract.html

RELEASE: 06-305

NASA Selects Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle Prime Contractor

NASA selected Wednesday Lockheed Martin Corp., based in Bethesda, Md.,
as the prime contractor to design, develop, and build Orion, America's
spacecraft for a new generation of explorers.

Orion will be capable of transporting four crewmembers for lunar
missions and later supporting crew transfers for Mars missions. Orion
could also carry up to six crew members to and from the International
Space Station.

The first Orion launch with humans onboard is planned for no later than
2014, and for a human moon landing no later than 2020. Orion will form
a key element of extending a sustained human presence beyond low-Earth
orbit to advance commerce, science and national leadership.

The contract with Lockheed Martin is the conclusion of a two-phase
selection process. NASA began working with the two contractor teams,
Northrop Grumman/Boeing and Lockheed Martin, in July 2005 to perform
concept refinement, trade studies, analysis of requirements and
preliminary design options. Lockheed Martin will be responsible for the
design, development, testing, and evaluation (DDT&E) of the new
spacecraft.

Manufacturing and integration of the vehicle components will take place
at contractor facilities across the country. Lockheed Martin will
perform the majority of the Orion vehicle engineering work at NASA's
Johnson Space Center, Houston, and complete final assembly of the
vehicle at the Kennedy Space Center, Fla. All 10 NASA centers will
provide technical and engineering support to the Orion project.

The contract is structured into separate schedules for DDT&E with
options for production of additional spacecraft and sustaining
engineering. During DDT&E, NASA will use an end-item
cost-plus-award-fee incentive contract. This makes the award fee
subject to final determination after the contractor has demonstrated
that it meets the technical, cost, and schedule requirements of the
contract.

DDT&E work is estimated to occur from Sept. 8, 2006, through Sept. 7,
2013. The estimated value is $3.9 billion.

Production and sustaining engineering activities are contract options
that will allow NASA to obtain additional vehicles as needed. Delivery
orders over and above those in the DDT&E portion will specify the
number of spacecraft to be produced and the schedule on which they
should be delivered.

Post-development spacecraft delivery orders may begin as early as Sept.
8, 2009, through Sept. 7, 2019, if all options are exercised. The
estimated value of these orders is negotiated based on future manifest
requirements and knowledge gained through the DDT&E process and is
estimated not to exceed $3.5 billion.

Sustaining engineering work will be assigned through task orders. The
work is expected to occur from Sept. 8, 2009, through Sept. 7, 2019,
with an estimated value of $750 million, if all options are exercised.

For information about Orion, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/orion