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With the cancellation of Ares1-Y, it looks to be at least
six or eight years before Ares could see a manned flight. Does it make sense to pursue two different paths to replacing the shuttle? I believe that the lack of support for another moon-shot, combined with the glaring need for lower cost to orbit means this program is the one that now makes sense. U.S. Air Force Aims to Launch Space Plane Next Year "As a reusable space plane, the intent of the craft is to serve as a testbed for dozens of technologies in airframe, propulsion and operation, and other items in the hopes of making space transportation and operations significantly more affordable. " http://www.space.com/news/090602-x-37b-space-plane.html s Executive Summary NASA'S SPACE SOLAR POWER EXPLORATORY RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY (SERT) PROGRAM http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=10202&page=1 |
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On Nov 11, 9:50*am, (Joseph Nebus) wrote:
means this * * * * As, clearly, building a human-carrying spaceplane based on the work of a robot spacecraft whose first flight might be sometime next year if all goes well that launches on an expendable rocket will be faster and cheaper than building a human-carrying capsule spacecraft that launches on an expendable rocket. * No, it doesn't. A. It would have to be a lot larger to carry crew, so no hardware can be shared B. This will have a big impact on the launcher, The X-37 in within the fairing. A larger craft would be in the airstream causing integration problems c. The X-37 is missing a lot of crew required systems. Orion is being delayed by Ares I. |
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On Nov 11, 9:50*am, (Joseph Nebus) wrote:
with the glaring need for lower cost to orbit means this program is the one that now makes sense. The X-37 has nothing to do with low cost. It is a spacecraft and not a launcher |
#5
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Me wrote:
On Nov 11, 9:50 am, (Joseph Nebus) wrote: means this As, clearly, building a human-carrying spaceplane based on the work of a robot spacecraft whose first flight might be sometime next year if all goes well that launches on an expendable rocket will be faster and cheaper than building a human-carrying capsule spacecraft that launches on an expendable rocket. No, it doesn't. I think Mr. Nebus was being satirical. Pat |
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On Nov 11, 1:17�pm, Pat Flannery wrote:
Me wrote: On Nov 11, 9:50 am, (Joseph Nebus) wrote: means this � � � � As, clearly, building a human-carrying spaceplane based on the work of a robot spacecraft whose first flight might be sometime next year if all goes well that launches on an expendable rocket will be faster and cheaper than building a human-carrying capsule spacecraft that launches on an expendable rocket. � No, it doesn't. I think Mr. Nebus was being satirical. Pat there have been rumors of a earlier air launched space plane....... vaguely recall it might have been helpful for columbia crew |
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On Nov 11, 9:46*pm, "Jonathan" wrote:
I'm talking to a bunch of rubes. (the well-meaning kind) Post 9/11 does anyone here really believe Bush/Cheney gave a crap about NASA except for what it could do for the military and national security? The Pentagon stripped NASA of all the cutting edge launch technology, leaving NASA's manned program with nothing more than the 'dead-on-arrival' Vision for Space Exploration. Which is certain to inspire no funding at all from this administration. Y'all were screwed, and most of you don't even realize it! Meanwhile, the Pentagon roles out a shiny new prototype no doubt chock full of all the projects that mysteriously were 'canceled' after Bush took office. They were all duds everyone insists, yet fail to comprehend the military would get to cherry pick the best under Bush/Cheney, not settle for the crap that won't fly. Canceled? No, you rubes, it was all transferred to the military black budget. Not true fool. What cutting edge technology? NASA wasn't working anything that was transferred. |
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"Jonathan" wrote in message
... Post 9/11 does anyone here really believe Bush/Cheney gave a crap about NASA except for what it could do for the military and national security? I think Bush gave as much crap about NASA as almost any president. In other words, very little thought. The Pentagon stripped NASA of all the cutting edge launch technology, leaving NASA's manned program with nothing more than the 'dead-on-arrival' Vision for Space Exploration. Which is certain to inspire no funding at all from this administration. What technology? Evidence? |
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On Nov 11, 11:41�pm, "Greg D. Moore \(Strider\)"
wrote: "Jonathan" wrote in message ... Post 9/11 does anyone here really believe Bush/Cheney gave a crap about NASA except for what it could do for the military and national security? I think Bush gave as much crap about NASA as almost any president. �In other words, very little thought. The Pentagon stripped NASA of all the cutting edge launch technology, leaving NASA's manned program with nothing more than the 'dead-on-arrival' Vision for Space Exploration. Which is certain to inspire no funding at all from this administration. What technology? �Evidence? bush was the worst president in a 100 years. he mucked up anything he touched. hey just think what the 2 wars costs could of done in space??? sad isnt it. |
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Snipped text:
" you (sic) ability to build rockets isn't much better." As contrasted to whom? Have we made mistakes? Oh Yeah! Have we made misjudgements? Oh Yeah! But who has accomplished more? Russia and the U.S. have both had many things go wrong with their respective space programs. But whom else would you cite as better in terms of proven performance over a broad scope of spaceflight related activities? Yes, there are other centers of excellence throughout the world, especially in Europe, China, Japan, and India. But in a broad long term view, history does not support the contention that there is a lack of ability to build viable spacecraft. As to a lack of political wisdom or business acumen, that is another discussion. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
...Military Space Plane (X-37b) to Launch February 26 | jonathan[_3_] | Policy | 39 | December 21st 08 02:43 AM |
...Military Space Plane (X-37b) to Launch February 26 | jonathan[_3_] | History | 37 | December 21st 08 02:43 AM |