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http://aviationnow.ecnext.com/free-s...ticle=02215top
Aviation Week & Space Technology Trial By Fire 02/20/2005 01:42:58 PM By Craig Covault TRIAL BY FIRE Boeing is preparing a range of Delta IV Heavy launcher options for NASA Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) and unmanned cargo transportation architectures to the Moon and Mars, now that the massive new rocket has been flight tested. The Dec. 21 launch of the 232-ft. vehicle on 2 million lb. thrust marked the largest all-liquid expendable booster flown since the last Saturn V in 1973. A second Delta IV Heavy mission is scheduled for this summer carrying a U.S. Air Force missile warning satellite. The first launch carried a dummy payload. Boeing wants NASA to consider the Delta IV Heavy for manned CEV missions, but is also pushing the Heavy for unmanned exploration launch roles. One Delta IV Medium version could also be a CEV player. Boeing says even modest upgrades could double the Delta Heavy's Earth orbit capability to more than 50 metric tons, including being able to fire up to 20 metric tons on escape trajectories to Mars. The current Heavy, like that tested in December, can already send about 10 metric tons to the Moon, while modest upgrades could more than double the lunar tonnage. NASA is asking all exploration program elements to standardize on metric ton references. Also among the options are performance upgrades using new upper-stage engines--including the Pratt & Whitney RL60 and the Mitsubishi/Boeing MB-60. |
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Allen Thomson wrote:
http://aviationnow.ecnext.com/free-s...ticle=02215top Aviation Week & Space Technology Trial By Fire 02/20/2005 01:42:58 PM By Craig Covault Lots of good info in this article. The best bits a 1) "The Delta IV is the only launch vehicle that, by design, sets itself on fire during its ignition sequence." and: 2) the information that Boeing has added to its catalog a Delta IV Medium with six solid boosters that will be able to meet the 20-metric-ton CEV launch mass requirement. This might be an indication that the company doesn't expect any more $200 million-a-copy Heavy launches after those currently planned. - Ed Kyle |
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"Ed Kyle" wrote in
oups.com: Allen Thomson wrote: http://aviationnow.ecnext.com/free-s...ge=aw_document &article=02215top Aviation Week & Space Technology Trial By Fire 02/20/2005 01:42:58 PM By Craig Covault Lots of good info in this article. The best bits a 1) "The Delta IV is the only launch vehicle that, by design, sets itself on fire during its ignition sequence." Completely peculiar to the current design of the RS-68; Rocketdyne might be asked to Do Something About It. 2) the information that Boeing has added to its catalog a Delta IV Medium with six solid boosters that will be able to meet the 20-metric-ton CEV launch mass requirement. This might be an indication that the company doesn't expect any more $200 million-a-copy Heavy launches after those currently planned. Man-rating a Medium D-IV with six solids might be interesting. The astronaut's office is reported not happy with the prospect. I wonder if they might go with two larger solids side-by-side. The Heavy will still have the option of being built as needed, when needed, and I think that could prove more often than most do. Significant payload gains with minimum changes, too. Now if Boeing can just get the cost of the Heavy down, and keep it there. --Damon |
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Ed Kyle wrote:
2) the information that Boeing has added to its catalog a Delta IV Medium with six solid boosters that will be able to meet the 20-metric-ton CEV launch mass requirement. This might be an indication that the company doesn't expect any more $200 million-a-copy Heavy launches after those currently planned. According to the article, Boeing will be proposing the Heavy for the CEV manned flights and would only use the augmented Medium+6 and augmented Heavy for cargo flights. That might be an indication that the company expects many more of those Heavy launches... -- Reed Snellenberger GPG KeyID: 5A978843 rsnellenberger-at-houston.rr.com |
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![]() Reed Snellenberger wrote: Ed Kyle wrote: 2) the information that Boeing has added to its catalog a Delta IV Medium with six solid boosters that will be able to meet the 20-metric-ton CEV launch mass requirement. This might be an indication that the company doesn't expect any more $200 million-a-copy Heavy launches after those currently planned. According to the article, Boeing will be proposing the Heavy for the CEV manned flights and would only use the augmented Medium+6 and augmented Heavy for cargo flights. That might be an indication that the company expects many more of those Heavy launches... I didn't see the article saying that Delta IV-M+(x,6) is only meant for cargo. It says: "Boeing wants NASA to consider the Delta IV Heavy for manned CEV missions, but is also pushing the Heavy for unmanned exploration launch roles. One Delta IV Medium version could also be a CEV player...." It is clear that Boeing would prefer to sell the Heavy, but a 20 ton CEV payload would underuse Heavy. It sounds like the company has worked out a less costly, fallback Medium option for CEV launches designed to compete with the solid-augmented Atlas V designs that Lockheed Martin will surely propose. - Ed Kyle |
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Ed Kyle wrote:
I didn't see the article saying that Delta IV-M+(x,6) is only meant for cargo. It says: "Boeing wants NASA to consider the Delta IV Heavy for manned CEV missions, but is also pushing the Heavy for unmanned exploration launch roles. One Delta IV Medium version could also be a CEV player...." Further down in the article, in the discussion about the requirements for a human-rated booster. Boeing is fully aware of the astronaut concerns [regarding man-rating boosters - ed.], says Jim Harvey, who heads Boeing Launch Services development and is leading Delta IV exploration studies. "Instead of a human-rated rocket, Boeing is talking about a 'human-compatible' launch vehicle," Harvey said. And that approach, coupled with CEV escape designed in from the start, he said, would make the whole system human-rated. Aside from its IV Medium with six solids, Boeing believes its all-liquid propulsion, with more benign failure modes than solids, argues for strong consideration of the Delta Heavy for the CEV role. The development of health-monitoring capability for liquid engines is well underway in NASA and industry. Such systems are designed to discern if a liquid engine is close to a potential failure that would make separation of a manned CEV less of a challenge. Upgraded Delta Heavy options do include solids as augmentation to the three RS-68s, but the options with solids would be for only unmanned cargos. Although you have to read between the lines slightly, it's pretty clear from this that Boeing realizes that solids are a non-starter for manned boosters due to their possible failure modes. -- Reed Snellenberger GPG KeyID: 5A978843 rsnellenberger-at-houston.rr.com |
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Damon Hill wrote:
Man-rating a Medium D-IV with six solids might be interesting. The astronaut's office is reported not happy with the prospect. I wonder if they might go with two larger solids side-by-side. The Heavy will still have the option of being built as needed, when needed, and I think that could prove more often than most do. I got the impression from the article that the Astronaut's office was plumping for a NASA-developed booster ('Upgrading EELVs "could potentially be as costly as building a new human-rated booster," said the Astronaut Office paper'). I guess I'd hoped for a more positive contribution -- let them help define what the requirements are for the manned booster (and "designed-in from scratch" doesn't count as a requirement) but even if the EELVs aren't the least expensive boosters possible, I've got to believe they're more affordable than *any booster* that NASA could develop. -- Reed Snellenberger GPG KeyID: 5A978843 rsnellenberger-at-houston.rr.com |
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On Mon, 21 Feb 2005 21:40:39 -0600, in a place far, far away, Damon
Hill made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Man-rating a Medium D-IV with six solids might be interesting. The astronaut's office is reported not happy with the prospect. I wonder if they might go with two larger solids side-by-side. I think that their consensus preference is a single solid (SRB based). |
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Reed Snellenberger wrote:
Although you have to read between the lines slightly, it's pretty clear ... that Boeing realizes that solids are a non-starter for manned boosters due to their possible failure modes. The customer is always right, but is it a consensus view at the customer (NASA) that solids are a no-go? No-solids would shut out Lockheed Martin's existing Atlas V models after all. - Ed Kyle |
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Rand Simberg wrote:
On 22 Feb 2005 08:27:22 -0800, in a place far, far away, "Ed Kyle" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: No-solids would shut out Lockheed Martin's existing Atlas V models after all. That's one reason why. It would also preclude the desire of some in the astronaut office for a "single-stick" SRB-based design. The failure mode they seem most worried about is the sort of catastrophic case/nozzle failure that have already killed at least one Delta (@ KSC) and one Titan IV (?, @ VAFB). No warning -- just *blam* followed by insta-chaff. I imagine it's a pretty difficult abort problem to solve -- you begin your abort already having given a good head-start to the blast wave & fragments, rather than just getting away from a booster that has begun to act up. I don't think that the SRB-based boosters would have *that* problem, necessarily. For one thing, an argument could be made that they're already man-rated in some sense. For another, I would like to think that the sort of case failure that would represent the same (or similar) failure mode has been either designed out (over-strength case, different materials) or quality-assured (x-ray or other testing of the case & filling) out of them. It might be possible to give the Atlas & Delta strap-ons the same level of confidence with some cost & weight penalty -- but you'd have to take into account that you would probably be using several of the motors and would have to be (individually) more rigorous in your testing to get the same level of confidence in the result (a 99%/motor success rate for one motor is only 94% when you have to use 6 of them). -- Reed Snellenberger GPG KeyID: 5A978843 rsnellenberger-at-houston.rr.com |
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