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I'm curious why nobody has posted anything regarding Space Island Groups
approach towards building a rather large space station using the shuttle's external tanks. Perhaps a few here can shed some light on the matter. Here's the link to their page. Seems they've gone through a lot of work already, though I haven't seen any really current updates on building a station. http://www.spaceislandgroup.com/home.html |
#2
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"S H" wrote in news:LIA0g.23020$s%6.2733@dukeread02:
I'm curious why nobody has posted anything regarding Space Island Groups approach towards building a rather large space station using the shuttle's external tanks. Perhaps a few here can shed some light on the matter. It's not going to happen. There are, at most, nineteen shuttle flights remaining in the program. Their site also contains the incorrect statement that the ET is carried to orbit already on each shuttle flight. In reality the ET is released on a suborbital trajectory and carrying it the rest of the way to orbit will cost propellant, which is something that most of the remaining flights (ISS assembly flights packed to capacity) cannot spare. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
#3
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In reality the ET is released on a suborbital trajectory and carrying
it the rest of the way to orbit will cost propellant, which is something that most of the remaining flights (ISS assembly flights packed to capacity) cannot spare. Yes, given the "packed to capacity" this is true. The real problem with the concept of making a station from spent fuel tanks, though, is how to supply the rest of the station, other than the structure. Cooling/heating, solar panels (or other power source), electrical distribution, etc, etc all need to be added. Inflating something inside the tank is perhaps promising. But still, adding labor for people to do on-orbit is problematic. So even aside from the issues specific to the shuttle external tank, I'm not sure this is a promising idea. |
#4
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But still, adding
labor for people to do on-orbit is problematic. So even aside from the issues specific to the shuttle external tank, I'm not sure this is a promising idea. Well, it seems this isn't a first idea... http://www.spacefuture.com/archive/g...facility.shtml of course, I'm no scientist, but it seems every hurdle has been looked at except as you mentioned, the labor aspect. I personally think the SIG concept of sending up a second ET attached in place of the shuttle as a huge station itself would be an attractive idea. |
#5
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How many spare and continuous terawatts of clean energy does SIG want
to export towards mother Earth? How does having 1e9 m3 of an SIG abode that's safely located in the most energy efficient location that's more than sufficiently near Earth as well as always that of our moon. Is any of that something SIG is interested in? - Brad Guth |
#6
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Jim Kingdon wrote in
news ![]() In reality the ET is released on a suborbital trajectory and carrying it the rest of the way to orbit will cost propellant, which is something that most of the remaining flights (ISS assembly flights packed to capacity) cannot spare. Yes, given the "packed to capacity" this is true. The real problem with the concept of making a station from spent fuel tanks, though, is how to supply the rest of the station, other than the structure. Cooling/heating, solar panels (or other power source), electrical distribution, etc, etc all need to be added. Inflating something inside the tank is perhaps promising. If you're going to bother inflating something, just use one of Bigelow's inflatable habitats and forget the tank - this technology has already been proven to be quite impact-resistant. So even aside from the issues specific to the shuttle external tank, I'm not sure this is a promising idea. True. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
#7
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If you're going to bother inflating something, just use one of Bigelow's
inflatable habitats and forget the tank - this technology has already been proven to be quite impact-resistant. Agreed. Using spent fuel tanks sounds good, but once you start looking at the details, it isn't clear that it buys you anything. Skylab looked at using spent fuel tanks but eventually decided against it. |
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