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http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0307/15boeing/
Way too many rockets, too little market. Expecting more fallout from Lockmart. Argh. Maybe if Ariane V blows up some more... Nah. If launches were free, the market's still too weak. --Damon |
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![]() "Damon Hill" wrote in message ... http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0307/15boeing/ Way too many rockets, too little market. Expecting more fallout from Lockmart. Argh. Maybe if Ariane V blows up some more... Nah. If launches were free, the market's still too weak. --Damon Meanwhile, in another part of town: "At least seven launches using Proton booster rocket to be made at Baikonur before end of this year." http://en.rian.ru/rian/index.cfm?prd...row=11&da te= 2003-07-16&do_alert=0 -kert |
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If the launch costs were lower, there would be a real market. EELV has done
nothing more then provide the military an alternative to Titan. I don't think you can look at Delta IV's failure as proof that there is no potential market. "Damon Hill" wrote in message ... http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0307/15boeing/ Way too many rockets, too little market. Expecting more fallout from Lockmart. Argh. Maybe if Ariane V blows up some more... Nah. If launches were free, the market's still too weak. --Damon |
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"Jon G" wrote in
: If the launch costs were lower, there would be a real market. EELV has done nothing more then provide the military an alternative to Titan. I don't think you can look at Delta IV's failure as proof that there is no potential market. Delta IV is a 'failure'?! HA!! There is no market, even if launches were free. That's the economic reality of the moment. Boeing will check back in when there are launch customers and the launch market isn't so saturated with launchers looking for payloads. I doubt Ariane could compete if it weren't heavily subsidized. I assume Proton and other Russian launchers, and Chinese launchers simply benefit from cheap labor and certain socialist economic unrealities. --Damon |
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Damon Hill wrote in message . 230...
There is no market, even if launches were free. That's the economic reality of the moment. Boeing will check back in when there are launch customers and the launch market isn't so saturated with launchers looking for payloads. Could some of this be caused of the extended life of satellites? I believe a communications satellite use to have a projected life of 5 to 7 years. I saw the other day where a newly launched satellite had a projected life of 18 years. That cuts the need for launches by about two thirds. -- Rusty Barton - Antelope, California |
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In article ,
Damon Hill wrote: http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0307/15boeing/ Way too many rockets, too little market. Note carefully that the "pulls Delta IV from commercial market" part is the invention of the headline writer -- Boeing itself did *not* say that, as best I can tell. They're aiming their marketing primarily at the government now, but that does not mean they won't accept commercial customers, only that they won't make strenuous efforts to seek them. It's a reasonably natural decision for Boeing, given the lousy state of the commercial launch market, Delta IV's considerable success (rather more than Atlas V) at winning government business, and the presence within the same company of Sea Launch (commercially very attractive but politically forbidden to fly US-government payloads). -- MOST launched 1015 EDT 30 June, separated 1046, | Henry Spencer first ground-station pass 1651, all nominal! | |
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"Kaido Kert" wrote in message ...
"John Ordover" wrote in message om... I assume Proton and other Russian launchers, and Chinese launchers simply benefit from cheap labor and certain socialist economic unrealities. --Damon All of the above are heavily subsidized. Bullsh*t. Krunichev hasnt received any significant money from their government in almost a decade -kert Who built their facilities? What is their debt-payment structure or opportunity cost on the cost of building those facilities? If someone handed me a satellite launch system complete with all facilities for free, I could make it work too. |
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(ed kyle) wrote in
om: (Henry Spencer) wrote in message ... In article , Damon Hill wrote: http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0307/15boeing/ Way too many rockets, too little market. Note carefully that the "pulls Delta IV from commercial market" part is the invention of the headline writer -- Boeing itself did *not* say that, as best I can tell. They're aiming their marketing primarily at the government now, but that does not mean they won't accept commercial customers, only that they won't make strenuous efforts to seek them. This seems to be Boeing finally admitting that the ICO launches on its backlog were not real. One thing Boeing said was that the Delta IV launch rate would be half of it's originally predicted rate. This means that the rocket's production and launch facilities, built for rapid launch turnaround, are seriously overbuilt ($$$). A lower launch rate means higher per-flight costs, which makes Delta IV non-competitive with cut-rate commercial competitors Proton, Ariane 5, and Zenit 3SL. Boeing didn't say that it was pulling Delta IV from the commercial market, but it might as well have. But will help make Delta IV more competitive when the market does recover, probably towards the end of the decade. Lockmart is in the same situation, with three models on two production lines; there's going to be a phaseout there anyway. No mention of Delta III here, but I wonder if this also means that we've seen the last of that type. No doubt; that model had some bad luck and finally fell between the cracks. Boeing salvaged something out of it by using the Delta III solids on a Delta II Heavy version. It looks like the III ended up qualifying the solids, and the cryogenic upper stage for Delta IV, but that's about it. It was a logical upgrade path at the time but ended up as the odd man out as Delta IV came online and the market bottomed out. Delta II seems to be hitting a sweet spot for NASA launches. I've been predicting an Air Force EELV and a NASA EELV. Looks like Delta IV will be the Air Force bird. Now it's NASA's turn. Ehn, I dunno. Everyone seems to be putting their OSP on a Delta IV Heavy; I doubt many Heavys will be flown until an OSP is finally built that requires a Heavy launcher. Atlas V may get just enough military and commercial launches to keep it alive and the older models will be retired. --Damon |
#10
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![]() "Henry Spencer" wrote in message ... Problem is, while Atlas V generally has greater lift capability when compared against a similar Delta IV configuration, only Delta IV currently has the option of the Heavy configuration. And unless common sense rules for long enough to get OSP made a capsule, which doesn't seem that likely, NASA's going to need the Heavy configuration. NASA will be making use of both Atlas V and Delta IV variants up to and including their Heavy models. Internal reviews of both boosters' designs is ongoing. LM has completed significant engineering on their Heavy and is only waiting for a customer to place an order. It is possible that the OSP program will be that customer, but that won't be known for sure until next year. WRT OSP designs, don't rule out "common sense" just yet. It's alive and well at this point in the program. -Kim- |
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