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Although the Centaur stage was first launched in May 1962, its first
operational launch (Surveyor I) didn't come until May 1966. Not counting the first launch, where the Centaur never had a chance to show its stuff because of a first-stage failure, there were 6 flights prior to Surveyor I, of which two or three were failures (in one case, I'm not sure whether the failure was in the Centaur stage or not). Contrast that with the larger S-IV stage, which first flew in January 1964 and racked up two more successes before what might be called its first operational mission, the launch of Pegasus I, in February 1965. Although only flown 6 times in total, the S-IV never failed. At the time of the S-IV's first flight, Centaur's record (again, ignoring the first flight) was 1 success in 2 attempts. Given that the S-IV project got started later and was larger and more complex, how is it that it became operational before the Centaur? We're there problems with the Centaur's manufacturer (Convair, or whatever it was called then)? Was it lack of attention that from MSFC, Centaur's original manager, that was the trouble? Douglas's S-IVB worked well from its initial outing. Then there's the S-II stage, which seems to have been the bottleneck in the development of the Saturn V. Why was it so troublesome? Was it incompetence at North American Aviation? The stage's mass structure fraction was lower than that of the other H2 stages. Although that's natural for a larger stage, does it indicate that the S-II design was sailing closer to the wind? Was that a source of development problems? The reason I ask is that I'm wondering when a Saturn C-3-class booster might have become operational under the previously posted question about multi-launch LOR missions. |
#2
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![]() Proponent wrote: The reason I ask is that I'm wondering when a Saturn C-3-class booster might have become operational under the previously posted question about multi-launch LOR missions. Great question, (I too would like from the wiser ones on this one), Carl |
#3
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As a side point, I supply the following link:
http://www.cardmodels.net/ Join the group, and do a search for SA-5. The model designer has done a amazing job with the detail on this model. He is looking for input to finish it and dev. the whole early saturn series. I think with the input from some of you guys, (We could help give the world what the resin guys never did). If you have a few moments, give this guy a hand, Carl |
#4
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"Proponent" wrote in message
ups.com... Then there's the S-II stage, which seems to have been the bottleneck in the development of the Saturn V. Why was it so troublesome? Was it incompetence at North American Aviation? The stage's mass structure fraction was lower than that of the other H2 stages. Although that's natural for a larger stage, does it indicate that the S-II design was sailing closer to the wind? Was that a source of development problems? The reason I ask is that I'm wondering when a Saturn C-3-class booster might have become operational under the previously posted question about multi-launch LOR missions. Start with this book and reference: Stages of Saturn Should answer most questions asked. gb |
#5
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![]() "g. beat " w9gb@spam protected wrote in message ... "Proponent" wrote in message ups.com... Then there's the S-II stage, which seems to have been the bottleneck in the development of the Saturn V. Why was it so troublesome? Was it incompetence at North American Aviation? The stage's mass structure fraction was lower than that of the other H2 stages. Although that's natural for a larger stage, does it indicate that the S-II design was sailing closer to the wind? Was that a source of development problems? The reason I ask is that I'm wondering when a Saturn C-3-class booster might have become operational under the previously posted question about multi-launch LOR missions. Start with this book and reference: Stages of Saturn Should answer most questions asked. And Angle of Attack, though it's a bit melodramatic in palces. gb |
#6
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![]() Proponent wrote: Although the Centaur stage was first launched in May 1962, its first operational launch (Surveyor I) didn't come until May 1966. Not counting the first launch, where the Centaur never had a chance to show its stuff because of a first-stage failure, there were 6 flights prior to Surveyor I, of which two or three were failures (in one case, I'm not sure whether the failure was in the Centaur stage or not). Contrast that with the larger S-IV stage, which first flew in January 1964 and racked up two more successes before what might be called its first operational mission, the launch of Pegasus I, in February 1965. Although only flown 6 times in total, the S-IV never failed. At the time of the S-IV's first flight, Centaur's record (again, ignoring the first flight) was 1 success in 2 attempts. Given that the S-IV project got started later and was larger and more complex, how is it that it became operational before the Centaur? We're there problems with the Centaur's manufacturer (Convair, or whatever it was called then)? Was it lack of attention that from MSFC, Centaur's original manager, that was the trouble? Douglas's S-IVB worked well from its initial outing. Then there's the S-II stage, which seems to have been the bottleneck in the development of the Saturn V. Why was it so troublesome? Was it incompetence at North American Aviation? The stage's mass structure fraction was lower than that of the other H2 stages. Although that's natural for a larger stage, does it indicate that the S-II design was sailing closer to the wind? Was that a source of development problems? The reason I ask is that I'm wondering when a Saturn C-3-class booster might have become operational under the previously posted question about multi-launch LOR missions. I did a write up on this a while ago. You can find it at: "http://www.geocities.com/launchreport/aclv3cb.html" My understanding was that Centaur suffered from weak program management, especially when it was initially run as an underfunded joint USAF/NASA project. The Marshall Center was never fully committed to the project (it was busy with Saturn). Centaur didn't start to come together until it was shifted to the Lewis Center, but even then it suffered a troubled development effort. The low point was probably the AC-5 disaster, which wasn't a Centaur problem but which cost money and time. Still, a remarkable program. AC-2 is still up there, circling Earth, the Surveyors still rest on the surface of the Moon, and AC-5 remains the largest on-pad explosion ever seen at the Cape. - Ed Kyle |
#7
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"Proponent" wrote in message
ups.com... Given that the S-IV project got started later and was larger and more complex, how is it that it became operational before the Centaur? We're there problems with the Centaur's manufacturer (Convair, or whatever it was called then)? Was it lack of attention that from MSFC, Centaur's original manager, that was the trouble? Douglas's S-IVB worked well from its initial outing. Then there's the S-II stage, which seems to have been the bottleneck in the development of the Saturn V. Why was it so troublesome? Was it incompetence at North American Aviation? The stage's mass structure fraction was lower than that of the other H2 stages. Although that's natural for a larger stage, does it indicate that the S-II design was sailing closer to the wind? Was that a source of development problems? NASA SP-4206 Stages of Saturn (yes, its on-line, if you don't want to read the paper copy) Table of Contents http://history.nasa.gov/SP-4206/contents.htm Have fun -- you will read how the weight issue was the real bottleneck -- and the S-II stage had to solve the problem. gb |
#8
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On 6 Oct 2006 22:25:40 -0700, "Ed Kyle" wrote:
My understanding was that Centaur suffered from weak program management, especially when it was initially run as an underfunded joint USAF/NASA project. The Marshall Center was never fully committed to the project (it was busy with Saturn). Centaur didn't start to come together until it was shifted to the Lewis Center, but even then it suffered a troubled development effort. The low point was probably the AC-5 disaster, which wasn't a Centaur problem but which cost money and time. ....Wasn't some of that funding also misdirected to that competitor project, Vega? OM -- ]=====================================[ ] OMBlog - http://www.io.com/~o_m/omworld [ ] Let's face it: Sometimes you *need* [ ] an obnoxious opinion in your day! [ ]=====================================[ |
#9
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![]() OM wrote: On 6 Oct 2006 22:25:40 -0700, "Ed Kyle" wrote: My understanding was that Centaur suffered from weak program management, especially when it was initially run as an underfunded joint USAF/NASA project. The Marshall Center was never fully committed to the project (it was busy with Saturn). Centaur didn't start to come together until it was shifted to the Lewis Center, but even then it suffered a troubled development effort. The low point was probably the AC-5 disaster, which wasn't a Centaur problem but which cost money and time. ...Wasn't some of that funding also misdirected to that competitor project, Vega? Could be, but Vega was cancelled not long after it started when NASA discovered that DoD was developing Agena. Agena and Centaur handled different payload classes, but they may have competed for funding a bit. My recollection is that the early Mariner missions were reprogrammed from Atlas-Centaur for launch on Atlas-Agena boosters instead, due to the Centaur development troubles. - Ed Kyle |
#10
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In article .net,
Greg D. Moore \(Strider\) wrote: Start with this book and reference: Stages of Saturn ... And Angle of Attack, though it's a bit melodramatic in palces. Yeah, you have to take "Angle of Attack" with more than a few grains of salt, since it was clearly meant as a movie script, not as history. Oh, and it's "Stages to Saturn", not "Stages of Saturn". -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | |
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