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I didn't know that Urie was the HAVE REGION guy.
http://www.rocketplane.com/Teammates.html The page says "Updated 2/18/99". David M. Urie founded Technology Advantage in 1995 to market aerospace management consulting services to emerging air and space hardware competitors around the Pacific Rim. He is the Former Director of Lockheed Martin Skunk Works SSTO and X-33 RLV Advanced Technology Demonstration Programs both located in Palmdale, CA. Urie's work as the program manger for the previously classified Have Region project demonstrated that rocket powered single stage to orbit vehicle were technically feasible which led to the Lockheed Martin SSTO design approach. This renewed interest established the X-33 program for which Urie was the program manger responsible for developing the VentureStar Single Stage to Orbit/Reusable Launch Vehicle concept and the X-33 demonstrator design. Recently, NASA awarded the Advanced Technology Demonstration Program to Lockheed Martin who will design, fabricate and fly an X vehicle to demonstrate the SSTO technology and design approach in flight. Urie's technical and program leadership created this success. |
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![]() Allen Thomson wrote: I didn't know that Urie was the HAVE REGION guy. http://www.rocketplane.com/Teammates.html The page says "Updated 2/18/99". David M. Urie founded Technology Advantage in 1995 to market aerospace management consulting services to emerging air and space hardware competitors around the Pacific Rim. He is the Former Director of Lockheed Martin Skunk Works SSTO and X-33 RLV Advanced Technology Demonstration Programs both located in Palmdale, CA. Urie's work as the program manger for the previously classified Have Region project demonstrated that rocket powered single stage to orbit vehicle were technically feasible which led to the Lockheed Martin SSTO design approach. This renewed interest established the X-33 program for which Urie was the program manger responsible for developing the VentureStar Single Stage to Orbit/Reusable Launch Vehicle concept and the X-33 demonstrator design. Recently, NASA awarded the Advanced Technology Demonstration Program to Lockheed Martin who will design, fabricate and fly an X vehicle to demonstrate the SSTO technology and design approach in flight. Urie's technical and program leadership created this success. I note that David Urie was no longer on board at Lockheed-Martin when the disastrous X-33 tank failures occurred. I heard him speak at a meeting held at Rocketdyne that was open to AIAA members. He told the Rocketdyne employees that they might believe their aerospike engine was the highest risk element because of its newness, but the LH2 composite tanks were actually the highest risk component. At that time Urie was retired from Lockheed-Martin but still a consultant to them. The way that Lockheed-Martin management handled the composite LH2 tank part of the program does not indicate that they paid any attention to their former managers concerns. This doesn't mean that I believe that the VentureStar was the right concept, but if better management had prevailed the X-33 might have at least made it to flight test. Mike Walsh |
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I didn't know that Urie was the HAVE REGION guy.
And I didn't know he'd been an SR-71 guy. (Many and varied are the things I don't know, obviously. So is it now, so shall it be; the journey is the reward.) http://www.sverdrup.com/tnaiaa/program/urie.htm American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics invites you to a luncheon meeting featuring a presentation by David M. Urie "From Dreams to Reality - The History of the Idea Behind and Birth of the X-33 from its Recognized Father/Creator" Currently president and co-founder of Concept Fusion in Sherman Oaks, CA, David M. Urie, Jr. retired two years ago after a thirty year career with Lockheed Martin Corporation. During his Lockheed career, Urie led teams on such projects as the X-30 National Aerospace Plane, the HL-20 Personnel Launch System, and was chief engineer and then program manager of the SR-71 reconnaissance system before initiating and heading the Single Stage to Orbit and X-33 Reuseable Launch Vehicle programs. As director of the Lockheed Martin Skunk Works' SSTO/RLV Advanced Technology Demonstration Programs, Urie conceived and developed the aerospike rocket propelled lifting body vehicle that was selected by NASA on July 2, 1996 as winner of the X-33 flight demonstrator competition. Urie received the 1997 Engineer of the Year Award from the AIAA for his accomplishments in the field of aerospace engineering. Thursday March 18, 1999 Lunch - 11:30 a.m. Program - 12:00 p.m. Oak Restaurant, Manchester, TN |
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