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Is there a good place (book, Website, etc.) offering a balanced analysis of the
different approaches to heavy lift (above the EELV Heavy classes) and the pro and con concerning the need for such a vehicle? Thanks, Matt Bille ) OPINIONS IN ALL POSTS ARE SOLELY THOSE OF THE AUTHOR |
#2
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MattWriter wrote:
Is there a good place (book, Website, etc.) offering a balanced analysis of the different approaches to heavy lift (above the EELV Heavy classes) and the pro and con concerning the need for such a vehicle?\ Not that I know of. I'm working on a long piece for The New Atlantis on that subject (among others), but I don't know if you'll consider it a "balanced analysis." Jeff Foust had an article about it at The Space Review a couple months ago. http://www.thespacereview.com/article/146/1 |
#3
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Rand Simberg wrote:
MattWriter wrote: Is there a good place (book, Website, etc.) offering a balanced analysis of the different approaches to heavy lift (above the EELV Heavy classes) and the pro and con concerning the need for such a vehicle?\ Not that I know of. I'm working on a long piece for The New Atlantis on that subject (among others), but I don't know if you'll consider it a "balanced analysis." Jeff Foust had an article about it at The Space Review a couple months ago. http://www.thespacereview.com/article/146/1 I read this article, and Jeff Foust made a good case why a HLV would be expensive. He did not, however, tell us, how much his proposed alternative (tank depot and other orbital infrastructure) would cost. Especially considering the ISS expierience. I guess I am not that impartial either... Robert Kitzmueller |
#4
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Robert Kitzmueller wrote:
http://www.thespacereview.com/article/146/1 I read this article, and Jeff Foust made a good case why a HLV would be expensive. He did not, however, tell us, how much his proposed alternative (tank depot and other orbital infrastructure) would cost. Especially considering the ISS expierience. ISS experience should have little relevance. Much of the ISS problem was due to political constraints. If we develop decent EVA equipment, and have affordable access to orbit, building orbital infrastructure shouldn't be that big a deal. And if we don't have those things, the vision is doomed to failure anyway. |
#5
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Rand Simberg wrote:
Robert Kitzmueller wrote: http://www.thespacereview.com/article/146/1 I read this article, and Jeff Foust made a good case why a HLV would be expensive. He did not, however, tell us, how much his proposed alternative (tank depot and other orbital infrastructure) would cost. Especially considering the ISS expierience. ISS experience should have little relevance. Less than Saturn V? Much of the ISS problem was due to political constraints. If we develop decent EVA equipment, How much would cost this, assuming NASA would have to do this? (Even if NASA would not do it inhouse, NASA would least be responsible for the oversight of it all.) and have affordable access to orbit, How affordable? Delta 4 Heavy like? Or ten times cheaper? Where is Your limit for affordable? building orbital infrastructure shouldn't be that big a deal. And if we don't have those things, the vision is doomed to failure anyway. Well, the US can certainly afford to send men to the moon Apollo-style. Even if it would not be cheap this way. You could do so in the 60s, and the GNP increased a lot in the meantime. Trying another way could be cheaper or it could be a lot more expensive. And I do not believe that NASA in the current environment, in which it gets more money for failure and nothing for success, where noones career really depends on success, will do anything cheap. Neither big HLV nor orbital infrastrucure. I still like big rockets, though... Robert Kitzmueller |
#6
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Robert Kitzmueller wrote:
ISS experience should have little relevance. Less than Saturn V? They're both inapplicable. We didn't build Saturn because it was the best way to establish a sustainable lunar exploration program. We did it because we were in a hurry, had money to burn, and wanted the lowest-risk approach. That was then, this is now, and we know a lot more about how to do it. Much of the ISS problem was due to political constraints. If we develop decent EVA equipment, How much would cost this, assuming NASA would have to do this? I don't know, but certainly a lot less than a heavy lifter. (Even if NASA would not do it inhouse, NASA would least be responsible for the oversight of it all.) and have affordable access to orbit, How affordable? Delta 4 Heavy like? Or ten times cheaper? Where is Your limit for affordable? Much less than any existing vehicle. building orbital infrastructure shouldn't be that big a deal. And if we don't have those things, the vision is doomed to failure anyway. Well, the US can certainly afford to send men to the moon Apollo-style. Even if it would not be cheap this way. You could do so in the 60s, and the GNP increased a lot in the meantime. We can, but we won't (at least I hope not). I still like big rockets, though... Yes, many people do, and at bottom that's really the only reason to build them. We certainly won't get a sustainable program from them (particularly since, like the Shuttle we'd have another fragile monoculture, so that if we had to shut down the heavy lifter, we'd be dead in the water, as we are now). We need much more diversity and resiliency in our space infrastructure. Dependence on heavy lift (particularly a single vehicle type, and who thinks we can afford two?) yields a fragile, and brittle one. |
#7
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Rand Simberg wrote:
Robert Kitzmueller wrote: Much of the ISS problem was due to political constraints. If we develop decent EVA equipment, How much would cost this, assuming NASA would have to do this? I don't know, but certainly a lot less than a heavy lifter. Each single piece of eqipment would not cost that much. A big orbital infrastrucure would need a lot pieces of equipment, of a lot of different types. The costs add up. How affordable? Delta 4 Heavy like? Or ten times cheaper? Where is Your limit for affordable? Much less than any existing vehicle. Should the US wait until CATS becomes available? building orbital infrastructure shouldn't be that big a deal. And if we don't have those things, the vision is doomed to failure anyway. Well, the US can certainly afford to send men to the moon Apollo-style. Even if it would not be cheap this way. You could do so in the 60s, and the GNP increased a lot in the meantime. We can, but we won't (at least I hope not). We will see when NASA presents any mission architecture. If they act as they did in the past, every center will include its pet project to this. (Meaning: both HLV and tankfarm would be built...) I still like big rockets, though... Yes, many people do, and at bottom that's really the only reason to build them. There is at least one more reason: I can compare the cost per kg to orbit to other existing launchers, and then decide if the launcher is cheap or expensive. What would You compare the orbital tankfarm too, if ISS is no applicable example? We certainly won't get a sustainable program from them (particularly since, like the Shuttle we'd have another fragile monoculture, so that if we had to shut down the heavy lifter, we'd be dead in the water, as we are now). Could not someone (like congress) turn this argument around: If too much infrastructure is needed before flights to the moon can commence, would this not mean the US is commited to spend much money even if the program is no longer desired? And would not hurt this view the chance of getting the program approved? We need much more diversity and resiliency in our space infrastructure. Dependence on heavy lift (particularly a single vehicle type, and who thinks we can afford two?) yields a fragile, and brittle one. I think You could afford two, but there is about no chance that NASA will get two. IMNSHO The best way I see would be to use something which can be used for commercial applications as well, like super-heavy Delta 4. I am not sure how heavy EELV can become before major investments like new pads etc. would become necessary, or how small capsule plus lander plus TLI-stage could be made, or articles like base modules. (I am also not sure how small the crew could become before it becomes to small: Must every astronaut be able to land on the moon, or should scientists be ferried by an pilot, making the capsule double the size.) Robert Kitzmueller |
#8
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Robert Kitzmueller wrote:
Should the US wait until CATS becomes available? For the human exploration? I'd say so. I still like big rockets, though... Yes, many people do, and at bottom that's really the only reason to build them. There is at least one more reason: I can compare the cost per kg to orbit to other existing launchers, and then decide if the launcher is cheap or expensive. What would You compare the orbital tankfarm too, if ISS is no applicable example? I don't understand your question. Could not someone (like congress) turn this argument around: If too much infrastructure is needed before flights to the moon can commence, would this not mean the US is commited to spend much money even if the program is no longer desired? And would not hurt this view the chance of getting the program approved? You don't think that heavy lift is an infrastructure? |
#9
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![]() "Rand Simberg" wrote in message hlink.net... Robert Kitzmueller wrote: Should the US wait until CATS becomes available? For the human exploration? I'd say so. That doesn't help space development if we never get CATS. :/ |
#10
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Dave O'Neill wrote:
Should the US wait until CATS becomes available? For the human exploration? I'd say so. That doesn't help space development if we never get CATS. Yes. What's your point? Space development will never happen if we can't afford to get into space. The inability to recognize this, and trying to pretend it's not an issue, is the biggest problem with current policy, and it's not a problem that will be solved by nostalgia over Apollo and Saturn Vs. |
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