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(CNN)
WASHINGTON (AP) -- NASA's plan to resume space shuttle flights as early as March drew heated criticism from congressional leaders on Wednesday, including one who wants to stop astronauts from flying the orbiter again Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas told NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe that he believed the shuttle was so unsafe that it should never again fly with people on board. "We are putting American men and women at great risk to their lives to fly an orbiter that is 30 years old and cannot be made safe," said Barton at a hearing of the House Science Committee. He pledged to "do everything I can" to prevent astronauts from going up in the shuttle, which he called "inherently unsafe." "We've lost 14 men and women and if we keep flying we'll lose 21 others in the next 10 to 15 years," he said. Other committee members offered criticism, albeit not as strong. Chairman Sherwood Boehlert, R-New York, told NASA its plan is overly ambitious. Dana Rohrabacher, R-California, said the agency must not rush and repeat the problems that led to the disaster which doomed the shuttle Columbia and its crew. Barton, however, said that the shuttle should be flown only in a robotic mode, without people on board, to deliver cargo and supplies to the international space station. O'Keefe said it may be technically possible to fly the space shuttle without a crew, operating the craft remotely, to haul cargo to and from the station. That is one option NASA is now studying, he said. For people, O'Keefe said, the agency could, if provided the funds, develop an orbital space plane designed to launch people only to the space station. 'Separate the crew from the cargo' Ret. Navy Adm. Harold Gehman Jr., chairman of the panel investigating the shuttle disaster, said the Columbia Accident Investigation Board considered the issues posed by Barton and concluded that, although it's risky, the shuttle could be operated with people on board for at least two more years. But he urged the nation to build a new spacecraft system so that people fly on one type of ship and cargo on another. "As soon as possible, we need to separate the crew from the cargo," the retired admiral said. ... .. . . . . Gotta agree ... the shuttles just haven't lived-up to their promises. Overly-complex, too expensive, WAY too unsafe - time for another approach. Using existing shuttles in robotic mode may be possible, but it's still gonna be extremely expensive. Perhaps we should start looking into disposable vehicles again. The existing, refined, SRBs used with the shuttles would make boffo boosters for a conventional liquid-fueled expendable upper stage. There's also the Saturn style booster - which might be made better and less expensive if mass-produced and incorporating modern technological advances. If no people are on board, some of the redundancy and safety items could be deleted. As for moving people, the Russian approach seems to work pretty well for now. A "space plane" sounds like a just another pork-barrel project, guarenteed to be a typical committee-decision hyper-complex cluster-****. The utility is obvious, however, but if we build it here, 75% of the money WILL find its way into some pork barrel or another - so maybe we should hire a foreign contractor. Saab makes nice fighter planes ... In any event, the status-quo just isn't good enough and any future plans will have to emphasize simplicity, safety and - importantly - economy. OR ... we can just wait for the Chinese to paint a big red star on the moon. Where's von Braun when we need him ... ? |
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But the Russians _do_ use (basically) the same ship to move people and
cargo, and even sometimes both in the same mission. Putting in a dogmatic division between personnel and cargo transport is stupid. Cargo ships routine transport (or at least they used to do so) up to 12 passengers. I regularly use my car for small-scale transport (up to a few hundred kilograms 8-)). Some airline routes (e.g., Frankfurt-Rio- Santiago) earn their keep through the mix of passengers and cargo they can fly on the same plane. Now, whether you want to combine the passenger car with the heavy-lift truck - that is another matter, and is probably debatable. But the reason why this is debatable has nothing to do with safety, as Barton and Gehman seem to be suggesting. Jan |
#3
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Jan C. Vorbr?ggen wrote:
But the Russians _do_ use (basically) the same ship to move people and cargo, and even sometimes both in the same mission. Putting in a dogmatic division between personnel and cargo transport is stupid. On the surface, I'd agree ... but then you've got to consider that there are significant differences between a cargo-only vessel, something which carries passengers PLUS cargo and something which carries only passengers (+ trivial cargo). Cargo-only allows you to cut out a LOT of the systems. With no precious, perishable, humans to support the entire environmental package can be scrapped, plus you can go from triple/quadruple-redundancy to mere double. If your cargo vessel is expendable, then you can drop all the re-entry crap too - vastly simplifying the design, reducing weight and eliminating recovery and reconditioning expenses. Big cargo pods might be left in orbit - to be later incorporated into a space station or simply as a source of spare materials - metal, wire, plastic, insulation etc.. Because of all this, an expendable cargo-only system would be comparatively cheap - especially after we standardize and mass-produce the major components - and have fewer systems that we mere humans could screw up. Passenger-only vessles can be physically small and of robust construction. Size matters when it comes to putting things into orbit and also matters when it comes to maneuvering IN orbit. A passenger-only vessle can also be OPTIMIZED for that role, which means fewer compromises that might come back to haunt us (or wind up scattered over Texas). The WORST plan is what we have now ... a compromise vehicle. Big and unweildly, trying to support people AND cargo-carrying needs. The only nice thing about the shuttles is the convenience of having people in the same ship as the robotic arm and immediately availible for EVA. However, the arm could as easily be controlled from a nearby ship, and as far as EVA goes, the passenger shuttle could literally be docked to the cargo pod. Cargo ships routine transport (or at least they used to do so) up to 12 passengers. I regularly use my car for small-scale transport (up to a few hundred kilograms 8-)). Some airline routes (e.g., Frankfurt-Rio- Santiago) earn their keep through the mix of passengers and cargo they can fly on the same plane. Now, whether you want to combine the passenger car with the heavy-lift truck - that is another matter, and is probably debatable. But the reason why this is debatable has nothing to do with safety, as Barton and Gehman seem to be suggesting. I think it DOES impact safety - and the economics too. Automobiles and airplanes are well-refined technology. Even thus, a truck or plane designed for cargo is not as well designed to safely transport people - and vice- versa. Making something that does both jobs well is difficult and more expensive than producing more dedicated vehicles. |
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![]() Now, whether you want to combine the passenger car with the heavy-lift truck - that is another matter, and is probably debatable. But the reason why this is debatable has nothing to do with safety, as Barton and Gehman seem to be suggesting. Jan Yes it does. as it costs a lot more to have the safety needed for a manned booster haul water to ISS |
#5
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Yes it does. as it costs a lot more to have the safety needed for a manned
booster haul water to ISS Why would that be the case? Astronauts are cheap, boosters/orbiters/spaceships are costly. It is in the operator's best interest to reduce the probability of vehicle losses, quite irrespective of whether it was a cargo or passenger vehicle. Jan |
#6
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Cargo-only allows you to cut out a LOT of the systems.
Nope - based on the wrong premises. With no precious, perishable, humans to support the entire environmental package can be scrapped, plus you can go from triple/quadruple-redundancy to mere double. See the reply to "hallerb" - it's the vehicle that's expensive. And for a resonably short period of time, you give every passenger his environmental package as carry-on luggage, or you provide a module with the necessary functionality and put the passengers into that. If your cargo vessel is expendable, then you can drop all the re-entry crap too Different, orthogonal issue. Jan |
#7
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nauts are cheap, boosters/orbiters/spaceships
are costly. It is in the operator's best interest to reduce the probability of vehicle losses, quite irrespective of Well unmanned you can shoot for 97% success. To get to 99.9 for man rating will likely increase your costs a LOT. Its a dollars issue. |
#8
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BlackWater wrote:
Where's von Braun when we need him ... ? Off working on updating his design for a cargo-and-passenger shuttle.... D. -- The STS-107 Columbia Loss FAQ can be found at the following URLs: Text-Only Version: http://www.io.com/~o_m/columbia_loss_faq.html Enhanced HTML Version: http://www.io.com/~o_m/columbia_loss_faq_x.html Corrections, comments, and additions should be e-mailed to , as well as posted to sci.space.history and sci.space.shuttle for discussion. |
#9
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Jan C. Vorbrüggen wrote:
Yes it does. as it costs a lot more to have the safety needed for a manned booster haul water to ISS Why would that be the case? Astronauts are cheap, boosters/orbiters/spaceships are costly. It is in the operator's best interest to reduce the probability of vehicle losses, quite irrespective of whether it was a cargo or passenger vehicle. Jan I would say it is a risk vs reward issue. With a human rated system, you spend more money because you are willing to accept less risk. Cost rises dramatically for these systems relative to unmanned systems, where you merely do a cost/benefit analysis and purchase insurance for your cargo. |
#10
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Well, what is the loss value which is acceptable on a development vehicle?
Seems to me that what has in fact happened since Apollo is that the cultural acceptance of the danger Astronauts face, has changed. In many ways, the small losses in Apollo were almost a matter of luck. Now though, the people, and Government want to make flying to space, almost commonplace and 'normal'. So, you have a vehicle who's roots are in the old culture, trying to achieve the requirements of the new. Of course, nobody has told Nasa and it seems, nobody made the money available since the Shuttles came on line, to make anything else either. OK, so the Shuttle was never able to meet the high, some would say, unrealistically high, flight rate and at a reasonable cost. However, this is as much about learning lessons as any other form of research, surely? So, it cost a lot more and still is, than some people thought, but maybe it had to be done. So, what to do? At present, i cannot see any alternative but to fly with people untill some other way is found to get people up there. OK rework the Shuttle into a cargo truck, but for missions like Hubble servicing, what choice is there? Can you do it with a Soyuz? I still think that a Shuttle derivative is required, but it may be a luxury nobody wants to fund. As for reusability, I'm sure that will come if space tourism is going to happen, but while its purely research and no doubt military,, if Bush gets back in, it will be the throw away cheap option. Brian -- Brian Gaff.... graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them Email: __________________________________________________ __________________________ __________________________________ --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.515 / Virus Database: 313 - Release Date: 01/09/03 |
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