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I ask this. Which is safer?
a shuttle or a man rated capsule like apollo on a non man rated booster like a delta? It would be interesting to take a historical look at a booster, and the failure rate that would kill a crew if the capsule had launch boost escape... now compare that with the known historical failure of the shuttles... which would be safer??? HAVE A GREAT DAY! |
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![]() It would be interesting to learn what drugs erased the knowledge that launch failures are only portion of the total risks from what passes for your mind. D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. Well there are two stages of flight. first launch and achieve orbit, which is the boosters job... then theres in orbit operations which dont include the now discarded boosters. my questions is what perentages of boosters fail where launch boost escape wouldnt work? HAVE A GREAT DAY! |
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On Sat, 14 Aug 2004 16:31:59 GMT, (Derek Lyons)
wrote: It would be interesting to learn what drugs erased the knowledge that launch failures are only portion of the total risks from what passes for your mind. ....Probably dropping battery acid and snorting diet coke. OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
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#7
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#8
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In article ,
"HAESSIG Frédéric Pierre Tamatoa" writes: EAC a écrit dans le message : ... "HAESSIG Frédéric Pierre Tamatoa" wrote in message ... Well, remember. Ariane V is/was supposed to be man-rated ( to launch Hermes ). Given the current record, would you volunteer to take a seat? Yes, the Ariane 5 was also supposed to use man-rated solid fuel boosters. The same goes to an uprated Saturn 5 that was supposed to use solid fuel boosters. Actually, it never was the solid fuel boosters which caused the problems on Ariane V. This has always worked flawlessly, AFAIK. IIRC, in the first case, the destruction was commanded from ground ( which, in case of manned flight would be avoided until the crew bailed out ). In the second case, it was a flaw in the Vulcain II nozzle design. I wonder if the ejection system could have worked in the second case ( or if Hermes could have landed by itself ). Anyhow, these were qualification flights, so I doubt there would have been a crew, even if Hermes had been ready by that time. I seem to remember it was to be readied a bit later than Ariane V maiden flight, but with all the delays everywhere, it may have caught up. The first Ariane V flight was an interesting example of foolish complacency on the part of the entire team, from managers down through techs. The reason for the loss of guidance was that they re-used the Ariane IV guidance system. Not a bad idea, but the greater acceleration of the Ariane V caused it to overflow several data accumulators. This caused the guidance logic to drop into a debug mode where it sat & waited for somebody to look at its core dump. This showed an incredible lack of attention on two fronts - The buffer overruns would have been immediately obvious if there had been even the most minimal amount of realistic testing performed. Even a simple black-box simulation would have shown it. Even with that, it would have been possible for th eguidance system to control the rocket, albeit not as accurately, if it had kept functioning. Having the system drop into a mode where it was not functioning, and was waiting for an irrelevant service was foolish. The system should have been set up to operate in a degraded, or even pregressively failing mode. Failure, especially in a complex system like a space booster and its guidance system, isn't an option - it's bundled with the system. Once it leaves the ground, the question isn't "Will it fail?", but "What happens when it _does_ fail?". It brings up the question of how, other than just by saying so, or claiming it was designed that way, they expected to man-rate Airane V. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
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#10
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In article ,
Peter Stickney wrote: The first Ariane V flight was an interesting example of foolish complacency on the part of the entire team, from managers down through techs. The reason for the loss of guidance was that they re-used the Ariane IV guidance system. Not a bad idea, but the greater acceleration of the Ariane V caused it to overflow several data accumulators... Close, but not quite right. There were several interlocking mistakes: 1. The problematic routine in the inertial measurement unit software was used to restart Ariane 4 countdowns after late holds. It had no role whatsoever on Ariane 5, but it was left in. 2. Said routine also had no reason to be left running after launch, yet it was (on both Ariane 4 and Ariane 5). 3. Most float-to-integer conversions in the software were protected against overflow, but to reduce overhead, a few that "couldn't overflow" weren't. One, in this particular routine, overflowed because of the higher acceleration of Ariane 5, and this caused an exception trap. As Les Hatton put it: "Approximately 37 seconds into the flight, the 16-bit integer overflowed. Now in a sloppier language like C, the program would have continued happily rumbling away to itself but would not in all probability have interfered with the flight. However, the Ada language is made of sterner stuff. Faced with this run-time error, the program threw an exception..." 4. Any unexpected exception was considered a sign of a hardware failure. Upper management basically thought they could prevent design errors by ordering the engineers not to make any. So any problem was a random hardware failure, in which case it seemed reasonable for that inertial unit to stop dead and let the other one carry on. But since there was a common design flaw, they *both* did that in fast succession. This caused the guidance logic to drop into a debug mode where it sat & waited for somebody to look at its core dump. No, actually it was worse -- the inertial unit started spewing debug output down the line to the main guidance system, which interpreted it as guidance updates! This would qualify as mistake #5, except that it made no difference in the end: with both inertial units in debug mode, the rocket was doomed even if they'd just gone silent. This showed an incredible lack of attention on two fronts - The buffer overruns would have been immediately obvious if there had been even the most minimal amount of realistic testing performed. There *was* considerable testing... of the new stuff. And *that* was mistake #5: full guidance simulations were dropped from the test plans as unnecessary when budgets and schedules started to pinch. The software for the central guidance computer was tested, but full-system tests including the inertial units (or at least their software) were thought less important -- after all, those units and that code had flown many times on Ariane 4. ...Even with that, it would have been possible for th eguidance system to control the rocket, albeit not as accurately, if it had kept functioning. As per above, there would have been no accuracy loss at all -- the problem was in a routine which wasn't involved in actually guiding the rocket. Had the inertial-unit software done its best to carry on despite problems, all would have been well. But the attitude that the design would be perfect, and so only random hardware failures would cause trouble, was everywhere in that program. ...It brings up the question of how, other than just by saying so, or claiming it was designed that way, they expected to man-rate Airane V. Man-rating is an essentially meaningless process anyway. (In practice, man-rated launchers do not appear to have higher reliability than non-man-rated ones.) -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
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