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We'll know soon enough.
BTW, the planned Falcon launch is apparently supposed to go from Space Launch Complex 3-West at Vandenberg AFB, formerly used for Atlas E/F/H launches. The site's service and unbilical towers were demolished in 2000, so this must be a "flat pad" setup. SLC-3W is supposed to be rebuilt for Atlas V in a few years as I understand it. The SpaceX web site has news of a recent test stand engine explosion and of launch date slippage. Neither are big suprises in such a development effort. According to the web site, the "reusable" Falcon first stage will reenter at Mach 9, float down to the Pacific on parachutes, and be fished out of the water by some guys in a rented tugboat! - Ed Kyle SpaceX Press Release Follows SpaceX Falcon Rocket to Be Unveiled In Washington, DC December 4 WHAT: Space Exploration Technologies Corporation (SpaceX)'s official unveiling ceremony for the new Falcon orbital launch vehicle. SpaceX will bring the entire seven-story high spacecraft and its mobile launch system to the nation's Capitol as part of the hundred-year anniversary of manned flight. WHO: SpaceX founder CEO Elon Musk and others WHEN: Thursday, December 4, 2003 - Unveiling ceremony at 8:00 EST - Reception begins at 7:00 EST WHE Unveiling ceremony on Independence Avenue followed by Reception: The Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, on the Mall, Washington, DC WHAT ELSE: The Falcon rocket is notable for being: -- The first rocket with substantial reusability developed since the Space Shuttle launched over two decades ago. Once the Shuttle retires, it will be the world's only reusable rocket. -- A major breakthrough in the cost of access to space, with a price per flight to orbit over four times lower than its nearest American competitor. -- Designed from a "clean sheet" for reliable space transportation, compared to most existing launch vehicles, which have a comparatively low-reliability heritage as weapons systems. First launch is expected to occur in early 2004 from the SpaceX launch complex at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. The payload is a Department of Defense tactical communications & observation satellite called TacSat-1. CONTACT: Frank Sietzen 703 685 7090, Email: About SpaceX Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) is developing a family of launch vehicles intended to reduce the cost and increase the reliability of access to space by a factor of ten. Falcon, a two stage, liquid-fueled orbital launch vehicle, is the company's first product. The entire vehicle, including main and upper stage engines, primary structure, avionics and guidance control, is being developed internally at SpaceX. Located in El Segundo, California, the company was founded by CEO Elon Musk in June 2002. SpaceX is the third company founded by Mr. Musk. Previously he co-founded and was the largest shareholder of PayPal, the world's leading electronic payment system, which sold to online auction giant eBay(TM) for $1.5 billion in 2002. More information about SpaceX can be found at http://www.SpaceX.com |
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On 2003-11-26, ed kyle wrote:
BTW, the planned Falcon launch is apparently supposed to go from Space Launch Complex 3-West at Vandenberg AFB, formerly used for Atlas E/F/H launches. The site's service and unbilical towers were demolished in 2000, so this must be a "flat pad" setup. SLC-3W is supposed to be rebuilt for Atlas V in a few years as I understand it. They've also been allocated Complex 46 out at The Cape. From a reply that Kim (Keller) gave to me wondering where Complex 46 was, that is a "flat pad". I'd guess SLC-3W is the same... See http://groups.google.com/groups?q=g7....rr.com&rnum=2 Iain |
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Iain Young wrote in message ...
On 2003-11-26, ed kyle wrote: BTW, the planned Falcon launch is apparently supposed to go from Space Launch Complex 3-West at Vandenberg AFB, formerly used for Atlas E/F/H launches. The site's service and unbilical towers were demolished in 2000, so this must be a "flat pad" setup. SLC-3W is supposed to be rebuilt for Atlas V in a few years as I understand it. They've also been allocated Complex 46 out at The Cape. From a reply that Kim (Keller) gave to me wondering where Complex 46 was, that is a "flat pad". I'd guess SLC-3W is the same... SLC 46 is flat in the sense that it has a subgrade flame trench and no umbilical tower to speak of (Athena used a steel pole-like mast), but it does have a mobile service structure that can house a vehicle during pre-launch assembly and testing. Vandenberg's SLC 3-West won't have a service tower, unless SpaceX or the Air Force builds one. I'm going to waffle a bit now about the Atlas V pad. It turns out that a recent Aviation Week story said that SLC-*East*, the current Atlas IIAS pad, is supposed to be rebuilt to support Atlas V. SLC-3E in current form is practically brand new (first launch in 1999), but has only hosted two Atlas IIA(S) launches. A third and final Atlas IIA(S) is on that pad right now. - Ed Kyle |
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In article ,
ed kyle wrote: According to the web site, the "reusable" Falcon first stage will reenter at Mach 9, float down to the Pacific on parachutes, and be fished out of the water by some guys in a rented tugboat! The story I heard is that the reusability is more public relations than reality... although things may have changed since then, I haven't had a recent update. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
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Maybe it is not about money. Or, maybe, it is about creating
a company to sell to your undercut competition later for a big profit. BRBR I can't see that here. This isn't PayPal: there's no mass market. Musk says he thinks he can sell 4-5 launches/year once the government believes he's for real and the vehicle is flight proven. Also, $6M is without range costs, so expect a creep to near $7M, still way lower than any other US provider. I had the chance to ask Musk if he expected to turn a profit on the small Falcon, or if it was just a useful stepping stone towards larger rockets. He replied that he would like to make money on the small vehicle and thought he would, but he didn't have to do so in the first year or two. Matt Bille ) OPINIONS IN ALL POSTS ARE SOLELY THOSE OF THE AUTHOR |
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#9
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In article , Al Jackson wrote:
(ed kyle) wrote in message . com... We'll know soon enough. - Ed Kyle Reading their website and other press on SpaceX , they say launch cost will be 6 million. That would be interesting, and maybe can be done. But the only mention I see for development cost is 100 million, that really seems low, even using off-the-shelf stuff , I find this hard to believe. Random thought - to what degree are development costs constrained by launch cost, and how does it scale? I mean, you'd rationally expect Pegasus to have lower development costs than, say, Delta IV. But is there a relationship? Interesting thought. (It no doubt depends on testing regimens - I'd hate to see the development cost of one of the EELVs if they'd used a V2-scale test-firing program) Might go and dig up some numbers here... -- -Andrew Gray |
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