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On January 28, 1986, challenger was lost after the O ring failure.
Now lets consider a different NASA path. it became all too clear the shuttle had no launch boost escape. So nasa still resumed flying but did a general shuttle redesign. They moved away from the solids, and designed a compatible liquid flyback booster with more power. One of the uses of more power was a jettisonable crew compartment. giving the shuttle what it should of never flown without, launch boost escape. Other redesigns would of included elminating the APUs that used hydrazine. All those would be great to have, and saved big bucks on processing. Eventually upgraded TPS, going to blankets rather than individual tiles. Plus changes to extend the shuttles life in orbit. Upgrading tires etc. Shuttle C cargo would of been a natural outgrowth of the upgrades and a larger more powerful flyback booster could of covered heavy lift The costs of operation could of been cut enough to pay for the upgrades. Plus perhaps additional new orbiters could be built slowly over time. Keeping the design fresh. Older orbiters could of been retired to museums as they were replaced. The big mistake was freezing the basic design after challenger. The shuttle could of been a safer much more capable vehicle if it wasnt starved for cash...... |
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![]() "Jeff Findley" wrote in message ... Eh, I don't mind a bit of "what-if" or "alt.history" from time to time. Comments within. In article dcdf2f03-ac1c-4cd5-ad69- , says... On January 28, 1986, challenger was lost after the O ring failure. Now lets consider a different NASA path. it became all too clear the shuttle had no launch boost escape. Umm, that was clear BEFORE hand. It wasn't like folks suddenly woke up one day and said, "Oh gee, we didn't realize this." So nasa still resumed flying but did a general shuttle redesign. They moved away from the solids, and designed a compatible liquid flyback booster with more power. There are some economic and huge safety reasons for this. I have no idea how well they'd have managed to argue this one. I suspect the politics alone would have prevented it. One of the uses of more power was a jettisonable crew compartment. Never would have happened. Huge expense. Huge additional safety concerns (NASA rightly hate pyros, especially that many around the crew compartment.) And would have provided limited value over a very small part of the flight envelope. giving the shuttle what it should of never flown without, launch boost escape. Other redesigns would of included elminating the APUs that used hydrazine. This was I believe planned and cancelled, once if not twice. Certainly would have helped with the processing flow. All those would be great to have, and saved big bucks on processing. Eventually upgraded TPS, going to blankets rather than individual tiles. Not possible. Where they could, they did this. However, for the underside especially, you need the tiles. And you can't replace them with monolithic pieces. Keep in mind the airframe flexes. So the tiles were far from a terrible solution. However, there was work done on tougher tiles that might have been of some value. Plus changes to extend the shuttles life in orbit. Upgrading tires etc. Shuttle C cargo would of been a natural outgrowth of the upgrades and a larger more powerful flyback booster could of covered heavy lift Eh. No real need. The costs of operation could of been cut enough to pay for the upgrades. "Maybe" The problem is, NASA's not operated as a business. It's funded by a Board of 535+1 people. They often don't look at spending that way. Plus perhaps additional new orbiters could be built slowly over time. Keeping the design fresh. Older orbiters could of been retired to museums as they were replaced. Very unlikely to happen. The flight rate just never came close to justifying it. The big mistake was freezing the basic design after challenger. No. The big mistake was continuing to treat the system as an operational design when it was clearly still an experimental system. For example one thing the CAIB recommended was embedding recording systems in ALL the shuttles, much like what Columbia had since it helped them determine the cause of the accident. (R3.6-1) Given the progress of technology, live camera feeds from the SRBs and/or tank should have been adopted as early as possible to monitor things like foam loss. And overall, a very different management structure. And changing the management structure really was the key part and basically would have cost $0. (In reality, it wouldn't because it might mean hiring different people, spending more money as a result of management decisions, etc.) Compare the history of the X-15 program (pick up Hypersonic by Jenkins) to that of the Shuttle program. The X-15 flew more flights, but was always considered an experimental system. Now granted, there are vast differences in the vehicles (you could test the X-15 in an incremental fashion, you couldn't do that with the shuttle). But also the attitudes simply were different. Again, I'd read the CAIB Bob. With the fixes YOU propose, we'd still have lost Columbia. The hardware was far from perfect, and there's good arguments for where it could have and should have been improved. However, the real problem was a structure that treated the system as operational and allowed things like foam loss to continue. The original specs required NO foam loss. Even how foam strikes hitting the orbiter were considered changed over time to the point where it was by STS-107 considered simply a post-landing processing issue. And worse, NASA wasn't even aware of some of the bipod ramp strikes until AFTER the CAIB looked at them. This isn't a matter where simply tossing more money at the program, especially for the upgrades you mentioned would have made a difference. A cultural change was what was needed. The shuttle could of been a safer much more capable vehicle if it wasnt starved for cash...... NASA didn't have the tens of billions it would have required for the "redesign" that you propose for an alternate history. Your premise is invalid, so your alternate history is fantasy. Jeff -- Greg D. Moore http://greenmountainsoftware.wordpress.com/ CEO QuiCR: Quick, Crowdsourced Responses. http://www.quicr.net |
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![]() "Jeff Findley" wrote in message ... In article dcdf2f03-ac1c-4cd5-ad69- , says... On January 28, 1986, challenger was lost after the O ring failure. Now lets consider a different NASA path. it became all too clear the shuttle had no launch boost escape. So nasa still resumed flying but did a general shuttle redesign. They moved away from the solids, and designed a compatible liquid flyback booster with more power. One of the uses of more power was a jettisonable crew compartment. giving the shuttle what it should of never flown without, launch boost escape. Other redesigns would of included elminating the APUs that used hydrazine. All those would be great to have, and saved big bucks on processing. Eventually upgraded TPS, going to blankets rather than individual tiles. Plus changes to extend the shuttles life in orbit. Upgrading tires etc. Shuttle C cargo would of been a natural outgrowth of the upgrades and a larger more powerful flyback booster could of covered heavy lift The costs of operation could of been cut enough to pay for the upgrades. Plus perhaps additional new orbiters could be built slowly over time. Keeping the design fresh. Older orbiters could of been retired to museums as they were replaced. The big mistake was freezing the basic design after challenger. The shuttle could of been a safer much more capable vehicle if it wasnt starved for cash...... NASA didn't have the tens of billions it would have required for the "redesign" that you propose for an alternate history. Your premise is invalid, so your alternate history is fantasy. Jeff -- "the perennial claim that hypersonic airbreathing propulsion would magically make space launch cheaper is nonsense -- LOX is much cheaper than advanced airbreathing engines, and so are the tanks to put it in and the extra thrust to carry it." - Henry Spencer Jeff, what else would you expect from the bobbert? Lunacy such as this is par for the course with him. |
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What ifs are great but hindsight is a wonderful thing and seldom available
as an option at the time its needed.. grin. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "bob haller" wrote in message ... On January 28, 1986, challenger was lost after the O ring failure. Now lets consider a different NASA path. it became all too clear the shuttle had no launch boost escape. So nasa still resumed flying but did a general shuttle redesign. They moved away from the solids, and designed a compatible liquid flyback booster with more power. One of the uses of more power was a jettisonable crew compartment. giving the shuttle what it should of never flown without, launch boost escape. Other redesigns would of included elminating the APUs that used hydrazine. All those would be great to have, and saved big bucks on processing. Eventually upgraded TPS, going to blankets rather than individual tiles. Plus changes to extend the shuttles life in orbit. Upgrading tires etc. Shuttle C cargo would of been a natural outgrowth of the upgrades and a larger more powerful flyback booster could of covered heavy lift The costs of operation could of been cut enough to pay for the upgrades. Plus perhaps additional new orbiters could be built slowly over time. Keeping the design fresh. Older orbiters could of been retired to museums as they were replaced. The big mistake was freezing the basic design after challenger. The shuttle could of been a safer much more capable vehicle if it wasnt starved for cash...... |
#6
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On Feb 19, 3:26*am, "Brian Gaff" wrote:
What ifs are great but hindsight is a wonderful thing and seldom available as an option at the time its needed.. grin. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is *active"bob haller" wrote in message .... On January 28, 1986, challenger was lost after the O ring failure. Now lets consider a different NASA path. it became all too clear the shuttle had no launch boost escape. So nasa still resumed flying but did a general shuttle redesign. They moved away from the solids, and designed a compatible liquid flyback booster with more power. One of the uses of more power was a jettisonable crew compartment. giving the shuttle what it should of never flown without, launch boost escape. Other redesigns would of included elminating the APUs that used hydrazine. All those would be great to have, and saved big bucks on processing. Eventually upgraded TPS, going to blankets rather than individual tiles. Plus changes to extend the shuttles life in orbit. Upgrading tires etc. Shuttle C cargo would of been a natural outgrowth of the upgrades and a larger more powerful flyback booster could of covered heavy lift The costs of operation could of been cut enough to pay for the upgrades. Plus perhaps additional new orbiters could be built slowly over time. Keeping the design fresh. Older orbiters could of been retired to museums as they were replaced. The big mistake was freezing the basic design after challenger. The shuttle could of been a safer much more capable vehicle if it wasnt starved for cash...... coud the liquid fly back booster have been intergrated with the ET making it all reusable' The tank and boosters would remain together till they got over the indian ocean. Or the shuttle could of flown on top of the booster and ET |
#7
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In article fb24780f-4c50-4ff9-bce6-
, says... coud the liquid fly back booster have been intergrated with the ET making it all reusable' No, because then it wouldn't be a booster. The tank and boosters would remain together till they got over the indian ocean. Or the shuttle could of flown on top of the booster and ET The numbers wouldn't work. Jeff -- "the perennial claim that hypersonic airbreathing propulsion would magically make space launch cheaper is nonsense -- LOX is much cheaper than advanced airbreathing engines, and so are the tanks to put it in and the extra thrust to carry it." - Henry Spencer |
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