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USAF announced the decission to transfer 7 Delta-IV launches of the EELV Buy
1 to Atlas-V. Additionally 3 Vandenberg launches of EELV Buy 2 will be granted to Atlas-V. So it is now 14 Atlas-V vs. 12 Delta-IV for the Buy procurement. And NASA asigned the New Horizons to an Atlas-5(551) launch. Looks like a lucky day for the Atlas-V program. And a heavy blow for Boeing's Delta-IV http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n0307/24usafeelv/ Gunter Krebs www.skyrocket.de/space |
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"Gunter Krebs" wrote in message ...
USAF announced the decision to transfer 7 Delta-IV launches of the EELV Buy 1 to Atlas-V. Additionally 3 Vandenberg launches of EELV Buy 2 will be granted to Atlas-V. So it is now 14 Atlas-V vs. 12 Delta-IV for the Buy procurement. And NASA asigned the New Horizons to an Atlas-5(551) launch. Looks like a lucky day for the Atlas-V program. And a heavy blow for Boeing's Delta-IV A really bad day for Boeing, especially after it said it was deemphasizing Delta IV commercial efforts to concentrate on the U.S. Air Force/NASA/NOAA customers. Now the Delta IV launch manifest looks so weak that the company will have to consider shelving the entire program. A really good day for Lockheed Martin and Energomash. A strange day for U.S. taxpayers who must contemplate their money going to a Russian company via. the Pentagon - to launch satellites that will largely be used to monitor Russia. The next logical step would be for the U.S. Air Force to replace it's aging fighters with Migs. - Ed Kyle |
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Gunter Krebs wrote:
USAF announced the decission to transfer 7 Delta-IV launches of the EELV Buy 1 to Atlas-V. Additionally 3 Vandenberg launches of EELV Buy 2 will be granted to Atlas-V. So it is now 14 Atlas-V vs. 12 Delta-IV for the Buy procurement. And NASA asigned the New Horizons to an Atlas-5(551) launch. Looks like a lucky day for the Atlas-V program. And a heavy blow for Boeing's Delta-IV That is kind of sad. The Delta-IV was the last launcher that had a chance to demonstrate economical usage of LH2 as a propellant. I was hoping for a fair fight between Atlas V and Delta IV to finally settle the age-old question wether hydrocarbons or hydrogen is better. On the other hand it is very good for the russian RD170/180/190 series engines. They won't go out of production for decades to come. Now it looks like all workhorse commercial launchers use dense propellants, and most of them use russian engines. Proton, Soyuz, Long March, Sea Launch and Atlas are arguably the most cost effective launchers in existence, and they all use dense propellants. The only remaining (somewhat) commercial hydrogen powered launchers are Ariane V and H-II, and both agencies try to supplement them with cheaper dense propellant launchers. The Europeans want to launch Soyuz and Aurora from Kourou, and the japanese are building a dense propellant launcher called J-1A using russian engines and dense propellants. So for all practical purposes, Hydrogen is dead as a first stage propellant. It is of course still used in upper stages where it makes sense to go for the highest possible ISP. |
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