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![]() "J. Clarke" wrote in message in.local... In article ef1d3438-60a2-4bc7-8693-09502186c549 @o11g2000prg.googlegroups.com, says... On Nov 27, 11:17 am, Fred J. McCall wrote: bob haller wrote: mars probes ending? http://www.spaceflightnow.com/atlas/av028/111124future/ It's like several of us have been telling you, Bobbert. Kill manned space and the rest of space takes an even bigger cut.... -- "Some people get lost in thought because it's such unfamiliar territory." --G. Behn No Buck Rogers, No Bucks. Simple as that. Then again, that's kinda going over the Bobbert's head. But then again, what do you expect from a clown who believes that MER-class rovers can be built on an assembly- line basis when both flight articles (and the spare at JPL used as a test bed) were literally hand-made? How does this prevent them from being made on an assembly line if someone chooses to fund a large enough buy to make it worthwhile? The first Volkswagen was hand-made too you know. The fella who makes these asinine proposals is so politically and technically naive it goes without saying. It's also a question of assets vs. support. There's a grand total of two orbiters that can act as comm relays-not to mention the Deep Space Nettwork at Goldstone, Canberra, and Madrid. Two rovers max is what the network can support. And that's not counting the orbiters' primary mission of orbital photography of the surface-and that data also has to be sent back. |
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![]() How does this prevent them from being made on an assembly line if someone chooses to fund a large enough buy to make it worthwhile? *The first Volkswagen was hand-made too you know. Do try to keep up. *Bobbert has been insisting that said production line ALREADY EXISTS so it's 'no additional cost' to make a bunch more to the same design. no they were produced over 10 years ago. since the design is so great i suggested setting up a assembly line to produce 25 to 50 or more and blanket mars. use basically the same design. land vehicles in pairs so if one got stuck its companion might be able to help. send them to more challenging and scientifically intersting areas, realizing some will not survive but the majority will have college students do the controlling to help keep down costs, with nasa experts to help in times of trouble |
#24
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![]() The fella who makes these asinine proposals is so politically and technically naive it goes without saying. It's also a question of assets vs. support. There's a grand total of two orbiters that can act as comm relays-not to mention the Deep Space Nettwork at Goldstone, Canberra, and Madrid. Two rovers max is what the network can support. And that's not counting the orbiters' primary mission of orbital photography of the surface-and that data also has to be sent back.- so no biggie send a couple new orbiters as data relays with advanced communication equiptement to increase bandwith availalble. with rovers all over the planet some will be in darkness etc for any number of reasons, so not all willl be talking at once. and stating we cant because we dont have the capacity, is like statuing we cant drive between new york and LA, if theres no road go build one ![]() |
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Matt Wiser wrote:
Sorry, Bobbert, but your "ideas" won't get anywhere in Congress. Like I said, they'd laugh you out of the hearing room, hold the door open for you, and give you a kick in the ass on the way out. If you want to blame someone for killing Saturn, as you imply, then throw darts at a pic of Tricky Dick Nixon. He gave the order. I call myth on that one. That's not my understanding. The funding of the build-out pipeline of Saturn Vs was capped in the 60's *before* Nixon was elected. Enough vehicles were built to go up to an Apollo 20 mission IIRC and that was all that was ever funded (Jorge?). The Nixon admin had nothing to do with that. It's not even clear the Nixon admin had any say in whether to stop at Apollo 17 and use the surplus hardware to do Skylab or if that was an internal decision of NASA's. Now it is possible that there may have been a bill introduced in Congress to extend funding to build more Saturn Vs that the Nixon administration could have desired to be quashed for budgetary reasons (we're in the era of wage & price controls at this point in history). Who can clarify? Dave |
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On Nov 28, 7:37*am, David Spain wrote:
Matt Wiser wrote: Sorry, Bobbert, but your "ideas" won't get anywhere in Congress. Like I said, they'd laugh you out of the hearing room, hold the door open for you, and give you a kick in the ass on the way out. If you want to blame someone for killing Saturn, as you imply, then throw darts at a pic of Tricky Dick Nixon. He gave the order. I call myth on that one. That's not my understanding. The funding of the build-out pipeline of Saturn Vs was capped in the 60's *before* Nixon was elected. Enough vehicles were built to go up to an Apollo 20 mission IIRC and that was all that was ever funded (Jorge?). The Nixon admin had nothing to do with that. It's not even clear the Nixon admin had any say in whether to stop at Apollo 17 and use the surplus hardware to do Skylab or if that was an internal decision of NASA's. Now it is possible that there may have been a bill introduced in Congress to extend funding to build more Saturn Vs that the Nixon administration could have desired to be quashed for budgetary reasons (we're in the era of wage & price controls at this point in history). Who can clarify? Dave It was the Nixon Administration that killed the last three Apollos and made the Skylab decision with the hardware existing at the time. |
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On 11/28/2011 09:37 AM, David Spain wrote:
Matt Wiser wrote: Sorry, Bobbert, but your "ideas" won't get anywhere in Congress. Like I said, they'd laugh you out of the hearing room, hold the door open for you, and give you a kick in the ass on the way out. If you want to blame someone for killing Saturn, as you imply, then throw darts at a pic of Tricky Dick Nixon. He gave the order. I call myth on that one. That's not my understanding. The funding of the build-out pipeline of Saturn Vs was capped in the 60's *before* Nixon was elected. Enough vehicles were built to go up to an Apollo 20 mission IIRC and that was all that was ever funded (Jorge?). The Nixon admin had nothing to do with that. It's not even clear the Nixon admin had any say in whether to stop at Apollo 17 and use the surplus hardware to do Skylab or if that was an internal decision of NASA's. Now it is possible that there may have been a bill introduced in Congress to extend funding to build more Saturn Vs that the Nixon administration could have desired to be quashed for budgetary reasons (we're in the era of wage & price controls at this point in history). Who can clarify? The Google Groups archive should have a complete set of my old posts on this issue. But to recap: 1) The Saturn V production line was capped at 15 rockets (enough for Apollo 4, 6, and 8-20) in June 1968 during the LBJ administration. NASA moved to terminate production contracts for the F-1, J-2, and H-1 in August 1968. 2) NASA internally made the switch from wet-lab to dry-lab for Skylab in July 1969, though at the time there was still some hope Nixon might reverse the previous administration's decision and restart Saturn V production. When that fell through, SA-513 was re-purposed for Skylab, effectively canceling Apollo 20 in January 1970. 3) A Congressional budget rescission for FY71 in September 1970 resulted in cancellation of two more Apollo missions. NASA chose to cancel 15 and 19 and renumber the remaining J-missions (16-18) to 15-17. |
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On Nov 28, 4:28*pm, "Jorge R. Frank" wrote:
On 11/28/2011 09:37 AM, David Spain wrote: Matt Wiser wrote: Sorry, Bobbert, but your "ideas" won't get anywhere in Congress. Like I said, they'd laugh you out of the hearing room, hold the door open for you, and give you a kick in the ass on the way out. If you want to blame someone for killing Saturn, as you imply, then throw darts at a pic of Tricky Dick Nixon. He gave the order. I call myth on that one. That's not my understanding. The funding of the build-out pipeline of Saturn Vs was capped in the 60's *before* Nixon was elected. Enough vehicles were built to go up to an Apollo 20 mission IIRC and that was all that was ever funded (Jorge?). The Nixon admin had nothing to do with that. It's not even clear the Nixon admin had any say in whether to stop at Apollo 17 and use the surplus hardware to do Skylab or if that was an internal decision of NASA's. Now it is possible that there may have been a bill introduced in Congress to extend funding to build more Saturn Vs that the Nixon administration could have desired to be quashed for budgetary reasons (we're in the era of wage & price controls at this point in history). Who can clarify? The Google Groups archive should have a complete set of my old posts on this issue. But to recap: 1) The Saturn V production line was capped at 15 rockets (enough for Apollo 4, 6, and 8-20) in June 1968 during the LBJ administration. NASA moved to terminate production contracts for the F-1, J-2, and H-1 in August 1968. 2) NASA internally made the switch from wet-lab to dry-lab for Skylab in July 1969, though at the time there was still some hope Nixon might reverse the previous administration's decision and restart Saturn V production. When that fell through, SA-513 was re-purposed for Skylab, effectively canceling Apollo 20 in January 1970. 3) A Congressional budget rescission for FY71 in September 1970 resulted in cancellation of two more Apollo missions. NASA chose to cancel 15 and 19 and renumber the remaining J-missions (16-18) to 15-17.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks for the update. Then it's LBJ we should blame for shutting down Saturn. You may now print out a pic of LBJ at leisure and throw however many darts at the man as you see fit. |
#29
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![]() Thanks for the update. Then it's LBJ we should blame for shutting down Saturn. You may now print out a pic of LBJ at leisure and throw however many darts at the man as you see fit His incompetence as president cost so many lives in vietnam...... he deserves not darts but flaming arrows |
#30
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On 11/28/2011 08:00 PM, Matt Wiser wrote:
Thanks for the update. Then it's LBJ we should blame for shutting down Saturn. You may now print out a pic of LBJ at leisure and throw however many darts at the man as you see fit. Nixon bears about as much responsibility for the end of Apollo/Saturn as Obama does for the end of shuttle. In both cases it was not a decision to cancel the program; it was a choice not to reverse a predecessor's decision. Which still means that both men "bought into" the decisions, in my opinion. "If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice" - Neil Peart |
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