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Patrick Underwood wrote:
So You say the discussion is moot anyway? No, just that I don't know the answer, and doubt anyone else does either, at this point. I would love to see the Russians use their dearly-paid-for Energia for a purpose a bit more noble than cold-warring with the Americans. There they sit, all the components necessary for a heavy-lift vehicle that would cost billions of dollars for the US to develop itself. Seems like somebody should consider the economic and technical pros and cons. Spending billions is going to be called "creating jobs", and anyway I believe developing a heavy lift launcher is not going to be the most expensive item of the return to moon, not by a long way. If time were constrained, Energia would have a chance: reviving the assembly line (and adding the famous hole to the plants side ;-) would be a lot faster than Shuttle C, extra-heavy versions of Atlas and Delta, or revival and reworking of Saturn V. A from the scratch launcher would take even longer, but NASA has time 'til 2020, which should suffice even for items like new engines. (OK, say the launcher must be ready in 2015, but thats 12 years.) The only chance I see for Energia is if a low-risk backup-solution is desired, which is also available earlier so that test may begin earlier. And if the russians are willing to sell the plans (maybe the tools also) to L* or B*, without building and launching more hardware outside the US. Regards Robert Kitzmueller |
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