![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jeff Findley" wrote in message ... "jonathan" wrote in message ... "Jeff Findley" wrote in message ... "jonathan" wrote in message ... Just one month before Bush wins the White House~ Atlanta Inquirer 10-14-2000 NASA, Lockheed Martin Agree On X-33 Plan NASA and Lockheed Martin have agreed on a plan to go forward with the X-33 space plane program, to include aluminum fuel tanks for the vehicle's hydrogen fuel, a revised payment schedule and a target launch date in 2003. The launch date is a contingent on Lockheed Martin's ability to compete and win additional funding under the Space Launch Initiative. NASA and Lockheed believe it is critical to continue work to solve the last remaining barrier to low-cost, reliable access to space. http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-79131028.html I see no malice by the administration here, only incompetence in picking the most technologically challenging X-33 proposal and actually expecting it to lead to a mature flight prototype. Not malice, militarization. I call b.s. As far as I'm concerned, there is no credible evidence that the US military had any interest in terminating X-33. If anything, if X-33 had flown, they would have gotten some good data from it, just as NASA would have. The fact is that the US military is not that interested in pushing reusability of launch vehicles. Witness the fact that we already have to underutilized EELV's, developed to meet US military requirements for launching military payloads. They're currently moderately interested in reusable upper stages/satellites, which could be launched by existing launch vehicles. But I absolutely don't see them pouring tens of billions of dollars into developing them, unlike other emerging military technologies. Remember, no bucks, no Buck Rodgers. Show me the money. You mean the Pentagon black budget? The whole point of this thread is to figure out what happened to /decades of effort/ to build reusable or SSO vehicles. Has it actually been abandoned, or merely moved to the Pentagon? The evidence is pretty clear it's been moved to the Pentagon. For starters, the AFSPC plan I posted essentially says to take the technology of the two scale demonstrators and use them in the next step, a full scale military space plane. And the plan was clear they thought the X-37 was the better of the two. And here we see the X-37b is about to launch. So it's rather logical to assume that 'plan' is proceeding just as it's written. Else why bother with the X-37b??? So I conclude this country is still trying to build the next generation of space plane. Something that will help fullfill the long sought promise of low cost to orbit. But post 9/11, it's also clear such a capability is a the next military high ground. Just as the first jet, the sound barrier and the fastest have always been military secrets. A space plane should be a highly guarded secret also. And having the Pentagon and NASA continue to share a black budget project to completion doesn't really make any sense. If the US military really is *very* interested in these sorts of technologies, why don't we see them spending the money to make them a reality? The answer is they're interested, but not *that* interested. How can we know how much the Pentagon is spending, or at what level their latest technology has achieved? If it's a military capability, we're not going to get any real details. Jeff -- "Many things that were acceptable in 1958 are no longer acceptable today. My own standards have changed too." -- Freeman Dyson |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "jonathan" wrote in message ... You mean the Pentagon black budget? The whole point of this thread is to figure out what happened to /decades of effort/ to build reusable or SSO vehicles. Has it actually been abandoned, or merely moved to the Pentagon? The evidence is pretty clear it's been moved to the Pentagon. Only in your dreams. The only evidence I see of reusable launch vehicle development is the very *low level* development seen with vehicles like X-37b. Again, if this was a *priority*, they'd be spending 10's of billions of dollars and would be doing more than tiny research projects and a little X-vehicle. We've got precious little to show for our efforts in this area from the 60's (lifting bodies, ASSET, X-20, and etc.) to today. And it's my opinion that a lot of that is due to lack of priority and lack of funding. In that time period we've fielded new bomber types (B-1, B-2), new air superiority fighter types (F-15, F-22), and numerous other extremely high price tag manned vehicles, but have yet to develop and field a single, dedicated, military, reusable, launch vehicle or space vehicle. For starters, the AFSPC plan I posted essentially says to take the technology of the two scale demonstrators and use them in the next step, a full scale military space plane. And the plan was clear they thought the X-37 was the better of the two. And here we see the X-37b is about to launch. So it's rather logical to assume that 'plan' is proceeding just as it's written. Else why bother with the X-37b??? The US military invests in *a lot* of low level (i.e. relatively cheap) technology development programs. But it doesn't necessarily mean that operational (i.e. extremely expensive) systems are "coming soon". Come back to me when there is a commmittment to develop and field an operational system. So I conclude this country is still trying to build the next generation of space plane. Something that will help fullfill the long sought promise of low cost to orbit. But post 9/11, it's also clear such a capability is a the next military high ground. Just as the first jet, the sound barrier and the fastest have always been military secrets. A space plane should be a highly guarded secret also. And having the Pentagon and NASA continue to share a black budget project to completion doesn't really make any sense. You're missing the obvious. Many at NASA doesn't care about this technology either. Witness the tens of billions of dollars in planned investment to create a "shuttle derived" launch vehicle to maintain the status-quo. This line of research was dropped from NASA because there wasn't a concensus within NASA that this technology was worth developing. If the US military really is *very* interested in these sorts of technologies, why don't we see them spending the money to make them a reality? The answer is they're interested, but not *that* interested. How can we know how much the Pentagon is spending, or at what level their latest technology has achieved? If it's a military capability, we're not going to get any real details. I call b.s. You can't keep launch vehicles hidden that easily. Unless the military has invented *several* new cloaking technologies for launch vehicles (visual, thermal, acoustic, radar, and etc.), every amateur launch/satellite tracker on the planet would know about the program the first time it was launched into orbit. What's next out of you, evidence of alien built flying saucers secretly operated by the military? Come back later when you have real evidence of *significant* levels of funding going into reusable launch technologies. All I see are a few programs which are funded at a very low level, especially by DOD standards. Jeff -- "Many things that were acceptable in 1958 are no longer acceptable today. My own standards have changed too." -- Freeman Dyson |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
.....NASA, Lockheed Martin Agree On X-33 Plan ! | jonathan[_3_] | Policy | 10 | December 19th 08 01:32 PM |
NASA picks Lockheed Martin for moon trip, right choice? | Jan Panteltje | Astronomy Misc | 0 | August 31st 06 10:46 PM |
Lockheed Martin HST teams receive NASA honors (Forwarded) | Andrew Yee | Astronomy Misc | 0 | July 28th 05 07:28 PM |
Lockheed Martin Receives $178.5 Million NASA Contract Extension | Jacques van Oene | Space Station | 0 | August 2nd 04 04:05 PM |