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The 23Feb04 issue of Aviation Week reports that NASA is telling Congress
that the Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV), the space agencies latest and greatest orbiter replacement, will cost $15B to develop. Earlier NASA estimated that the Orbital SpacePlane (OSP), last year's super-duper orbiter replacement, would cost $10-13B (todays bucks). NASA keeps turning the crank and coming up with the same numbers. The development cost of the original orbiter was about $14B in today's money. None of this is surprising because, even though the orbiter was designed over 30 years ago, spacecraft technology hasn't changed much at all. The CEV, the OSP and the orbiter all use the same technology, namely, Apollo heritage technology. So when measured in constant dollars, the development cost for these vehicles will be about the same, despite significant differences in size and weight. Why? Because the cost of airframe structure is a relatively small part of the development cost. It's the complex systems (avionics, environmental control/life support, guidance, navigation, communication, flight computer/software, hydraulics, thermal control, RCS, APS, etc.) that determine the development cost and these systems are essentially the same regardless of the size of the vehicle. There have been no major breakthroughs in these complex systems during the last 30 years that will cause a significant decrease in theirdevelopment cost. Later Ray Schmitt |
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"rschmitt23" wrote:
There have been no major breakthroughs in these complex systems during the last 30 years that will cause a significant decrease in theirdevelopment cost. Nor is it written anywhere that there ever will be such a breakthrough. D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. |
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rschmitt23 wrote:
that the Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV), the space agencies latest and greatest orbiter replacement, will cost $15B to develop. I know that this would not be a popular suggestion, but how much would it cost to build new shuttles nearly identical to the existing ones ? How much more would it cost to add in all the improvements NASA has wished it could do (electric APUs etc) ? How much more would it cost to replace SRBs with liquid fueled flyback boosters ? (or whatever technology is deemed best to replace the SRBs) ? How much more would it cost to rework the engine area to make it simple, fast and cheap to remove/replace engines ? Would there be any significant advantage in having the SSMEs attached to the ET instead of actual shuttle ? (either as a capsule with its parachutes for re-usability, or using disposable engines). Instead of dreaming of a totally radically new vehicle NASA has no idea how to build, wouldn't it be more realistic to just build new and improved shuttles ? If you start with the base model and then add each new improvement, at one point, you will reach the "sorry, we can't afford this" level, at which point your new shuttle's designed is finalised with only the improvements you can afford ? Yes, I know all the tooling for shuttle is gone. But the tooling for CEV doesn't exist either. However, there are a lot of things about Shuttle which are still manufactured (tiles, engines and I am sure countless other components that are regularly replaced). |
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John Doe wrote in :
rschmitt23 wrote: that the Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV), the space agencies latest and greatest orbiter replacement, will cost $15B to develop. I know that this would not be a popular suggestion, but how much would it cost to build new shuttles nearly identical to the existing ones ? About $2 billion a copy, plus the fixed costs of getting the line going again. How much more would it cost to add in all the improvements NASA has wished it could do (electric APUs etc) ? Electric APU alone is in the $550 million range, IIRC. How much more would it cost to replace SRBs with liquid fueled flyback boosters ? (or whatever technology is deemed best to replace the SRBs) ? In the range of $3-5 billion. How much more would it cost to rework the engine area to make it simple, fast and cheap to remove/replace engines ? No idea. Would there be any significant advantage in having the SSMEs attached to the ET instead of actual shuttle ? (either as a capsule with its parachutes for re-usability, or using disposable engines). No. SSMEs are expensive. Throwing them away would be ridiculously expensive. Developing a recovery capsule would take years, probably hundreds of millions of dollars, and would add weight to the stack. RS-68s would be cheaper but the Isp is significantly less, so performance would suffer. Moving the SSMEs to the bottom of the ET would mean reworking the MLPs, TSMs and the flame trenches on the pads. It would also significantly change the thermal/acoustic environment at the base of the SRBs. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
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![]() "John Doe" wrote in message ... How much more would it cost to replace SRBs with liquid fueled flyback boosters ? (or whatever technology is deemed best to replace the SRBs) ? NASA replowed this ground in 2001-02 as part of the so-called Space Launch Initiative (SLI) effort. The SLI folks spent time and money on studying a shuttle replacement consisting of a fully-reusable two-stage vehicle with a large flyback booster. The development cost was an estimated $30-35B (in today's bucks). Sean O'Keefe had several independent studies made to keep the SLI folks honest and these came up with essentially the same numbers. Not surprising. When I worked on the original shuttle Phase A effort (1969-70) at McDonnell Douglas, this two-stage monster was our baseline for awhile and our estimated development cost was $37B (in today's money). Again, not surprising that these numbers agree despite over 30 years of separation, because the technology remains the same. How much more would it cost to rework the engine area to make it simple, fast and cheap to remove/replace engines ? Don't know. Would there be any significant advantage in having the SSMEs attached to the ET instead of actual shuttle ? (either as a capsule with its parachutes for re-usability, or using disposable engines). Each SSME costs about $50M to manufacture (current dollars). NASA spends about $200M per year (current dollars) to maintain the SSME inventory. The shuttle flies, on average, 5.5 times per year. So 15-18 SSMEs are flown each year. So NASA is paying about $11M per SSME flown. If you can build an SSME substitute (e.g. Rocketdyne's RS-68 that powers the Delta IV CBC) for less than $11M per copy, then you might consider strapping a few of these engines to the bottom of the ET and dumping them into the Indian Ocean along with that tank. BTW, NASA studied a similar configuration in the late 1970s when it became evident that the shuttle could not meet the USAF requirement to place 32,000 pounds payloads launched out of VAFB into a polar reference orbit (100 nm altitude circular orbit at 90 deg inclination). NASA and Martin figured out how to beef up the structure in the bottom of the ET to attach liquid or solid rocket boosters to give the shuttle more lift for the launches to polar orbit. Instead of dreaming of a totally radically new vehicle NASA has no idea how to build, wouldn't it be more realistic to just build new and improved shuttles ? If you start with the base model and then add each new improvement, at one point, you will reach the "sorry, we can't afford this" level, at which point your new shuttle's designed is finalised with only the improvements you can afford ? What improvements? As I mentioned at the start of this thread, there have been no "improvements" made in spacecraft and launch vehicle technology during the last 30 years that will produce large reductions in either development cost or operations costs. Why? First, because the technology is difficult ( especially in the high temperature materials area, where I spent about 15 years of my aerospace career) and we have been in a region of diminishing returns since the early 1970s. And, second, there just hasn't been much R&D money spent during the last 30 years on this technology. For example, there has been only one new high thrust engine developed in the last 20 years, namely, the RS-68, which, BTW, is a legacy engine that relies heavily on technology developed in the late 1960s for the excellent Rocketdyne J-2S engine, which, in turn, was a simplified version of the venerable J-2S engine that powered the 2nd and 3rd stages of von Braun's Saturn V ELV. Yes, I know all the tooling for shuttle is gone. But the tooling for CEV doesn't exist either. However, there are a lot of things about Shuttle which are still manufactured (tiles, engines and I am sure countless other components that are regularly replaced). |
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![]() "rschmitt23" wrote in message news:h6T0c.24678$aZ3.5432@fed1read04... technology during the last 30 years that will produce large reductions in either development cost or operations costs. Why? First, because the technology is difficult ( especially in the high temperature materials area, where I spent about 15 years of my aerospace career) and we have been in a region of diminishing returns since the early 1970s. And, second, there just hasn't been much R&D money spent during the last 30 years on this technology. For example, there has been only one new high thrust engine developed in the last 20 years, namely, the RS-68, which, BTW, is a legacy engine that relies heavily on technology developed in the late 1960s for the excellent Rocketdyne J-2S engine, which, in turn, was a simplified version of the venerable J-2S engine that powered the 2nd and 3rd stages of von Braun's Saturn V ELV. Oops, that should be "J-2" engines, not J-2S, on the Saturn V. |
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On or about Mon, 1 Mar 2004 19:27:09 -0800, rschmitt23
made the sensational claim that: What improvements? As I mentioned at the start of this thread, there have been no "improvements" made in spacecraft and launch vehicle technology during the last 30 years that will produce large reductions in either development cost or operations costs. My opinion is still do at least Orbiter Mark II. Start with a design for which we know what's good, bad, and ugly. Or 30 years from now we'll be saying what a shame...the Saturn V never really got refined, nor did the shuttle orbiters. I know about the upgrades program, and how different the vehicles are now than when they were built, but still, to refine the design without the restrictions of well, not being able to build one *new* might be a good idea. For god's sake, Columbia was a freak accident, now all of a sudden the shuttle is a deathtrap we need to sweep under the rug ASAP? Bleh. -- This is a siggy | To E-mail, do note | Just because something It's properly formatted | who you mean to reply-to | is possible, doesn't No person, none, care | and it will reach me | mean it can happen |
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LooseChanj wrote:
My opinion is still do at least Orbiter Mark II. Start with a design for which we know what's good, bad, and ugly. Or 30 years from now we'll be saying what a shame...the Saturn V never really got refined, nor did the shuttle orbiters. I know about the upgrades program, and how different the vehicles are now than when they were built, but still, to refine the design without the restrictions of well, not being able to build one *new* might be a good idea. For god's sake, Columbia was a freak accident, now all of a sudden the shuttle is a deathtrap we need to sweep under the rug ASAP? Bleh. A fleet of OV-200s would be a fine idea. The price isn't bad, and the vehicle would be based on a reasonably well-understood design. Unfortunately, it'll never get up due to the lack of a launch escape system. I strongly agree with your point about the perception of shuttle going from a boring, routine, reliable workhorse to a deathtrap in an instant. Yes, we did mismanage signs that something bad may be about to happen. We're all much wiser now and we are adopting a much more conservative approach to potential flight safety issues. It's very unfortunate that it took the loss of Columbia and her crew for us to come to this point. It's not so much the space shuttle system that's the real deathtrap, it's the way we have managed it in the past. Had we managed any other vehicle the way we managed the space shuttle, we would have suffered a major failure, although a LES may have prevented loss of life. --Chris |
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Chris Bennetts wrote:
A fleet of OV-200s would be a fine idea. The price isn't bad, and the vehicle would be based on a reasonably well-understood design. Unfortunately, it'll never get up due to the lack of a launch escape system. Oh? Let me borrow the time machine you used to see the designs for the OV-200 series, I need to check out some future stock prices. D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. |
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On or about Tue, 02 Mar 2004 20:14:15 +1100, Chris Bennetts
made the sensational claim that: A fleet of OV-200s would be a fine idea. The price isn't bad, and the vehicle would be based on a reasonably well-understood design. Unfortunately, it'll never get up due to the lack of a launch escape system. I recall some discussion in this group about the crew cabin's toughness. Why not just make the *entire* structure the crew escape...something. *Not* an ejectable "pod" though. What I'm thinking is toughen up the pressure vessel, let the vehicle break up around it, and keep the crew cabin intact. Not necessarily intact, as in "self contained vehicle", but rather simply a box with people in it that can take a little punishment. The next bit in my plan is tricky, getting rid of that box when you're at altitudes that would allow "bail-out". Ideally, it should be able to just go "poof" and the crew be out in the open, just like that. Perhaps big blowout panels? Say the aft bulkhead. A CG that will ensure that the cabin stabilizes nose down. Astros lean their seats all the way back and just unbuckle, opening their chutes when they're clear of the "wreck". I know there's some serious issues and problems with this approach, but does it sound like a non-starter? And note that this is strictly something to be incorporated into the OV-200 series. -- This is a siggy | To E-mail, do note | Just because something It's properly formatted | who you mean to reply-to | is possible, doesn't No person, none, care | and it will reach me | mean it can happen |
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