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What is our heavy lift capability now? Excluding the Shuttle? I think
the Saturn V could heave 100 tons into low Earth orbit, 52 tons to the moon. Is it also true that the Apollo CM could have been modified for six people just for transfer to orbit and back? |
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Bill wrote in
: What is our heavy lift capability now? Excluding the Shuttle? I think the Saturn V could heave 100 tons into low Earth orbit, 52 tons to the moon. Is it also true that the Apollo CM could have been modified for six people just for transfer to orbit and back? Titan is no longer available; it was replaced by the Delta IV Heavy which has a payload of 25 tons to low orbit. This could almost be doubled with upgrades; with major upgrades payload might increase to 90 tons or so. Atlas V Heavy could be used in the same way. http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/...bls/flash.html Shuttle components could be used without the orbiter for heavy lift as well; this is called Shuttle-C or Shuttle- Derived. Payloads would be similar to the uprated Delta IV or Atlas V. I don't know exactly what was proposed for Apollo; after Shuttle other manned vehicle will take over the role of transporting humans into space. They might resemble an enlarged Apollo capsule. Or not. --Damon |
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Damon Hill wrote:
Titan is no longer available; it was replaced by the Delta IV Heavy which has a payload of 25 tons to low orbit. This could almost be doubled with upgrades; with major upgrades payload might increase to 90 tons or so. Atlas V Heavy could be used in the same way. They may be out of production but at least one Titan's available. In fact, one (T4b) is on pad 40 right now and is set to hoist a KH-12 variant up early next month, on or around the 9th I believe... T3 |
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"T3" wrote in message
... Damon Hill wrote: Titan is no longer available; it was replaced by the Delta IV Heavy which has a payload of 25 tons to low orbit. This could almost be doubled with upgrades; with major upgrades payload might increase to 90 tons or so. Atlas V Heavy could be used in the same way. They may be out of production but at least one Titan's available. In fact, one (T4b) is on pad 40 right now and is set to hoist a KH-12 variant up early next month, on or around the 9th I believe... T3 Yes, the last of the series from the Cape - then pad 40 will likely be mothballed - since LM Atlas V is already using Pad 41 In 1997, Cassini (now orbiting Saturn) was launched from Titan IV pad 40 http://www.britastro.org/journal/archive/cassini.htm gb |
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T3 wrote in news:%ye1e.3609$Pc.2290
@tornado.tampabay.rr.com: Damon Hill wrote: Titan is no longer available; it was replaced by the Delta IV Heavy which has a payload of 25 tons to low orbit. This could almost be doubled with upgrades; with major upgrades payload might increase to 90 tons or so. Atlas V Heavy could be used in the same way. They may be out of production but at least one Titan's available. In fact, one (T4b) is on pad 40 right now and is set to hoist a KH-12 variant up early next month, on or around the 9th I believe... I know that. But Titan's irrelevant to future space launch; it was way too expensive to continue using and as a result it is now all but history. --Damon |
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"Bill" wrote in message
... What is our heavy lift capability now? Excluding the Shuttle? I think the Saturn V could heave 100 tons into low Earth orbit, 52 tons to the moon. Is it also true that the Apollo CM could have been modified for six people just for transfer to orbit and back? The US has two EELV launchers (e.g. developed to Air Force specifications in 1990s to largely replace Titan and Atlas). .... not counting SeaLaunch/Zenit or its derivatives. http://www.spaceandtech.com/spacedat...enit_sum.shtml Lockheed Martin - Atlas 5 (various versions) http://www.spaceandtech.com/spacedat...las5_sum.shtml Boeing - Delta 4 (I believe Delta 4 Heavy has top life capability) http://www.spaceandtech.com/spacedat...lta4_sum.shtml Boeing reworked the Cape Launch Pad 37 facilities (old Saturn 1B launch pads) Lockheed Martin reworked Cape Launch Pad 41 (old Titan III and IV launch pad) http://www.space.com/missionlaunches...v_020825b.html Cape Launch ad 40 is scheduled to launch the last Titan IV in next few weeks (end of era) http://www.spaceandtech.com/spacedat...an4b_sum.shtml At Vandenberg, Lockheed Martin is currently reworking a launch pad (old Atlas?) and Boeing reworked the SLC 6 pad (original AF MOL program and Shuttle SLC-6 facility) Maybe 100 tones to LEO will be developed again - maybe using common parts from these 2 launchers -- I hope so -- the current need is likely 3 to 4 a year. "Build it .. and they will come" gb |
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![]() "gb" wrote in message ... "Build it .. and they will come" They built it, and few came. gb |
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On Sat, 26 Mar 2005 02:56:07 GMT, "Greg D. Moore \(Strider\)"
wrote: They built it, and few came. ....Please, let's keep the group sex jokes to a dull thud. OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
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"Bill" wrote in message
... I think the Saturn V could heave 100 tons into low Earth orbit... Is it also true that the Apollo CM could have been modified for six people just for transfer to orbit and back? The Saturn V could lift roughly 140 tons to LEO: http://history.msfc.nasa.gov/saturnV/Introduction.pdf A kit was developed for the Apollo CM that provided five couches for a possible Skylab rescue mission. This was nearly used during Skylab 3, when a service module RCS problem initiated rescue preparations. The problem was later solved so the rescue wasn't needed. http://www.astronautix.com/craft/apouecsm.htm |
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