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#51
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the SSME can be cut off and returned.
Returned how? The CEV isn't big enough to return an SSME. And whoever said use the CEV for that role? Again, *think.* Try to come up with an approach. Think about it from the standpoint of the entepreneur. There are, say, a dozen SSME's on orbit, each worth $30-$90 *million* dollars, fully refurbed. How would *you* go about getting 'em? I've already pointed out a relatively straightforward and cheap means of returning them. Refine that idea, or do better. look how many ET's have been dumped into the ocean ET's aren't Stick upper stages, anymore than the CEV is the Shuttle. their lunar mission architecture requires only a single docking in LEO before departing for the moon. Good for them! They lack the desire to do any orbital assembly (beyond a single docking). They also lack the desire for hypersonic in-flight refueling. The *******s! Your wishful thinking will not change this, just as the same wishful thinking never resulted in a single ET being taken to LEO. And just as wishful thinking has not built a private orbital manned spacecraft, much less put someone on the moon. But here's the difference: the Stick Stage 2 will end up in some sort of orbit. Instead of whining like a little bitch, talk (calmly) to your Congresscritters and get them to order NASA to either use the stages on orbit, or have them transfer ownership to the highest bidder. Write letters to the editor with simialr suggestions, call NASA PAO, arrange a meeting with Mike Griffin, whatever. Or some other suggestion more useful than "WAAAAH! WAAAAAAHHHH! They're not doing things the way *I* want them to!!!!!" |
#52
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Their "new" lunar mission architecture is so similar to Apollo that it's ...
.... technologically boring. Which is *exactly* the right approach if you want to actually *do* something. |
#53
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![]() Henry Spencer wrote: [...] ...the SSME can be cut off and returned. I don't believe that CEV, by current notions, is big enough to return it. This is a theoretical future possibility, not something that can reasonably be cited as a virtue of the current system. It's only a lack of even moderate imagination that makes the 2nd stage expendable. No, it's the lack of a reentry system that could return it for reuse. I agree that the hardware itself isn't inherently limited to a single use -- as best one can tell, given how little detail exists -- but as currently conceived, that stage is 100% expendable. Demonstartor 2R tells us that cheap recovery systems for the SSME (and CMGs when shuttle stands down) are still "just around the corner". /dps P.S. D-2R is "fluffy" without the tubesocks cooling system, Pete. |
#54
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In article , Pat Flannery says...
Henry Spencer wrote: The fundamental cost of putting mass into orbit with LOX/kerosene is under $1.50/kg. Wait a minute; leaving the LOX out of the equation, I can accelerate 1 kg of mass to 18,000 mph and 100 miles altitude with the energy in around 2/3rds of a gallon of Kerosene? Yes. Yes you can. Higher heating value of gasoline typically runs about 20,000 btu/lb, or in proper units 45 MJ/kg. Two-thirds of a gallon of gasoline weighs in at 1.8 kilograms. So, over eighty megajoules of energy to play with. Combined kinetic and potential energy of an object at 100 miles and 18,000 mph is thirty-four megajoules per kilogram. So you only need to achieve an overall efficiency of 40% to pull this off. Rockets can do this easily. It's running around $2.75 at the moment. Domestic retail, including road-use tax. We'll be buying wholesale, and where we're going, we don't need *roads*. Price of LOX in 2001 was about $.67 per gallon. Cheaper than that if you build your own LOX extractor on-site, which is worth doing if you're using it in rocket-propellant quantities. -- *John Schilling * "Anything worth doing, * *Member:AIAA,NRA,ACLU,SAS,LP * is worth doing for money" * *Chief Scientist & General Partner * -13th Rule of Acquisition * *White Elephant Research, LLC * "There is no substitute * * for success" * *661-951-9107 or 661-275-6795 * -58th Rule of Acquisition * |
#55
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In article , JHNichols says...
There's a South Park episode lurking in there somewhere. (Cut to image of Kenny impaled on a solar array.) :-D There is an episode were the children are standing at the bus stop before school and MIR falls on Kenny. "Oh, my God, MIR killed Kenny! You *******s!" Hmm. Was a "Kenny McCormick" ever one of Maggie O'Connell's boyfriends on _Northern Exposure_? Some things can't be coincidence, and others can but shouldn't be :-) -- *John Schilling * "Anything worth doing, * *Member:AIAA,NRA,ACLU,SAS,LP * is worth doing for money" * *Chief Scientist & General Partner * -13th Rule of Acquisition * *White Elephant Research, LLC * "There is no substitute * * for success" * *661-951-9107 or 661-275-6795 * -58th Rule of Acquisition * |
#56
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#57
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![]() "Herb Schaltegger" wrote in message .com... On Wed, 19 Oct 2005 13:13:47 -0500, Jeff Findley wrote (in article ): Then I pick neither. Unless NASA is willing to do for manned spaceflight what NACA did for air transport, then I don't feel it should be in the business of manned spaceflight at all. Whining about 45 years' worth of entrenched methodology doesn't help, either. Expecting change out of a government agency is absurd. At the same time, the Glories of Private Enterprise haven't stepped up to the plate either. NASA does appear to be at a decision point here. If we go ahead with the CEV, stick, and SDHLV, it's insuring that NASA will continue with its business as usual approach to manned spaceflight. There will be little opportunity for change if NASA gets its way. Jeff -- Remove icky phrase from email address to get a valid address. |
#58
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... the SSME can be cut off and returned. Returned how? The CEV isn't big enough to return an SSME. And whoever said use the CEV for that role? Again, *think.* Try to come up with an approach. Think about it from the standpoint of the entepreneur. There are, say, a dozen SSME's on orbit, each worth $30-$90 *million* dollars, fully refurbed. How would *you* go about getting 'em? I've already pointed out a relatively straightforward and cheap means of returning them. Refine that idea, or do better. Ideas are a dime a dozen. Astronautix.com is littered with thousands of ideas, but very few have led to actual flight hardware because few of them have ever been funded to completion. The idea of recovering SSME's from spent (expendable) upper stages isn't new, it's just unfunded. Right now NASA is in quite a bit of a funding crisis. It seems it can't afford to keep flying the shuttle for ISS assembly flights and start CEV and stick development at the same time on its existing budget. They're not about to compound that development effort (and increase the development costs by billions) just to recover a few SSME's or start a LEO junkyard made up of spent upper stages (that would need constant reboosts to counter aerodynamic drag). That's reality. What you propose is very pie in the sky by comparison. look how many ET's have been dumped into the ocean ET's aren't Stick upper stages, anymore than the CEV is the Shuttle. How many times has *any* spent upper stage or launch vehicle engine that's in LEO, been recovered or reused? Even the Skylab Wet Workshop concept was quickly dropped when a surplus Saturn V became available. their lunar mission architecture requires only a single docking in LEO before departing for the moon. Good for them! But bad for anyone proposing a use for spent upper stages. NASA badly wants to avoid any and all zero gravity EVA's. I'm sure if a private company could get to LEO and figure out a way to use the spent stages, that they might be able to reach an agreement with NASA to do so. However, those spent stages will still be property of the US government, so they really will need permission to do anything with them. They lack the desire to do any orbital assembly (beyond a single docking). They also lack the desire for hypersonic in-flight refueling. The *******s! Your wishful thinking will not change this, just as the same wishful thinking never resulted in a single ET being taken to LEO. And just as wishful thinking has not built a private orbital manned spacecraft, much less put someone on the moon. But here's the difference: the Stick Stage 2 will end up in some sort of orbit. Instead of whining like a little bitch, talk (calmly) to your Congresscritters and get them to order NASA to either use the stages on orbit, or have them transfer ownership to the highest bidder. Write letters to the editor with simialr suggestions, call NASA PAO, arrange a meeting with Mike Griffin, whatever. Or some other suggestion more useful than "WAAAAH! WAAAAAAHHHH! They're not doing things the way *I* want them to!!!!!" Resorting to name calling in a debate is always telling. I'm just being realistic. Congress doesn't care about recovering spent rocket stages in LEO. If they did, Delta IV and Atlas V wouldn't be completely expendable. The fact is that any use of these stages will require a substantial up front development cost. That's a cost the government has historically been unwilling to pay. But if you're so convinced this is a viable strategy, why not start your own company and work on a solution yourself? If it's such a good idea, investors won't hesitate to give you development money. Jeff -- Remove icky phrase from email address to get a valid address. |
#59
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Their "new" lunar mission architecture is so similar to Apollo that it's .... ... technologically boring. Which is *exactly* the right approach if you want to actually *do* something. Which is why they should be buying launches, not developing new launch vehicles. NASA should be working on the hard problems that prevent us from being a true spacefaring nation, not keep repeating the successes of the past. The hard problems are things like: 1. High launch costs 2. Cumbersome, low pressure EVA suits and gloves 3. Better EVA tools 4. Better designs for hardware intended for assembly or swap-out during an EVA (e.g. ISS assembly and Hubble servicing) 5. Refueling techniques for cryogenic fuels and oxidizers 6. Automated rendezvous and docking (useful for commercial ISS resupply) 7. Inexpensive reentry and recovery techniques for large pieces of hardware (e.g. SSME's) and etc. NASA ought to work on enabling technologies and techniques to open up space, not on developing hardware that could otherwise be purchased commercially. As these technologies are matured, it's up to the commercial launch providers to choose to use these technologies, just as early aircraft manufacturers were free to choose to use NACA airfoil designs. Jeff -- Remove icky phrase from email address to get a valid address. |
#60
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We've already *done* that.
We've already cured diseases. Why do it again? And beyond that, what specific things can you do, things that are actually worth doing, with Stick/CEV? Building a space-based civilization. If somebody else can come up with somethign else to do it with, great. |
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