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Boeing is using Command Module shaped hardware
and an Apollo type escape rocket in some of its recent concept drawings: According to NASA Watch: "Boeing has placed a dozen or so graphics online depicting a varety of spacecraft one would expect to see proposed as part of the President's new space policy." http://www.nasawatch.com/ http://boeingmedia.com/images/search...roduct_id=1525 Some earlier Boeing OSP CM capsule shaped concepts. http://boeingmedia.com/images/search.cfm?product_id=986 - Rusty Barton - Antelope, California -- Visit my Thor IRBM History Website http://www.geocities.com/thor_irbm/index.html |
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![]() "Brett O'Callaghan" wrote in message ... (Rusty B) wrote: Boeing is using Command Module shaped hardware and an Apollo type escape rocket in some of its recent concept drawings: I guess a good design is a good design, regardless of how old or recycled it is. ;-) Absolutely. The Russians have been using them for years ![]() |
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"Dr. O" dr.o@xxxxx wrote in message .. .
"Brett O'Callaghan" wrote in message ... (Rusty B) wrote: Boeing is using Command Module shaped hardware and an Apollo type escape rocket in some of its recent concept drawings: I guess a good design is a good design, regardless of how old or recycled it is. ;-) Absolutely. The Russians have been using them for years ![]() I had hoped that, in keeping with the desire for a simpler entry/descent/landing than the (99% successful) Space Shuttle option, we might have opted for a self-orienting reentry vehicle for the CEV. I am thinking of off-nominal cases when even your entry-attitude rockets might not be working. Mercury and Gemini were self-orienting (Carpenter mentioned Faget's confidence of less than a 60-degree oscillation of the nose during reentry, but I guess it was blunt-end forward, or BEF, on average!), and Soyuz is, too. But the Apollo command module shape had two stable entry attitudes, BEF and nose-forward. The launch escape tower included canards to destablize the nose-forward attitude so the CM would end up BEF for parachute deployment (IIRC). So my question is: what is a good shape (besides sperical, like Vostok and Voskhod) that is self-orienting for re-entry? John Charles Houston, Texas |
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John Charles wrote:
I had hoped that, in keeping with the desire for a simpler entry/descent/landing than the (99% successful) Space Shuttle option, we might have opted for a self-orienting reentry vehicle for the CEV. I am thinking of off-nominal cases when even your entry-attitude rockets might not be working. Mercury and Gemini were self-orienting (Carpenter mentioned Faget's confidence of less than a 60-degree oscillation of the nose during reentry, but I guess it was blunt-end forward, or BEF, on average!), and Soyuz is, too. But the Apollo command module shape had two stable entry attitudes, BEF and nose-forward. The launch escape tower included canards to destablize the nose-forward attitude so the CM would end up BEF for parachute deployment (IIRC). Mercury had a small spoiler flap attached to its nose to orient it blunt-end forward during re-entry. I think it was designed to put the capsule in that attitude during an abort as well. --Bill Thompson |
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In article ,
John Charles wrote: ...But the Apollo command module shape had two stable entry attitudes, BEF and nose-forward. The launch escape tower included canards to destablize the nose-forward attitude so the CM would end up BEF for parachute deployment (IIRC). It was a little more complicated than that. The canards were to ensure base-first orientation during the atmospheric aborts. For an actual reentry, from a high-altitude abort, even they weren't good enough: interaction of the tower shock with the CM produced a weak nose-forward stable position that bigger canards didn't fix. But since stability there was weak, the CM couldn't settle into that position if it was rotating at more than about 2deg/s. So high-altitude abort procedures called for immediately establishing a 5deg/sec pitch rate, ensuring that it would always stabilize base-first. While it is nice to have dependable passive stability on reentry, you do pay a price for it, and the tradeoff needs careful assessment. There is nothing inherently risky about needing active attitude control early in reentry; in many cases you need active attitude control to get to that point anyway. Providing redundant guidance and RCS may be easier, especially given that you probably want those anyway... To quote a comment from a 1990 Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel memo: ...for every failure mode someone can envision, someone else must provide a solution... The proven costs of such solutions are money, schedule delays, and additional unknowns. I believe that many of our solutions to problems create more serious problems through added complication, dilution of effort, and increased time compression on already over-stressed work loads... Unless management and program personnel develop a sense of proportion, we will forever be trying to chase things to the last decimal point, frittering away limited resources on insignificant issues. The author of that, by the way, was an astronaut. -- MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. | |
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On Tue, 27 Jan 2004 05:34:23 +0000, Henry Spencer wrote:
To quote a comment from a 1990 Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel memo: ...for every failure mode someone can envision, someone else must provide a solution... The proven costs of such solutions are money, schedule delays, and additional unknowns. I believe that many of our solutions to problems create more serious problems through added complication, dilution of effort, and increased time compression on already over-stressed work loads... Unless management and program personnel develop a sense of proportion, we will forever be trying to chase things to the last decimal point, frittering away limited resources on insignificant issues. The author of that, by the way, was an astronaut. Wow! What a great quote. Of course some of the "experts" who hang out on usenet would vehemently disagree with this astronaut in the belief that they could do better and assure safety. |
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In article ,
Brett O'Callaghan wrote: (Rusty B) wrote: Boeing is using Command Module shaped hardware and an Apollo type escape rocket in some of its recent concept drawings: I guess a good design is a good design, regardless of how old or recycled it is. ;-) If Boeing is contemplating recycling the CM, can a recycled Saturn V be far behind? -- Stephen Souter http://www.edfac.usyd.edu.au/staff/souters/ |
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On Tue, 27 Jan 2004 13:07:31 +1100, in a place far, far away, Stephen
Souter made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: In article , Brett O'Callaghan wrote: (Rusty B) wrote: Boeing is using Command Module shaped hardware and an Apollo type escape rocket in some of its recent concept drawings: I guess a good design is a good design, regardless of how old or recycled it is. ;-) If Boeing is contemplating recycling the CM, can a recycled Saturn V be far behind? Yes. The capsule will be a new design. If a heavy lifter is built, it will be as well. |
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In article ,
h (Rand Simberg) wrote: On Tue, 27 Jan 2004 13:07:31 +1100, in a place far, far away, Stephen Souter made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: In article , Brett O'Callaghan wrote: (Rusty B) wrote: Boeing is using Command Module shaped hardware and an Apollo type escape rocket in some of its recent concept drawings: I guess a good design is a good design, regardless of how old or recycled it is. ;-) If Boeing is contemplating recycling the CM, can a recycled Saturn V be far behind? Yes. The capsule will be a new design. If a heavy lifter is built, it will be as well. An update... The 31 January issue of _New Scientist_ magazine has a section with three articles on the Bush Plan, one of which contains some speculation about the booster that might be used to send the CEV to the moon. Three options are mentioned (pp29-30): 1) EOR (off-the-shelf rockets would send components into LEO which would then be assembled into a craft for a mission to the moon; this would, however, entail "constructing a space station to work from", which given the ISS and its history some in NASA, Congress, and this newsgroup may not be too happy with) 2) Shuttle-C 3) Resurrecting the Saturn V in some form (p29: "NASA is again harking back to the tried-and-tested Saturn V rocket", the writer notes, adding that "a modern moon rocket won't be quite the same as the model of 40 years ago". Although "it will be liquid fueled", one of the writer's informants speculates that it would probably use a new rocket motor, hybrid fuels, and "myriad technologies undreamed by the Apollo designers half a century past".) (Another source pours cold water on the Saturn V idea, claiming "my guess is that there are no readily accessible plans--and certainly not in any format that we could make use of".) -- Stephen Souter http://www.edfac.usyd.edu.au/staff/souters/ |
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