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#61
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#63
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![]() Derek Lyons wrote: ROTFL. I *love* how everytime someone points out the low performance of the SS1 as compared to the X-15, or how it only spends a couple of minutes in 'space' as compared to the Russian 'tourist' flights.... Someone else always parrots the 'its cheaper though! and privately built! and carries people!" as though that changes things. It's good at what it's intended to do; but the thing's overall impact on spaceflight is going to be about as important as the GeeBee racer's impact on fighter design. Pat |
#64
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In article ,
Joe Strout writes: In article , (Peter Stickney) wrote: SpaceShip 1 is an impressive project. Make no mistake about that. But it's a very limited system, for a very limited purpose. While I'd be more than happy to bet that they'll win the X-Prize, it's not going to advance the State of the Art. Nonsense -- it's already advanced the state of the art. Just a few of the new technologies developed and demonstrated: - first manned vehicle with a hybrid rocket motor And what differences are there between the hybrid motor for SS1 and other hybrids? None, that I've seen. - first rocket plane to use innovative "shuttlecock" configuration for stable re-entry That is nifty, and it's a good example of Rutan's approach to things - Burt's very good at finding simple solutions to single-point problems. but it's not applicable to anything but this particular point case, where the vehicle is reentering at a low speed, and steep angle. It's not going to work for the delicate balance of drag, heating and lift that is a lifting reentry for an orbital vehicle. - innovative high-visibility vacuum-rated cabin I suggest that you take a look at the cabins used for high altitude balloon flights in the 1930s (Auguste Piccard's Aluminum Beer Barrel, for example, or the U.S. Army/National Geographic Explorers. It's teh same concept) - And high visibility it isn't. If you read Scaled COmposite's FAQ for White Knight (Same cabin) they note that visibility is "adequate" with enough squirming around. It's not adequate for traffic clearance, which is provided by the FAA (Air Traffic Control) and chase aircraft. In addition, if "art" includes not just the final vehicle but the development and production processes as well, it's certainly advanced the state of the art significantly by developing a reusable suborbital three-person craft for about $25M. The development process is a Standard Issue incremental approach. And if they were serious about succeeding withough inordinate risk, I would expect nothing less. There's nothing new, or partularly innovative about the production processes - we already know how to carve Aluminum and lay up Fiberglass. Again, that's another example of Rutan's commitment to success - While the shapes may look odd and exotic, the materiels and techniques are not. This avoids introducing expensive (In time and money) and risky (in technical and human terms) development problems that aren't in this case necessary. White Knight, on the other hand, may end up with a useful post X-Prize career hauling payloads to high altitudes, for purposes such as Atmospheric Sampling or UV Astronomy. Unlikely; White Knight's purpose is to carry SS1. Both will have useful and productive careers as research craft, and then be retired as new, derivative craft are produced. No, White Knight's purpose is to carry an 8,000# payload to 50,000 - 60,000', at Mach 0.5 or so, and can stary there for an extended period of time. It doesn't care if the payload is SpaceShipOne, an instrumentation pod, a high resolution camera, or a SLAR system. With what are basically two Learjet engines to push it along, it's quite economical to run. There is, in fact a market for this sort of capability, as environmental studies and remote sensing work are picked up more and more by the Private Sector. SpaceShipOne isn't going to be researching anything - We already know how to fly at Mach 2, and have been doing so quite hapilly for 50 years. If the goal is to get instruments to that height, Sounding Rockets are a much more economical and safer. (As in no Pilot Risk with no Pilot) If you want a longer duration flight, you're not talking SpaceShipOne. In order to fly higher, it's going to have to fly faster, be larger, heavier, -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
#65
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![]() "Kevin Willoughby" wrote in message ... In article , says... SpaceShip 1 is an impressive project. Make no mistake about that. But it's a very limited system, for a very limited purpose. While I'd be more than happy to bet that they'll win the X-Prize, it's not going to advance the State of the Art. hmm... If "state of the art" includes concepts like "cost effectiveness" then SS1 does advance the SOTA. -- Kevin Willoughby lid By my criteria, either SpaceShip 1 construction and testing has already demonstrated an increase in the State of the Art or it hasn't. Test flights don't advance the State of the Art. They can demonstrate whether or not there has been an advance. The design and construction of SpaceShip may have used some design concepts and perhaps materials that advanced the state of the art. Improved State of the Art requires improving materials, methods, design processes and any other background things that are really different from the previously available background. Successfully flying something demonstrates that these more advanced concepts work. Flight failure may indicate that there was an attempt to design something "Beyond the State of the Art" which means that it was impossible to achieve the desired goal. On the other hand, it might indicate a simple error. I will note that my remark is simply a comment about what I see as bad semantics. Mike Walsh |
#66
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![]() "Pat Flannery" wrote in message ... Derek Lyons wrote: ROTFL. I *love* how everytime someone points out the low performance of the SS1 as compared to the X-15, or how it only spends a couple of minutes in 'space' as compared to the Russian 'tourist' flights.... Someone else always parrots the 'its cheaper though! and privately built! and carries people!" as though that changes things. It's good at what it's intended to do; but the thing's overall impact on spaceflight is going to be about as important as the GeeBee racer's impact on fighter design. Pat Interesting. I don't know about the specific impact of the GeeBee racer, but it was my understanding that racer design and development did have an impact on fighter design. Mike Walsh |
#67
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Pat Flannery wrote:
It's good at what it's intended to do; but the thing's overall impact on spaceflight is going to be about as important as the GeeBee racer's impact on fighter design. A Spitfire sure looks a hell of a lot more like a Gee Bee than an SE5A, on the inside as well as the outside. |
#68
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Herb Schaltegger wrote:
... my point was that a crew of three living, breathing, excreting and metabolizing human beings is not functionally equivalent to a crew of one such plus a bunch of lead shot bags. For a fifteen-minute suborbital flight, I don't think the difference in function is relevant. For the X-prize requirements, the difference is *explicitly* not relevant. Read it already and again, it seems to me that in my experience with reading and interpreting "requirements" the part I posted corresponds to a Tier 1 or Level 1 requirement, while the part you quoted corresponds to a Tier 2 or 3 requirement; had the X-Prize been trying to come up with workable designs for an ordinary revenue customer, someone surely would have written up a RID (Review Item Discrepancy) and asked why the Tier 2 requirement was written to weasel out of the Tier 1. The informal description of the X-prize you posted is not "requirements" at all. It's an after-the-fact *summary* of the requirements, written for people who don't care to slog through the relatively long official rules. Your having read the summary first doesn't mean you should consider the rules to be derived from the summary. |
#69
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#70
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In article ,
Peter Stickney wrote: ...If the goal is to get instruments to that height, Sounding Rockets are a much more economical and safer... You might try pricing sounding rockets sometime -- they are not cheap. As for "safer", that's a word with many definitions. Sounding rockets are a good deal less safe for both the payload and the innocent bystanders -- that's why cargo aircraft have pilots, to keep the cargo and the people on the ground safe. (As in no Pilot Risk with no Pilot) And this matters... why, exactly? Again, why is this so different from a cargo aircraft? -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
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