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Grumblings of true commercial space travel at NASA



 
 
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  #1  
Old July 10th 05, 02:05 PM
Craig Fink
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Default Grumblings of true commercial space travel at NASA

I agree, hats off to Michael Griffin!

Editorial at:

http://aviationnow.ecnext.com/free-s...ticle=06275p09

begin quote

.... tried to pound that point home last week with a bracing call for
private enterprise to carry crew and cargo to the International Space
Station. Let's hope he's taken seriously, in and out of the government.

"We've got to get commercial enterprise into the space business," Griffin
said. ". . . There's no future for us continuing to build manned
spacecraft that cost $200,000 a pound."

end quote

There is another good article in this weeks issue too.

--
Craig Fink
Courtesy E-Mail Welcome @
  #2  
Old July 10th 05, 04:19 PM
Explorer
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Its very common for NASA to talk about commercializing, but not so
common for NASA to actually act on it. The chances are that what NASA
is thinking about here is a Prime Contractor, like United Space
Alliance, not a truly commercial service.

  #3  
Old July 10th 05, 04:42 PM
Jorge R. Frank
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"Explorer" wrote in
oups.com:

Its very common for NASA to talk about commercializing, but not so
common for NASA to actually act on it. The chances are that what NASA
is thinking about here is a Prime Contractor, like United Space
Alliance, not a truly commercial service.


The question will hinge on insurance. In government-contractor
relationships, the government is responsible for the project and
indemnifies the contractor against liability. In commercial supplier
relationships, the vendor is liable for its actions and must carry
liability insurance.

It will be interesting to see how the insurance industry reacts when an
alt.space company walks in the door and asks for a liability policy for
approaching and docking with a $100 billion space station, something the
alt.space company will have had no track record with. The actuaries will go
nuts trying to assign probabilities, and therefore premiums, so the policy
will probably be priced conservatively, resulting in sticker shock.

There are several potential ways out. One is to have the commercial
suppliers launch the cargo in passive cannisters and use a space tug based
at the station to retrieve it. However, this just moves the liability
problem from the cargo supplier to the space tug supplier, since one does
not currently exist.

The other solution would be government indemnification for commercial
suppliers, but the government would likely insist on a level of oversight
comparable to a government-contractor relationship, which would negate many
of the benefits of a commercial approach.

--
JRF

Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail,
check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and
think one step ahead of IBM.
  #4  
Old July 10th 05, 05:22 PM
Derek Lyons
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"Jorge R. Frank" wrote:

The other solution would be government indemnification for commercial
suppliers, but the government would likely insist on a level of oversight
comparable to a government-contractor relationship, which would negate many
of the benefits of a commercial approach.


ponders Didn't a relationship something like that help kill off the
nuclear power industry?

D.
--
Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh.

-Resolved: To be more temperate in my postings.
Oct 5th, 2004 JDL
  #5  
Old July 10th 05, 10:29 PM
Henry Spencer
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In article ,
Jorge R. Frank wrote:
There are several potential ways out. One is to have the commercial
suppliers launch the cargo in passive cannisters and use a space tug based
at the station to retrieve it. However, this just moves the liability
problem from the cargo supplier to the space tug supplier, since one does
not currently exist.


One obvious solution is to have the tug supplied by one of the station
partners. Then only the tug is an insurance issue, still not trivial but
vastly more tractable than the station itself.

People are already thinking in that direction. When Boeing asked SpaceX
for a quote on freight delivery to an orbital fuel depot, what came back
was a quote for delivery to a point 1km from the depot.
--
"Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer
-- George Herbert |
  #6  
Old July 11th 05, 02:50 AM
Rick Nelson
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Default

You people are all NSA or just so plain dumb that you should hit
yourselves in the head with a shovel and bury yourselves as living dead.

I can't imagine any of you being NASA - just NSA - you're all Cheney
********s of nothing who like a big dick up ..

I am so sad - humanity will be destroyed because dumb "Aristocratic
Fsmilies" want to go back to a feudal system because they realize (like
the Saudi's do) that the only thing they have in their future is
political self-referenced power and a few billions of dollars.


GO FIGURE why the evil Bushes have allied themselves with the Saudi
Kings. It's a complete miscalculation, but they stand for all the
benefits of the creators of Global Warming in the dirtiest energy
industries. And Herbert Walker had to sign a "treaty" to limit his
liability against killing folks in an African village in order to take
over a mine area on a global scale and make a couple of billion for his
"family". Global Mafia Fascists - spending the money to make the laws
for the super rich.a Queer, Bush Gay Jeb's Son..




Jorge R. Frank wrote:
"Explorer" wrote in
oups.com:


Its very common for NASA to talk about commercializing, but not so
common for NASA to actually act on it. The chances are that what NASA
is thinking about here is a Prime Contractor, like United Space
Alliance, not a truly commercial service.



The question will hinge on insurance. In government-contractor
relationships, the government is responsible for the project and
indemnifies the contractor against liability. In commercial supplier
relationships, the vendor is liable for its actions and must carry
liability insurance.

It will be interesting to see how the insurance industry reacts when an
alt.space company walks in the door and asks for a liability policy for
approaching and docking with a $100 billion space station, something the
alt.space company will have had no track record with. The actuaries will go
nuts trying to assign probabilities, and therefore premiums, so the policy
will probably be priced conservatively, resulting in sticker shock.

There are several potential ways out. One is to have the commercial
suppliers launch the cargo in passive cannisters and use a space tug based
at the station to retrieve it. However, this just moves the liability
problem from the cargo supplier to the space tug supplier, since one does
not currently exist.

The other solution would be government indemnification for commercial
suppliers, but the government would likely insist on a level of oversight
comparable to a government-contractor relationship, which would negate many
of the benefits of a commercial approach.

  #8  
Old July 11th 05, 03:16 AM
Jorge R. Frank
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

h (Rand Simberg) wrote in
:

On Sun, 10 Jul 2005 21:50:19 -0400, in a place far, far away, Rick
Nelson made the phosphor on my monitor glow in
such a way as to indicate that:

You people are all NSA or just so plain dumb that you should hit
yourselves in the head with a shovel and bury yourselves as living dead.

I can't imagine any of you being NASA - just NSA - you're all Cheney
********s of nothing who like a big dick up ..

I am so sad - humanity will be destroyed because dumb "Aristocratic
Fsmilies" want to go back to a feudal system because they realize (like
the Saudi's do) that the only thing they have in their future is
political self-referenced power and a few billions of dollars.


GO FIGURE why the evil Bushes have allied themselves with the Saudi
Kings. It's a complete miscalculation, but they stand for all the
benefits of the creators of Global Warming in the dirtiest energy
industries. And Herbert Walker had to sign a "treaty" to limit his
liability against killing folks in an African village in order to take
over a mine area on a global scale and make a couple of billion for his
"family". Global Mafia Fascists - spending the money to make the laws
for the super rich.a Queer, Bush Gay Jeb's Son..


I think you need a medication increase. Or decrease. Or a new
prescription altogether.


I suggest the "L" pill.


--
JRF

Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail,
check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and
think one step ahead of IBM.
  #10  
Old July 11th 05, 04:39 AM
John Doe
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Posts: n/a
Default

"Jorge R. Frank" wrote:
It also means that the particular station partner is in the critical path
of commercial crew and cargo service to ISS.


The americans have "complained" about Russia being in the critical path with
fears it couldn't be relied upon and could jeoperdize the station.

Now, the Americans are definitely on the critical path with so much of the
hardware designed to be hauled up and down by the shuttle and the Shuttle is
being widthdrawn before the station is really complete.

If there is ever to be a HAB attached to a USA node, it will have to have a
new tug. HTV may have technologies developped to bring additional modules to
within grabbing distance from the station arm for berthing. But do the
Japanese have sufficient lift (and tugging) capacity to bring a whole new
module up ?

How long would it take the Japanese to adapt HTV into a module tug ?

Has ESA indicated they are willing to fill the gap left once MPLMs are no
longer usable by committing to more ATVs ? Or will the station have to revert
back to 2 crewmembers once ESA has expanded the ATVs it had committed to
build ?

People bitch about the Shuttle, but I don't think that they realise how
important it is to have a space truck with the shuttle's capabilities.
 




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