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![]() "Rick C" wrote I think the idea is not that you'd h ave fewer launches per year, but fewer total flights. That's the idea -- that hardware doesn't stack up on the ground and overflow onto the tarmac at KSC -- where uplift was the bottleneck long before the neck was corked by the 107 catastrophe. At the same cost, you launch your components 30% faster, get to 'Assembly Complete' years sooner, and make all the users happier. Meanwhile, in this alternate reality, the Russians would have put their Mir-2 into the intended 65 deg orbit, as was planned from the start, for much better land and sea coverage AND that allows access from Plesetsk, breaking the stranglehold of a foreign spaceport. First unmanned Progress vehicles, and then manned Soyuzes, would have launched out of Plesetsk. And occasional NASA shuttle missions would also visit, perhaps to bring up US earth-observation modules for the hi-inc orbit, in support of occasional US guests on the Mir-2. Russians (aboard our shuttles) would visit ISS in its 32 or 33 deg orbit for science research, too. Two stations? Too perfect? Yeah, it never could have happened -- it LOOKED more wasteful, and when it comes to government budget decisions, appearance ALWAYS trumps reality. |
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