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This news item
http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/03...in-early-2014/ notes that at least a tentative approximate date has been set for a test flight of Orion; thus, a craft that NASA could use to send humans to the Moon, an asteroid, or even Mars _is_ slowly becoming a reality. John Savard |
#2
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On Mar 3, 1:35*am, Quadibloc wrote:
This news item http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/03...a-has-designed... notes that at least a tentative approximate date has been set for a test flight of Orion; thus, a craft that NASA could use to send humans to the Moon, an asteroid, or even Mars _is_ slowly becoming a reality. John Savard Orion costs way too much, plus a capsule is great for transit to LEO, but really not large enough to go far. Theres no money for orion missions. This program is just a BIG pork piggie payoff to previous shuttle contractors. Our country can no longer afford pork. Meanwhile space X delivers supplies to ISS for 10% of $$$ what a NASA system would. NASA needs to get out of the way and let private operators do things |
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On Mar 3, 2:36*pm, Fred J. McCall wrote:
bob haller wrote: On Mar 3, 1:35*am, Quadibloc wrote: This news item http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/03...a-has-designed.... notes that at least a tentative approximate date has been set for a test flight of Orion; thus, a craft that NASA could use to send humans to the Moon, an asteroid, or even Mars _is_ slowly becoming a reality. John Savard Orion costs way too much, plus a capsule is great for transit to LEO, but really not large enough to go far. Theres no money for orion missions. This program is just a BIG pork piggie payoff to previous shuttle contractors. Our country can no longer afford pork. Meanwhile space X delivers supplies to ISS for 10% of $$$ what a NASA system would. NASA needs to get out of the way and let private operators do things Just how is NASA 'in the way', Bobbert? -- "Some people get lost in thought because it's such unfamiliar *territory." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * --G. Behn BY BUILDING ORION its a complete waste of money and time, and just a warmed leftover of ARES. truly congress is at fault for demanding pork. our country is headed to collapse from far too much pork and too much military spending, its doubled since 9 11 and we funded 2 wars yet with one war over and the other winding down congress wants military spending to not be cut... like my grandma used to say you can have so much insurance you cant afford to live... we need a big fast strike force based in the US and close most military bases worldwide in peaceful areas. leaving hardened bases with minimal skelton crews for security and maintence. no one is attacking japan or germany while keeping or perhaps increasing staffing in unstable areas like korea. with enough nuclear weapons as a deterrent but theres no need to have enough to kill the planet 200 times over. plus its important the US be a good neighbor and not the bully on the block. another thing is energy independence that really happens. Convert new vehicle production to electric and CNG and let the arabs drown in their oil...... They will mss the billion dollars a day we have been sending them ![]() |
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I've done some more checking. From this page,
http://www.tallgeorge.com/mpcv.php it appears that the test launch is going to be of the new Orion capsule - now called the MPCV, as Orion, as such, is officially cancelled - is going to be launched on an off-the-shelf, and never-to- be-man-rated Delta IV Heavy. Which, of course, raises the question of why the test is even taking place; apparently it will be 2020 before the SLS - Space Launch System is ready. However, a test launch in 2013 is needed if the capability of sending humans into space aboard the MPCV is to be ready in 2016, as required by legislation. Ahem. How is a launch on a Delta IV Heavy going to hasten the development of a completely unrelated booster? Only if this launch were to contribute to uprating the Delta IV Heavy, so that it could actually be used instead while we're waiting, would it accomplish something. It appears that NASA has been taken over by the pointy-haired manager from Dilbert - I had been inclined to dismiss its critics, but this information, partly from NASA's own site, and partly from a site that doesn't seem to have a political ax to grind, appears to me to add up to something that makes absolutely no sense. And, while the mess may be partly the fault of Congress, it is not NASA's job to pull the wool over Congress' eyes until the last minute by hoping that no one there will notice that what they are doing is spending money in a way totally irrelevant to achieving their mandated objective. John Savard |
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On Mar 3, 7:55*pm, Fred J. McCall wrote:
So how is that in anyone else's way? Well, it does cost the taxpayer money. As I've noted, though, I've come across something disturbing that makes it look as if, even if Orion is a very promising approach to a return to space, that the forthcoming test appears to serve no purpose that could justify the expense of a launch. I could be misunderstanding what I read, or some of it could be out of date, of course. John Savard |
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![]() "Fred J. McCall" wrote in message ... bob haller wrote: On Mar 3, 1:35 am, Quadibloc wrote: This news item http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/03...a-has-designed... notes that at least a tentative approximate date has been set for a test flight of Orion; thus, a craft that NASA could use to send humans to the Moon, an asteroid, or even Mars _is_ slowly becoming a reality. John Savard Orion costs way too much, plus a capsule is great for transit to LEO, but really not large enough to go far. Theres no money for orion missions. This program is just a BIG pork piggie payoff to previous shuttle contractors. Our country can no longer afford pork. Meanwhile space X delivers supplies to ISS for 10% of $$$ what a NASA system would. NASA needs to get out of the way and let private operators do things Just how is NASA 'in the way', Bobbert? -- "Some people get lost in thought because it's such unfamiliar territory." --G. Behn The bobbert thinks that the private sector ONLY should have HSF now or in the future. Such fantasies need to be knocked out of his ass-by a two-by-four if necessary. |
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![]() "Quadibloc" wrote in message ... On Mar 3, 7:55 pm, Fred J. McCall wrote: So how is that in anyone else's way? Well, it does cost the taxpayer money. As I've noted, though, I've come across something disturbing that makes it look as if, even if Orion is a very promising approach to a return to space, that the forthcoming test appears to serve no purpose that could justify the expense of a launch. I could be misunderstanding what I read, or some of it could be out of date, of course. John Savard EFT-1 is going to test fight avionics in a space environnment, and give the heat shield a full-scale workout, with a reentry at 85% of the velocity of a lunar mission's return. Once the test data is in, then Lockheed-Martin can make any needed changes prior to EM-1, the first SLS flight in '17, which will be the precursor to the EM-2, the initial human flight, Bobbert fantasies notwithstanding. |
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Just this Sunday, Quadibloc explained that ...
I've done some more checking. From this page, http://www.tallgeorge.com/mpcv.php it appears that the test launch is going to be of the new Orion capsule - now called the MPCV, as Orion, as such, is officially cancelled - is going to be launched on an off-the-shelf, and never-to- be-man-rated Delta IV Heavy. Which, of course, raises the question of why the test is even taking place; apparently it will be 2020 before the SLS - Space Launch System is ready. However, a test launch in 2013 is needed if the capability of sending humans into space aboard the MPCV is to be ready in 2016, as required by legislation. Ahem. How is a launch on a Delta IV Heavy going to hasten the development of a completely unrelated booster? Only if this launch were to contribute to uprating the Delta IV Heavy, so that it could actually be used instead while we're waiting, would it accomplish something. I wouldn't expect it to hasten the development of a completely unrelated booster. Instead, it would be to validate concepts and design details of the capsule itself, so that the capsule will be ready when the booster is. Compare the Little Joe tests back in Project Mercury days. Is there a link somewhere to a NASA document describing the launch? /dps -- But happiness cannot be pursued; it must ensue. One must have a reason to 'be happy.'" Viktor Frankl |
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On Mar 4, 4:12*am, Fred J. McCall wrote:
Quadibloc wrote: On Mar 3, 7:55*pm, Fred J. McCall wrote: So how is that in anyone else's way? Well, it does cost the taxpayer money. Yes, but that's not in the way of anyone else wanting to spend their own money, which is what's being talked about. *Unless what Bobbert really means by 'in the way' is it somehow prevents government going to whoever Bobbert thinks it ought to be going to. Again, for Bobbert, so how is that in anyone else's way? -- "Some people get lost in thought because it's such unfamiliar *territory." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * --G. Behn Musk is developing a manned falcon to be ready in around 2 years, the unmanned cargo flights are testing the falcon booster and operations while resupplying ISS, it costs only 10% of a nasa version.... Now if ares / orion / or whatever its named these days were a pure heavy lift I probably wouldnt care but its being sold as a manned launcher too. . Instead its nasas latest pork project. To reward past nasa contractors. Its cost per flight will be so high there will be no money for missions, err jobs for it to do... I dont know about the rest of you, but budgets are tight right now. If your family is short on cash do you buy a brand new vehicle that will only be used once a year for a family vacation? or a slightly smaller daily driver say a minivan? certinally it cant haul a tractor trailer load of stuff but it can get used daily. the tractor trailer? not only is purchase price high but we cant even afford the fuel ![]() The shuttle was sold to have a high flight rate to make its costs lower. the last thing we need is another low flight rate vehicle ![]() orion is just a boondgle wasting $$$ and nasa should of man rated the delta heavy. cost a fraction of orion and the higher flight rate of delta would of benefitted everyone |
#10
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