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"NASA is committed to launching American astronauts from U.S. soil in the
very near future, and we're taking a significant step toward achieving that goal today," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said. "Our American industry partners have already proven they can safely and reliably launch supplies to the space station, and now we're working with them to get our crews there as well. However, we will require that these companies provide spacecraft that meet the same rigorous safety standards we had for the space shuttle program, while providing good value to the American taxpayer." Hmm.. well, .. Brian -- Brian Gaff....Note, this account does not accept Bcc: email. graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them Email: __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________ |
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David Spain formulated the question :
On 11/20/2013 3:37 PM, Jeff Findley wrote: In article , says... "NASA is committed to launching American astronauts from U.S. soil in the very near future, and we're taking a significant step toward achieving that goal today," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said. "Our American industry partners have already proven they can safely and reliably launch supplies to the space station, and now we're working with them to get our crews there as well. However, we will require that these companies provide spacecraft that meet the same rigorous safety standards we had for the space shuttle program, while providing good value to the American taxpayer." Hmm.. well, .. Brian It's a "good enough" yardstick for ISS. After all, I'm guessing crewed flights on commercial crew will happen about every six months. That's a lower flight rate than the shuttle, so the odds of losing a crew, in a given year, will be less even if they "only" achieve space shuttle like reliability. Jeff My feeling on this is that Dragon/Falcon-9 and Shuttle are such completely different systems that statistical comparisons between them are probably meaningless. It would only be slightly more informative to compare Dragon/F9 to Mercury/Atlas or Gemini/Titan.... The statistical comparison that counts is not at all meaningless: can the crew expect to get to spoace, perform their mission, and return? Statistical comparisons delaing with individual components may be problematic, but I don't see a difference in counting mission failures. /dps -- Who, me? And what lacuna? |
#5
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Snidely submitted this gripping article, maybe on Wednesday:
The statistical comparison that counts is not at all meaningless: can the crew expect to get to spoace, perform their mission, and return? Statistical comparisons delaing with individual components may be problematic, but I don't see a difference in counting mission failures. Crap, I need to fire my proof reader ... the statistical properties of that component are not staying within guidelines. /dps -- "I am not given to exaggeration, and when I say a thing I mean it" _Roughing It_, Mark Twain |
#6
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Don't worry we all knew wot you ment.
What you need is a boring screenreader voice like wot I has. It can spot some of the things eyes do not. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Snidely" wrote in message news:mn.a53d7ddb9370c1bb.127094@snitoo... Snidely submitted this gripping article, maybe on Wednesday: The statistical comparison that counts is not at all meaningless: can the crew expect to get to spoace, perform their mission, and return? Statistical comparisons delaing with individual components may be problematic, but I don't see a difference in counting mission failures. Crap, I need to fire my proof reader ... the statistical properties of that component are not staying within guidelines. /dps -- "I am not given to exaggeration, and when I say a thing I mean it" _Roughing It_, Mark Twain |
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On 11/21/2013 1:21 AM, Snidely wrote:
Snidely submitted this gripping article, maybe on Wednesday: The statistical comparison that counts is not at all meaningless: can the crew expect to get to spoace, perform their mission, and return? Statistical comparisons delaing with individual components may be problematic, but I don't see a difference in counting mission failures. Crap, I need to fire my proof reader ... the statistical properties of that component are not staying within guidelines. /dps But of what practical use are such statistics? Might as well have a measurement along the lines of "breathable air is good factor"... I read Mr. Bolden's commentary about Dragon/F9 vs Shuttle as more of a political "selling job" for CCDev. Underlying that is really nothing but statistical vaporware, since Falcon 9/Dragon is not yet flying humans. And even if it were only the most superficial of comparisons to shuttle can be made. You want a near meaning-less statistic (from an engineering perspective) how about: Number of Crew Killed to Date.... Dave |
#8
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I think I was really taking exception of saying the Shuttle was the safest
thing since sliced bread implication in the statement. I mean, it kind of glosses over that the issues with the Shuttle were almost as much a management and culture issue, as problems with the hardware. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Jeff Findley" wrote in message ... In article , says... "NASA is committed to launching American astronauts from U.S. soil in the very near future, and we're taking a significant step toward achieving that goal today," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said. "Our American industry partners have already proven they can safely and reliably launch supplies to the space station, and now we're working with them to get our crews there as well. However, we will require that these companies provide spacecraft that meet the same rigorous safety standards we had for the space shuttle program, while providing good value to the American taxpayer." Hmm.. well, .. Brian It's a "good enough" yardstick for ISS. After all, I'm guessing crewed flights on commercial crew will happen about every six months. That's a lower flight rate than the shuttle, so the odds of losing a crew, in a given year, will be less even if they "only" achieve space shuttle like reliability. Jeff -- "the perennial claim that hypersonic airbreathing propulsion would magically make space launch cheaper is nonsense -- LOX is much cheaper than advanced airbreathing engines, and so are the tanks to put it in and the extra thrust to carry it." - Henry Spencer |
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