Archived material Access restricted Article
Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Tue 08/09/2005 View Mon 08/08/2005 View Sun 08/07/2005 View Sat 08/06/2005 View Fri 08/05/2005 View Thu 08/04/2005 View Wed 08/03/2005
1
2005-08-09 Home Front: Tech
Discovery lands safely for the last time
Archived material is restricted to Rantburg regulars and members. If you need access email fred.pruitt=at=gmail.com with your nick to be added to the members list. There is no charge to join Rantburg as a member.
Posted by Jackal 2005-08-09 09:55|| || Front Page|| [1 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1 Or outsource to USAF. Or the USMC.
Posted by Edward Yee 2005-08-09 12:24|| http://edwardyee.fanworks.net]">[http://edwardyee.fanworks.net]  2005-08-09 12:24|| Front Page Top

#2 Consolidate the funding and instead offer it as a 'prize' to independent developers and businesses which will accomplished specially achieved goals. Only need a small committee to validate the accomplishment before presenting the award monies.
Posted by Flash Hupomoling8954 2005-08-09 12:32||   2005-08-09 12:32|| Front Page Top

#3 Regardless of the future, I'm grateful the Discovry landed safely. Welcome home.
Posted by Seafarious">Seafarious  2005-08-09 12:42||   2005-08-09 12:42|| Front Page Top

#4 If we have to rely on NASA the future in space is I think bleak at best. The ISS is in an orbit that was chosen more to make the Russians happy than anything else. It's high inclination severely reduces the payload the shuttle can carry to orbit if it is headed there. For transporting crews to and from orbit a simpler vehicle is needed but I don't think we should throw the baby out with the bath water. The shuttle launch stack holds the core of an extremely capable Heavy Lift Vehicle that with expansion could be capable of placing up to 200 tons in LEO. The loss of Challenger can be traced directly to the forced decesion of NASA to go with the low bidder for the original SRB design (thanks to Congress). The original field joints of the casings on the Thiokol SRB desigh had the recieving portion of the joint on the bottom casing. Water could collet and freeze in the field joint causing the joint to unseat. The brittleness of the original O-Ring material at low temps didn't help either. The re-design featured joints that had both casings nesting inside deep groves cut into each section. The foam problem that caused Columbias loss can be traced to several issues IMO. One is the CFC foam issue. The other is the whole issue of using foam on a surface being subjected to high speed airflow in the first goddamn place. This is something that never would of been allowed in a comercial application. Some of this foam is hand applied for Chrit's sake. Take a look at films of the Saturn V being launched. Large amounts of ice are falling off the vehicle at launch. If you are going to use cyrogenic fuels and oxidizers then you are going to a) either put up with debris at launch and allow for it or b) insulate the tanks better. If I were king I'd remove the shuttle operations from NASA'a control and transfer the responsibility to either the Air Force or the Navy. The shuttle itself would only be flown when the mission required it. The operating budget of NASA for the shuttle would be tranfered to either the DARPA or a similiar organization for the development of X-type vehicles as envisioned by people such as Dr. Jerry Pournelle who helped the SDI office get funding for the DC-X test vehicle that flew sucessfully until NASA took it over and they crashed first time out. There have been too damn many studies of how to do it cheaper and easier. What has been lacking is the will in Washington to see that we do it. And don't rely on privte investment to do the job for you. The only way that will work is if you offer a contract to operate supply and ferrying services to say the ISS or something similiar. And while such an operation may not be government run it would be government funded
Posted by Cheaderhead 2005-08-09 13:27||   2005-08-09 13:27|| Front Page Top

#5 If we have to rely on NASA the future in space is I think bleak at best. The ISS is in an orbit that was chosen more to make the Russians happy than anything else. It's high inclination severely reduces the payload the shuttle can carry to orbit if it is headed there. For transporting crews to and from orbit a simpler vehicle is needed but I don't think we should throw the baby out with the bath water. The shuttle launch stack holds the core of an extremely capable Heavy Lift Vehicle that with expansion could be capable of placing up to 200 tons in LEO. The loss of Challenger can be traced directly to the forced decesion of NASA to go with the low bidder for the original SRB design (thanks to Congress). The original field joints of the casings on the Thiokol SRB desigh had the recieving portion of the joint on the bottom casing. Water could collet and freeze in the field joint causing the joint to unseat. The brittleness of the original O-Ring material at low temps didn't help either. The re-design featured joints that had both casings nesting inside deep groves cut into each section. The foam problem that caused Columbias loss can be traced to several issues IMO. One is the CFC foam issue. The other is the whole issue of using foam on a surface being subjected to high speed airflow in the first goddamn place. This is something that never would of been allowed in a comercial application. Some of this foam is hand applied for Chrit's sake. Take a look at films of the Saturn V being launched. Large amounts of ice are falling off the vehicle at launch. If you are going to use cyrogenic fuels and oxidizers then you are going to a) either put up with debris at launch and allow for it or b) insulate the tanks better. If I were king I'd remove the shuttle operations from NASA'a control and transfer the responsibility to either the Air Force or the Navy. The shuttle itself would only be flown when the mission required it. The operating budget of NASA for the shuttle would be tranfered to either the DARPA or a similiar organization for the development of X-type vehicles as envisioned by people such as Dr. Jerry Pournelle who helped the SDI office get funding for the DC-X test vehicle that flew sucessfully until NASA took it over and they crashed first time out. There have been too damn many studies of how to do it cheaper and easier. What has been lacking is the will in Washington to see that we do it. And don't rely on privte investment to do the job for you. The only way that will work is if you offer a contract to operate supply and ferrying services to say the ISS or something similiar. And while such an operation may not be government run it would be government funded
Posted by Cheaderhead 2005-08-09 13:30||   2005-08-09 13:30|| Front Page Top

#6 Interesting post, Cheaderhead. Do you have any recommended reading with respect to Pournelle's concepts? (Yeah, I could Google it, but...)
Posted by eLarson 2005-08-09 14:51|| http://larsonian.blogspot.com]">[http://larsonian.blogspot.com]  2005-08-09 14:51|| Front Page Top

#7 Simplest solution is to re-explore the methods fo getting manned craft to orbit - and make them passenger-only craft. Let this out for bid and do it liek we do fighter aircraft. Get 2-3 competitive consortiums, have a bake-off, and whoever loses gets to subcontract form the winners. And unlike military programs, have the contractors bid out the launch and recovery systems, and bid out operations as well. All NASA would be is a management arm - set the direction, put out hte specs, accept bids, and manage how the winners work with the government. Put profit there and we will get humans into space.

As for the big satellites (that DoD needs): Leave the heavy lift to a purpose designed lifter. Be easy enough to use the SRBs, and the Shuttle main engines and control systems and come up with a reliable booster system for heavy throw weights to LEO, and be easy to implement quickly since it need not be man-rated.


As for an immediate manned solution: Go with Soyuz type system (Russians will sell it cheap) to get the crew on station until we can come up with a better one ourselves.

In the meanwhile for heavy lift, you could go back and restart the production lines for the one-shot launch vehicles the USAF was using to loft spy satellites: big fragile loads, lifted to wierd orbits = bigger loads lifted to more normal orbits. FYI, the orbit required dominates the energy needed which sets the amount of payload available. Spy satellite LEOs are at unusual inclinations and perogee/apogee, so take a lot more to loft into orbit.

Pretty simple eh? But NASA as it exists now will not go for it; not enough pork in it for Congress to pass it.
Posted by OldSpook 2005-08-09 17:28||   2005-08-09 17:28|| Front Page Top

#8 Just Google Chaos Manor. I'd post the link but it is about a gazillion characters long and I can never remember that trick to shrink 'em down. Claims to be the original Blog and might be. Some interesting commentary that pops up from time to time about everything from education to space to Iraq. In the last year I saw someone else using his system to map out just where a person stands in the political spectrum something I first saw in the late '70s or early '80s
Posted by Cheaderhead 2005-08-09 17:31||   2005-08-09 17:31|| Front Page Top

#9 Cheaderhead, tinyurl.com is probably what you're looking for.

Posted by Tony (UK) 2005-08-09 17:35||   2005-08-09 17:35|| Front Page Top

#10 Thanks Tony. One reason the address was so long is I was working off of a Netscape search. DUH! Try this

http://www.jerrypournelle.com/
Posted by Cheaderhead 2005-08-09 17:47||   2005-08-09 17:47|| Front Page Top

#11 I very much like the "Spaceship One" piggyback concept, it's not as "New" as folks think, the idea was bypassed when the concept of a "Shuttle" was first being designed, it's much cheaper when you start from 30 angels and up than from a dead stop on the ground and straight up from there.

But the idea fell by the wayside in favor of the "Brute Force" concept, poor decision in light of the results.

Another workable concept was to use helium gasbags to lift as high as possible, then light 'er off, several experiments proved the idea workable, including shooting the rocket directly through the lifting gasbag at max altitude.

Maybe next generation?
Posted by Redneck Jim 2005-08-09 18:05||   2005-08-09 18:05|| Front Page Top

23:58 Jan
23:49 bigjim-ky
23:47 Chris W.
23:47 BigEd
23:45 BigEd
23:44 Poison Reverse
23:43 Chris W.
23:43 bigjim-ky
23:40 Alaska Paul
23:38 bigjim-ky
23:22 Pappy
23:16 Pappy
23:09 3dc
23:08 Pappy
23:00 jules 2
22:56 Sock Puppet 0’ Doom
22:54 Captain America
22:35 Sock Puppet 0’ Doom
22:26 Frank G
22:24 Sock Puppet 0’ Doom
22:11 Alaska Paul
21:55 Robert Crawford
21:39 Darrell
21:37 Old Patriot









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com