AJ doesn't build and operate its own rockets. BO however can theoretically take over ULA's business. Quite a one-sided affair if you ask me.
Quote from: Oli on 03/12/2017 07:58 pmAJ doesn't build and operate its own rockets. BO however can theoretically take over ULA's business. Quite a one-sided affair if you ask me.1. Blue is a ULA subcontractor. 2. ULA is not for sale.Everything else is over-the-top speculation not worth discussing. By the same argument, ULA could take over Blue Origin's business, etc.Does everyone realize how massive New Glenn will be? It will expend nearly an Atlas 5-401's worth of upper stage hardware on every launch! - Ed Kyle
I'm just saying that BO has all the ingredients to build its own rockets, New Glenn or something else, while ULA relies on BO's engines.
Quote from: Oli on 03/12/2017 11:11 pmI'm just saying that BO has all the ingredients to build its own rockets, New Glenn or something else, while ULA relies on BO's engines.Ahhh. So you are suggesting that the future only belongs to the vertically-integrated launch companies? That is an interesting assertion. If true, the survivors would be companies like Orbital-ATK, SpaceX, Blue Origin, and Virgin Galactic. ULA would need a propulsion partner to survive according to this thinking. I know a propulsion company that is looking for a partner .... - Ed Kyle
Quote from: Brovane on 03/12/2017 04:24 am"My statement about ULA expecting fewer government launch contracts in the future under a competitive bidding environment was just repeating what Mr. Bruno has said during congressional testimony. So unless ULA can win more private commercial launch contracts than they currently do we can expect a drop in the number of launches per year being conducted by ULA if we assume that what Mr. Bruno has said during his testimony come true. Of course, things can change and the future is not set. "Are you done, arguing that ULA cannot expect fewer government launches in the future under a competitive environment? I expect both ULA and SpaceX to thrive in a competitive environment. ULA will likely do more of what it does best (government launches) while SpaceX will handle a higher percentage of commercial launches than ULA (though the majority of SpaceX launches will also be for government customers).As for your previous speculation about Blue Origin buying ULA I can only point out that United Launch Alliance is not for sale. That was established a year or two ago when Aerojet Rocketdyne made a bid. - Ed Kyle
"My statement about ULA expecting fewer government launch contracts in the future under a competitive bidding environment was just repeating what Mr. Bruno has said during congressional testimony. So unless ULA can win more private commercial launch contracts than they currently do we can expect a drop in the number of launches per year being conducted by ULA if we assume that what Mr. Bruno has said during his testimony come true. Of course, things can change and the future is not set. "Are you done, arguing that ULA cannot expect fewer government launches in the future under a competitive environment?
I also distinctively remember Mr. Bruno stating that ULA has to become competitive in the commercial market, and both legacy LVs they have are not going to achieve that. In essence, Vulcan is developed as a competitive product for the commercial market, with a focus on both partial re-usability and streamlining (both in manufacturing and operations). The past reliance on government (and especially, DoD) launches is not going to suffice. Due to competition, and due to a shrinking market in the 20's (after this batch of DoD satellites goes up).
I will go with what the CEO of the Company has said, that ULA can expect fewer government launches in the future under a competitive environment. Feel free to think you know more about ULA's business future than the CEO of the ULA.
You might want to review SpaceX's manifest, about 60%+ of it's planned launches going forward are private commercial contracted launches.
Quote from: meekGee on 03/13/2017 01:27 amVulcan is a far from ideal response to the threats ULA is facing. Unsubstantiated and biased opinion. Not based on facts or reality.
Vulcan is a far from ideal response to the threats ULA is facing.
Everyone is entitled to their opinion. Mine is that Vulcan is being designed to be competitive. Why would it not?Consider that ULA is slimming down and shedding subcontractors while SpaceX and Blue are expanding and adding personnel and costs (SpaceX has more than 5,000 employees now!). (Didn't SpaceX increased its bid by 50% on the second CRS round compared to the first, or somesuch?) ULA is sharing the development cost of its booster engine with Blue Origin (a cost cutting move). By using a higher energy upper stage than its competitors, ULA requires less thrust at liftoff. (Two BE-4 engines cost less than seven. Thrust costs money.) ULA plans to recover engines during every flight, not just the LEO and lower energy GTO flights like SpaceX. Etc. - Ed Kyle
The opinion of meekGee *is* based on facts (a.k.a. reality): both Vulcan and New Glenn, while not yet "existing" in a completed, ready to fly form, are described by both competitors with enough detail to meaningfully compare them. Falcon 9 exists and flying, and is clearly a threat to Vulcan (and everything else, except perhaps Soyuz).
Quote from: edkyle99 on 03/13/2017 04:17 pmEveryone is entitled to their opinion. Mine is that Vulcan is being designed to be competitive. Why would it not?Consider that ULA is slimming down and shedding subcontractors while SpaceX and Blue are expanding and adding personnel and costs (SpaceX has more than 5,000 employees now!). (Didn't SpaceX increased its bid by 50% on the second CRS round compared to the first, or somesuch?) ULA is sharing the development cost of its booster engine with Blue Origin (a cost cutting move). By using a higher energy upper stage than its competitors, ULA requires less thrust at liftoff. (Two BE-4 engines cost less than seven. Thrust costs money.) ULA plans to recover engines during every flight, not just the LEO and lower energy GTO flights like SpaceX. Etc. - Ed KylePrecisely. It seems as if some believe that just because a company is so called old space that it is capable of changing as the market dictates.
Everyone is entitled to their opinion. Mine is that Vulcan is being designed to be competitive. Why would it not?
ULA is sharing the development cost of its booster engine with Blue Origin (a cost cutting move).
Quote from: gospacex on 03/13/2017 05:37 pmExcellent idea to source the booster engine from your competitor. NOT.Wrong again.They are not competitors. BO is not going for gov't missions.
Excellent idea to source the booster engine from your competitor. NOT.
Quote from: gospacex on 03/13/2017 04:02 pmThe opinion of meekGee *is* based on facts (a.k.a. reality): both Vulcan and New Glenn, while not yet "existing" in a completed, ready to fly form, are described by both competitors with enough detail to meaningfully compare them. Falcon 9 exists and flying, and is clearly a threat to Vulcan (and everything else, except perhaps Soyuz).Wrong again. Cost reduction due to reuse is unproven and therefore stating that a design that doesn't incorporate it is a drawback fails logic.
Quote from: Jim on 03/13/2017 04:42 pmQuote from: gospacex on 03/13/2017 04:02 pmThe opinion of meekGee *is* based on facts (a.k.a. reality): both Vulcan and New Glenn, while not yet "existing" in a completed, ready to fly form, are described by both competitors with enough detail to meaningfully compare them. Falcon 9 exists and flying, and is clearly a threat to Vulcan (and everything else, except perhaps Soyuz).Wrong again. Cost reduction due to reuse is unproven and therefore stating that a design that doesn't incorporate it is a drawback fails logic.Wait, and a grabbing the thrust structure with a helicopter is proven somehow?This is not about proof anyway, it's about likely outcome. It is very likely that a fully reusable rocket will have lower operating costs, compared with one that operates like Vulcan does. The payload mass penalty is tiny in comparison to the cost of building an entire first stage structure, and is actually irrelevant as long as the rocket can fly its mission, which F9 seems to be sized to do.Besides, was there a timeline given even for when this "partial reusability" for Vulcan will be implemented?The helicopter scheme was an old idea (We've all seen it before) that was pulled together along with Vulcan to have ANY sort of response to SpaceX. There was no way that ULA could come up with a VTVL architecture because they don't have the engine, and they clearly weren't interested in building a NG-scale rocket.To pretend that mid-air recovery of the thrust structure was chosen because they believe it will work out better than VTVL in not credible. ULA simply will not commit to something as radical as VTVL, and they're basically sitting on their market position, waiting to see how things play out. If F9 and NG fail, then they have a good enough rocket. If F9 or NG work as their developers expect, ULA doesn't have an answer.
Why Russians, in the face of the Falcon threat, are replacing Proton with a rocket which costs *more* than Proton while not exceeding F9/FH payloads?
Because old, ossified organizations sometimes lose ability to compete.
Quote from: meekGee on 03/13/2017 06:12 pmQuote from: Jim on 03/13/2017 04:42 pmQuote from: gospacex on 03/13/2017 04:02 pmThe opinion of meekGee *is* based on facts (a.k.a. reality): both Vulcan and New Glenn, while not yet "existing" in a completed, ready to fly form, are described by both competitors with enough detail to meaningfully compare them. Falcon 9 exists and flying, and is clearly a threat to Vulcan (and everything else, except perhaps Soyuz).Wrong again. Cost reduction due to reuse is unproven and therefore stating that a design that doesn't incorporate it is a drawback fails logic.Wait, and a grabbing the thrust structure with a helicopter is proven somehow?This is not about proof anyway, it's about likely outcome. It is very likely that a fully reusable rocket will have lower operating costs, compared with one that operates like Vulcan does. The payload mass penalty is tiny in comparison to the cost of building an entire first stage structure, and is actually irrelevant as long as the rocket can fly its mission, which F9 seems to be sized to do.Besides, was there a timeline given even for when this "partial reusability" for Vulcan will be implemented?The helicopter scheme was an old idea (We've all seen it before) that was pulled together along with Vulcan to have ANY sort of response to SpaceX. There was no way that ULA could come up with a VTVL architecture because they don't have the engine, and they clearly weren't interested in building a NG-scale rocket.To pretend that mid-air recovery of the thrust structure was chosen because they believe it will work out better than VTVL in not credible. ULA simply will not commit to something as radical as VTVL, and they're basically sitting on their market position, waiting to see how things play out. If F9 and NG fail, then they have a good enough rocket. If F9 or NG work as their developers expect, ULA doesn't have an answer.So you're saying ULA should do VTVL with their two-engine rocket? Or are you certain that refurbishing 9 engines will be cheaper than refurbishing 2 engines and making an aluminum cylinder?