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.
BO, OTOH, is playing with ULA because why not.
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?
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.
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.
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: Jim on 03/13/2017 05:42 pmQuote 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.Blue Origin just announced commercial customers though, and ULA has stated publicly that they will need commercial customers for Vulcan. That would make Blue Origin a competitor.
Would someone kindly explain why it would be difficult to vertically land a two-engine Vulcan booster? Wouldn't it "just" be a matter of nailing the hoverslam maneuver and then cutting thrust?
...It seems like politics might kill Vulcan with BE-4's. The AR-1 maybe several years away. However I do like Ed Kyles AR-1 powered SLS delivering 160 tons to LEO. I know it is too late to change SLS, but politics can be weird. ...
It seems like politics might kill Vulcan with BE-4's. The AR-1 maybe several years away. However I do like Ed Kyles AR-1 powered SLS delivering 160 tons to LEO. I know it is too late to change SLS, but politics can be weird.
Maybe I have asked this before. SpaceX has a proven engine in Merlin. Would several of these (4-5) be a good replacement for the RD-180 on Atlas? SpaceX may not want to sell? Too much plumbing change from one to 4 or 5 engines? They could still use the solids. Atlas is about the same diameter as Falcon. It would be like a Falcon 5. Solids would increase it's payload capacity. I know rockets aren't legos, but at least it is an American made engine. It seems like politics might kill Vulcan with BE-4's. The AR-1 maybe several years away. However I do like Ed Kyles AR-1 powered SLS delivering 160 tons to LEO. I know it is too late to change SLS, but politics can be weird. Just some thoughts on what ULA might be able to do. Even with 5 Merlins, Atlas might be able to land or still save the engines like the proposed Vulcan.
Maybe I have asked this before. SpaceX has a proven engine in Merlin. Would several of these (4-5) be a good replacement for the RD-180 on Atlas?
Quote from: Dante80 on 03/13/2017 02:16 amI 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 am not sure how you can assert that in the 20s their will be shrinking market in government launches. Being as quite a number of these projects are going to be classified nothing can be said at this stage from the outside on their status in the launch market.
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).
Merlin doesn't have to use densified lox. It didn't to begin with, that is so SpaceX can put more lox in the same size tank for the full thrust version. Anyway. Just a thought. Two AR-1's might be better like Ed Kyle said. My question, if AR-1 was/is so good, why hasn't Aerojet spent more to develop it? Also, why not adapt it to 3D printing like SpaceX did with Merlin? The printers may be expensive, but the production costs are much lower.
Quote from: Brovane on 03/13/2017 01:35 amI 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. A company can thrive even if launch counts go down. Some might not do as well as others under those conditions. Still, I don't see launch counts dropping much. Where once ULA was busy launching a new NRO constellation, now it will launch Starliners and Dream Chasers and the occasional X-37B, etc. The Cygnus launches were unexpected, but there they are.
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.
Quote from: Brovane on 03/13/2017 01:35 amYou might want to review SpaceX's manifest, about 60%+ of it's planned launches going forward are private commercial contracted launches. I did, and my count showed more than 50% government. http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_lau/falcon-9.htmThere are a couple dozen Dragons, a GPS, SWOT, TESS, SARah, SADcom, etc. Even Eutelsat Quantum and the Inmarsats are government funded in part. - Ed Kyle
You might want to review SpaceX's manifest, about 60%+ of it's planned launches going forward are private commercial contracted launches.