Have any specs or performance figures been released about Vulcan/Centaur 5? How closely would a widened Centaur 5 end up resembling the notional 'Exploration Upper Stage' for SLS?
Plus SpaceX may never be able to take care of all of the special need payloads for the USAF, but they are, little by little, becoming qualified for more and more of the lower requirements. And Blue Origin is planning to be certified for USAF launches too, which leaves even less for ULA to win on the bottom end. That leaves ULA with the top end of the market, which is not enough for them to survive on by itself.Which is why Vulcan needs to be good enough to compete in the worldwide commercial market too. Today the top three launch providers are Ariane 5, Proton and Falcon 9, but by the time Vulcan comes online it's likely that Blue Origin will already be replacing Proton - so who will Vulcan replace?
Here's a way to satisfy that (of many): a venture funded start-up does reusable LRE strapons optionally used by Vulcan, they land independently. Eventually they carry enough propulsion and coordinate after booster burnout to land the Vulcan booster with excess propellant. After it works, the parents buy it out for ULA. No booms or out of pocket.
Quote from: woods170 on 12/01/2017 06:05 amQuote from: edkyle99 on 11/30/2017 03:44 pmYes. The 5.4 meter diameter is shared by Ariane 5 and 6, which will also share some or most aspects of the Vulcan payload fairing. One wonders what other bits Vulcan and Ariane might end up sharing.Other than the fairings being produced by RUAG the two vehicles will share nothing.How about fairing reuse additions? Or will that injure production volume so much to be a "no go"? This reuse thing is so pesky ...
Quote from: edkyle99 on 11/30/2017 03:44 pmYes. The 5.4 meter diameter is shared by Ariane 5 and 6, which will also share some or most aspects of the Vulcan payload fairing. One wonders what other bits Vulcan and Ariane might end up sharing.Other than the fairings being produced by RUAG the two vehicles will share nothing.
Yes. The 5.4 meter diameter is shared by Ariane 5 and 6, which will also share some or most aspects of the Vulcan payload fairing. One wonders what other bits Vulcan and Ariane might end up sharing.
Falcon will continue to pick up EELV work for which it is capable, with Heavy perhaps intended to cover the "C" categories. But neither Falcon has been custom designed from the outset for EELV.
If Centuar V has IVF and endurance built in to do GEO missions without expensive upgrade kits, ULA would have whole new market to themselves. Being able to deliver satellites direct to GEO reduces build cost of satellite and helps increase mission reliablility. There have been a few satellites that have had problems delivering themselves from GTO-GEO.Would open up GEO market to smallsats and cubesat plus make delivery of hosted pay loads to persistent platforms (PP) cheaper. PP are still a while away but they are coming. These may not be primary payloads but rideshares still are an important extra revenue stream.
Quote from: Coastal Ron on 12/04/2017 12:27 amWhich is why Vulcan needs to be good enough to compete in the worldwide commercial market too. Today the top three launch providers are Ariane 5, Proton and Falcon 9, but by the time Vulcan comes online it's likely that Blue Origin will already be replacing Proton - so who will Vulcan replace?Of those three, only Ariane 5 was designed from the outset for commercial GTO, a category it still leads even this year. Proton was originally designed for the Cold War. Falcon 9's first big job was ISS cargo, and, sure enough, Falcon 9 leads in LEO mass so far this year, though R7 may catch it by year's end. Vulcan is being designed for EELV requirements specifically. Those capabilities may allow it to also compete for some commercial work, but the track record for achieving that goal is spotty. Government requirements typically exceed the needs of the commercial markets. It needs more mass sent to a variety of orbit types. This forces development of larger, more expensive rockets. Ariane 5/6 will continue to excel at GTO. It is impossible to beat the physics of Kourou, but Ariane can't compete for EELV. Neither can Proton. Falcon will continue to pick up EELV work for which it is capable, with Heavy perhaps intended to cover the "C" categories. But neither Falcon has been custom designed from the outset for EELV. Northrop Grumman's NGL will be the wild-card, maybe. Blue is out there, but a ways off from certification. Same for BFR, which appears to be crazy overkill for this payload category regardless. Plans call for two EELV providers in the end. Another one or two may pick up NASA work. - Ed Kyle
Which is why Vulcan needs to be good enough to compete in the worldwide commercial market too. Today the top three launch providers are Ariane 5, Proton and Falcon 9, but by the time Vulcan comes online it's likely that Blue Origin will already be replacing Proton - so who will Vulcan replace?
DoD space policy chief: ‘It’s imperative that we innovate’
As competition ratchets up for space dominance, adversaries are poised to challenge the United States, causing real concern among policy makers at the Pentagon.“The threats are moving fast and we need to stay ahead of it,” said Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Space Policy Stephen Kitay.
As U.S. dominance of space is challenged by other nations, the Pentagon has to rethink strategies and investment priorities, Kitay said. It’s not just about buying the latest and greatest technology but also about making sure U.S. systems can be defended from attacks.
The Air Force’s missile-warning satellites are one example of a critical space system that military officials worry may be targeted in the future. With global tensions rising over North Korea’s nuclear weapons and intercontinental ballistic missile program, the Air Force has come under pressure to start designing a new system to replace the current missile-warning constellation.
Another area that the space industry is closely watching is how the Pentagon buys satellite communications. A study is under way to determine whether the military should buy more wideband communications services from the private sector. “DoD is in the process of analyzing alternatives,” said Kitay. “We are analyzing a full range of architectures — from fully commercial to fully DoD purpose-built, and combinations in between.”
Requirements are changing. DoD has recognized the vulnerability of its battleship Galactica approach to NSS.
Quote from: meekGee on 12/03/2017 07:54 pmThis is not a slug fest... This is an observation that in order to remain relevant, even for USG launches, they (ULA) need to do a hell of a lot more than another EELV, even if it's better than Atlas. And a lot more than maybe-IVF and someday-SMART.It already will do more. Vulcan-Centaur 5 is being designed to meet all of the EELV reference mission requirements from the get-go. Falcon 9 can't meet all of those requirements. Its first stage will have to be expended, or a more expensive Falcon Heavy will have to perform the missions, and I'm not certain that recoverable Heavy can reach the highest payload requirements. So, even SpaceX will have to expend rockets for many of the most-difficult missions, if it wins the work. - Ed Kyle
This is not a slug fest... This is an observation that in order to remain relevant, even for USG launches, they (ULA) need to do a hell of a lot more than another EELV, even if it's better than Atlas. And a lot more than maybe-IVF and someday-SMART.
Quote from: AncientU on 12/04/2017 06:24 pmRequirements are changing. DoD has recognized the vulnerability of its battleship Galactica approach to NSS. Still not going to remove the need for them. Physics drives the requirements.Again, ignoring reality and skewing new/information to reflect a biased view.DOD does not operate the "battleship Galactica" NSS.Also, most DOD spacecraft are not invulnerable ASAT orbits.
Quote from: Jim on 12/04/2017 06:29 pmQuote from: AncientU on 12/04/2017 06:24 pmRequirements are changing. DoD has recognized the vulnerability of its battleship Galactica approach to NSS. Still not going to remove the need for them. Physics drives the requirements.Again, ignoring reality and skewing new/information to reflect a biased view.DOD does not operate the "battleship Galactica" NSS.Also, most DOD spacecraft are not invulnerable ASAT orbits.Physics does not drive all requirements (e.g., communications using LEO sat and phased array vs HEO/GEO sat with large reflector) and many NSS satellites can be dis-aggregated.
Fairing reuse additions are part of the fairing. And since both companies outsource their ENTIRE fairings to RUAG...
Swiss manufacturer Ruag Space is developing reusable fairings, which Bonguet said are of interest to ArianeGroup.“We are discussing with Ruag,” he said. “They have presented to us their concept. If it is working, and if it is bringing cost savings, we will be happy to accommodate it.”
Quote from: AbuSimbel on 12/04/2017 06:11 pmThere's something I don't understand: when you say 'custom designed from the outset for EELV' what do you mean? The outset for Vulcan coincides with the maturity of F9/H, and isn't it likely that those system will be able to cover all EELV missions by then? If that's the case what advantage should Vulcan gain from 'being designed from the outset for EELV', when mature systems with actual flight history sport the same capabilities, albeit implemented over time?ULA has jumped directly to Centaur 5 to allow Vulcan to do all of the specified EELV missions from the outset, so "custom" in the sense that the launch system is being tailored for that mission set. Small to Medium to Heavy. LEO near-polar to GTO to MEO to GEO, all using the same two-stage single-core. Vertical integration. SpaceX and Northrop will have to fly two different launch systems (Falcon 9/Heavy and NGL 500/500XL) to accomplish the same. I don't think people appreciate the coup ULA has achieved here with its only-recently announced design change. - Ed Kyle
There's something I don't understand: when you say 'custom designed from the outset for EELV' what do you mean? The outset for Vulcan coincides with the maturity of F9/H, and isn't it likely that those system will be able to cover all EELV missions by then? If that's the case what advantage should Vulcan gain from 'being designed from the outset for EELV', when mature systems with actual flight history sport the same capabilities, albeit implemented over time?
ULA has jumped directly to Centaur 5 to allow Vulcan to do all of the specified EELV missions from the outset, so "custom" in the sense that the launch system is being tailored for that mission set.
Quote from: edkyle99 on 12/04/2017 07:19 pmULA has jumped directly to Centaur 5 to allow Vulcan to do all of the specified EELV missions from the outset, so "custom" in the sense that the launch system is being tailored for that mission set. Of course.So now they can retire Delta IV Heavy at the same time as the EoL Atlas V and Delta IV. 3 Mfg lines --> 1 Mfg line. Now if only they could get IVF and end all that messing about with Hydrazine tanks and high pressure Helium. <sigh>
Quote from: AbuSimbel on 12/04/2017 06:11 pmThere's something I don't understand: when you say 'custom designed from the outset for EELV' what do you mean? The outset for Vulcan coincides with the maturity of F9/H, and isn't it likely that those system will be able to cover all EELV missions by then? If that's the case what advantage should Vulcan gain from 'being designed from the outset for EELV', when mature systems with actual flight history sport the same capabilities, albeit implemented over time?ULA has jumped directly to Centaur 5 to allow Vulcan to do all of the specified EELV missions from the outset, so "custom" in the sense that the launch system is being tailored for that mission set. Small to Medium to Heavy. LEO near-polar to GTO to MEO to GEO, all using the same two-stage single-core. Vertical integration using existing launch facilities, etc.. SpaceX and Northrop will have to fly two different launch systems (Falcon 9/Heavy and NGL 500/500XL) to accomplish the same. I don't think people appreciate the coup ULA has achieved here with its only-recently announced design change. - Ed Kyle