Atlas V was more popular with the USAF, which constituted the majority of the demand for ULA. Customer demand is a great indicator of how well your product is doing...
Quote from: edzieba on 08/13/2024 05:23 pmQuote from: Jim on 08/13/2024 04:22 pmAtlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavyI thought the triple-core configuration never made its way past the proposal stage, was there actual hardware (or vestiges) of that in some Atlas V cores? I don't know - it does seem odd that Atlas V Heavy never got to fly, especially as Jim points out they could do this with little or no modification - something I didn't know.Perhaps GSE updates, or ensuring two dissimilar systems... Again.
Quote from: Jim on 08/13/2024 04:22 pmAtlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavyI thought the triple-core configuration never made its way past the proposal stage, was there actual hardware (or vestiges) of that in some Atlas V cores?
Atlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavy
Quote from: nicp on 08/13/2024 10:46 pmQuote from: edzieba on 08/13/2024 05:23 pmQuote from: Jim on 08/13/2024 04:22 pmAtlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavyI thought the triple-core configuration never made its way past the proposal stage, was there actual hardware (or vestiges) of that in some Atlas V cores? I don't know - it does seem odd that Atlas V Heavy never got to fly, especially as Jim points out they could do this with little or no modification - something I didn't know.Perhaps GSE updates, or ensuring two dissimilar systems... Again. It never flew because it would've been a deadly threat to Ares I.
DIV-H was selected by the USAF for NSSL missions. DIV-H was selected by Lockheed-Martin for the first flight of an Orion capsule. AV-H was never selected by NASA because its capabilities were so similar to Ares I, and Ares I provided commonality with (pre-paid some development costs of) Ares V.
Quote from: sdsds on 09/01/2024 08:37 pmDIV-H was selected by the USAF for NSSL missions. DIV-H was selected by Lockheed-Martin for the first flight of an Orion capsule. AV-H was never selected by NASA because its capabilities were so similar to Ares I, and Ares I provided commonality with (pre-paid some development costs of) Ares V.AV-H wasn't wasn't there for NASA to select.
Quote from: Jim on 09/01/2024 08:41 pmQuote from: sdsds on 09/01/2024 08:37 pmDIV-H was selected by the USAF for NSSL missions. DIV-H was selected by Lockheed-Martin for the first flight of an Orion capsule. AV-H was never selected by NASA because its capabilities were so similar to Ares I, and Ares I provided commonality with (pre-paid some development costs of) Ares V.AV-H wasn't wasn't there for NASA to select. That's my point, that if AV-H was already flying in the mid 00s it would've put a target on the back of Ares I. There would've been no rhyme or reason for Ares I to exist.
A 5-meter core (using Delta IV tankage) version of the AV-H was presented to the Augustine Commission. ULA was even suggesting a possible 8.4m super heavy lift version.
Atlas V 'heavy' had ceased to be a thing before Ares-I was conceived.
Is there a definitive date for when AV-H was removed from the list of ULA offerings? (It was offered for awhile even after USAF selected DIV-H for NSSF missions.)
Quote from: edzieba on 09/02/2024 05:09 pmAtlas V 'heavy' had ceased to be a thing before Ares-I was conceived.Is there a definitive date for when AV-H was removed from the list of ULA offerings? (It was offered for awhile even after USAF selected DIV-H for NSSF missions.)
The period of time in question is leading up to the November 2005 announcement of the NASA Exploration Systems Architecture Study. Prior to that Sean O'Keefe reportedly liked the idea of launching the CEV on DIV-H or AV-H.
Quote from: sdsds on 09/02/2024 11:57 pmThe period of time in question is leading up to the November 2005 announcement of the NASA Exploration Systems Architecture Study. Prior to that Sean O'Keefe reportedly liked the idea of launching the CEV on DIV-H or AV-H. NASA would have had to pay for pad and GSE completion and to take the design past CDR.
Or at least produce a workable rocket that could launch an Orion with all the goodies: not the castrated weight-trimmed variant we got a decade late. Goodies like a) land-landing b) a service module with 2000 m/s + of delta-v that could, like Apollo, geting IN and OUT of low lunar orbit.