Quote from: ChrisWilson68 on 11/07/2015 10:00 pmafter a failure an attempt is made to fix the root cause, so there's a smaller chance of failure after the fix.Prove that?Why is an implementation of the fixed design less likely to fail than the implementation of the original?
after a failure an attempt is made to fix the root cause, so there's a smaller chance of failure after the fix.
this thread has gone way off track
Quote from: sdsds on 11/08/2015 03:55 amQuote from: ChrisWilson68 on 11/07/2015 10:00 pmafter a failure an attempt is made to fix the root cause, so there's a smaller chance of failure after the fix.Prove that?Why is an implementation of the fixed design less likely to fail than the implementation of the original?A TV analogy: A good design is analogous to the prize, a failure is analogous to the goat, and reality is analogous to Monty Hall. By showing you were the goat is, the odds of a re-design getting the prize increase. Yes?Another try:A man falls down the stairs. Upon investigation, it turns out that he couldn't see the warning strip because he is color blind. As a result, a new warning strip is redesigned. Also, as a result of increased scrutiny, the handrail was improved. Why couldn't that have been done before the accident? because there are a very large number of possible faults, and it took reality to show us the issue with color-blind people, and now there's one less thing to worry about. The odds of people falling down these stairs have decreased.
I had a thought regarding a potential influence in the number of contract awards that materialize for this effort. It's my opinion three contracts will be awarded. Apart from the capabilities each provider brings to the table, the reason for three awards is redundancy. As we have seen, the two existing providers have had mission failures. Up until recently, a single or double mission failure was not as critical because the Progress, ATV and HTV provided plenty of capability. Unfortunately Progress had a failure along with the commercial providers leaving the HTV as the sole provider since ATV had been retired.Although failures have been rare, the potential for them to occur is a reality. A third commercial provider would provide similar redundancy to that which existed while the ATV flew. In addition to redundant supply vehicles, redundant launch vehicles would also exist.Thoughts?
Quote from: deadman719 on 11/16/2015 12:33 amI had a thought regarding a potential influence in the number of contract awards that materialize for this effort. It's my opinion three contracts will be awarded. Apart from the capabilities each provider brings to the table, the reason for three awards is redundancy. As we have seen, the two existing providers have had mission failures. Up until recently, a single or double mission failure was not as critical because the Progress, ATV and HTV provided plenty of capability. Unfortunately Progress had a failure along with the commercial providers leaving the HTV as the sole provider since ATV had been retired.Although failures have been rare, the potential for them to occur is a reality. A third commercial provider would provide similar redundancy to that which existed while the ATV flew. In addition to redundant supply vehicles, redundant launch vehicles would also exist.Thoughts?Each additional provider probably increases costs by circa $1B over the life of the contract due to increased fixed costs. Redundancy is nice, but NASA has better things to do with its limited funds. I would go with 1-2 awards.
I see one big problem for Sierra Nevada. They need to recover their development cost over the number of flights. If they get only few, that increases cost per flight by a lot. Or they gamble on follow up contracts which is a risk.
Quote from: guckyfan on 11/17/2015 03:36 pmI see one big problem for Sierra Nevada. They need to recover their development cost over the number of flights. If they get only few, that increases cost per flight by a lot. Or they gamble on follow up contracts which is a risk.add to that thought, and remember SNC is not a startup company.
Quote from: Prober on 11/17/2015 03:39 pmQuote from: guckyfan on 11/17/2015 03:36 pmI see one big problem for Sierra Nevada. They need to recover their development cost over the number of flights. If they get only few, that increases cost per flight by a lot. Or they gamble on follow up contracts which is a risk.add to that thought, and remember SNC is not a startup company.What about the redesign of DC down to fit inside a payload shroud? And to put the larger berthing connector on a smaller vehicle? Is DC still slated to use an Atlas V 552 for launch? The cargo capacity was listed at 5000kg, which almost certainly assumes/requires an Atlas V 551 or 552. That is considerably more expensive than an Atlas V 401 like the one Cygnus is using, which adds cost in addition to the unfinished development costs.My guess is, since SNC is explicitly still in the competition, they generated a low cost bid (they really, really want to win the contract). The hard question will be whether or not that represents too high a risk profile or not.
It will quite probably be volume limited.
2.1.1 A minimum usable pressurized cargo density of 65 Cargo Transfer Bag Equivalents (CTBE) per 1000 kg of pressurized cargo shall be used.
I could see NASA considering to NOT select SpaceX; due to the fact they really don't need the money anymore to survive and be successful. They could select the other two (and also have the work they have done with SpaceX in their back pocket, give them a back-up capability to launch on Dragon should the emergency need arise). In the meantime, perhaps the money is better spent for our nation to develop an additional U.S. spacecraft. I'm a big fan of SpaceX, but realistically they don't have a need for winning this contract. Thoughts?