IMO, they are doing the best service to NASA since the whole Constellation mess (actually, since way before that... even before Shuttle): getting it out of the launcher business and back into the spacecraft and development business.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 06/16/2010 06:35 pmIMO, they are doing the best service to NASA since the whole Constellation mess (actually, since way before that... even before Shuttle): getting it out of the launcher business and back into the spacecraft and development business.This administration has “punted” exploration down the road for the next 15 years and has decided to continue to go around in circles during these next 15 years like we have for the last 30 years. I’m sure this inspires my daughter and her generation....
Quote from: Robotbeat on 06/16/2010 06:35 pmIMO, they are doing the best service to NASA since the whole Constellation mess (actually, since way before that... even before Shuttle): getting it out of the launcher business and back into the spacecraft and development business.This administration has “punted” exploration down the road for the next 15 years and has decided to continue to go around in circles during these next 15 years like we have for the last 30 years. I’m sure this inspires my daughter and her generation.And who says NASA engineers are the best designer of spacecraft? They may create the specs but it was the engineers at private companies that made the greatest contributions in the past. It is my understanding that it was Grumman engineers that came up with the weight savings ideas on the LM to reduce the landing legs from 5 to 4, remove the seats, and make the windows smaller. I also do not believe the NASA of today can hold a candle to the NASA of the past.It could again but not with the leadership it has now.
NASA could've chosen an architecture that didn't need such a big budget increase, but they didn't.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 06/16/2010 07:36 pmNASA could've chosen an architecture that didn't need such a big budget increase, but they didn't."NASA" didn't choose the CxP architecture; Mike Griffin brought it into NASA with him and jammed it down NASA's throat.
Quote from: clongton on 06/16/2010 06:32 pmQuote from: A_M_Swallow on 06/16/2010 04:10 pmNASA may be going to Moon and Mars but I do know 2 people who are not - President Obama and Administrator Bolden. Their terms will be over before the manned spaceships arrive.I'd like to see both of them, along with their deputies, out on their butts tomorrow. They are screwing the hooch for all of us.Fifty percent in the house, two thirds in the Senate. Start making phone calls.
Quote from: A_M_Swallow on 06/16/2010 04:10 pmNASA may be going to Moon and Mars but I do know 2 people who are not - President Obama and Administrator Bolden. Their terms will be over before the manned spaceships arrive.I'd like to see both of them, along with their deputies, out on their butts tomorrow. They are screwing the hooch for all of us.
NASA may be going to Moon and Mars but I do know 2 people who are not - President Obama and Administrator Bolden. Their terms will be over before the manned spaceships arrive.
Quote from: yinzer on 06/16/2010 07:11 pmQuote from: clongton on 06/16/2010 06:32 pmQuote from: A_M_Swallow on 06/16/2010 04:10 pmNASA may be going to Moon and Mars but I do know 2 people who are not - President Obama and Administrator Bolden. Their terms will be over before the manned spaceships arrive.I'd like to see both of them, along with their deputies, out on their butts tomorrow. They are screwing the hooch for all of us.Fifty percent in the house, two thirds in the Senate. Start making phone calls.One Hundred percent in the house, two thirds in the Senate. Start making phone calls.
Quote from: OV-106 on 06/16/2010 07:06 pmQuote from: Robotbeat on 06/16/2010 06:35 pmIMO, they are doing the best service to NASA since the whole Constellation mess (actually, since way before that... even before Shuttle): getting it out of the launcher business and back into the spacecraft and development business.What spacecraft? Orion is in a massive state of flux. Thanks to having to wait for the dang launcher.QuoteWhat development? The Galveston "wish-list" with all the disclaimers?As for getting out of the launch business, ok fine, if that is the "ah-ha moment" that so many think is the key to everything.It's not just an "ah-ha" moment. NASA has been operating an HLV (Shuttle) with an MLV budget, which is why it took so dang long for Space Station Freedom to get built, meanwhile the Russians had their own space stations in orbit and operating. I don't have this libertarian idea that it's impossible for the "gubmint" to do anything right (nor did I vote for 'bama). But NASA obviously think that they have to have a kick-butt launcher if they will have any launcher at all, partly because they have so many people invested in launch operations. This has sucked most of the money out of human spacecraft development at NASA for generations.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 06/16/2010 06:35 pmIMO, they are doing the best service to NASA since the whole Constellation mess (actually, since way before that... even before Shuttle): getting it out of the launcher business and back into the spacecraft and development business.What spacecraft? Orion is in a massive state of flux.
What development? The Galveston "wish-list" with all the disclaimers?As for getting out of the launch business, ok fine, if that is the "ah-ha moment" that so many think is the key to everything.
What development? The Galveston "wish-list" with all the disclaimers?
As for getting out of the launch business, ok fine, if that is the "ah-ha moment" that so many think is the key to everything. So we have ULA and one flight of Falcon 9. What goes on them? Dragon is the only thing that is really a "known commodity". When will it, and all the others, be ready, proven and operational?QuoteGood question. There should be official estimates soon, possibly in the agreements.I could go on. I do believe the administrator is an honorable man. However, I also believe there are a lot of questions left unanswered and too many things that could completely derail everything to just shutter everything and increase risk to ISS on a non-detailed, non-specific plan that may or may not culminate with a crew going to a small rock 15 years from now.
Good question. There should be official estimates soon, possibly in the agreements.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 06/16/2010 07:20 pmQuote from: OV-106 on 06/16/2010 07:06 pmQuote from: Robotbeat on 06/16/2010 06:35 pmIMO, they are doing the best service to NASA since the whole Constellation mess (actually, since way before that... even before Shuttle): getting it out of the launcher business and back into the spacecraft and development business.What spacecraft? Orion is in a massive state of flux. Thanks to having to wait for the dang launcher.QuoteWhat development? The Galveston "wish-list" with all the disclaimers?As for getting out of the launch business, ok fine, if that is the "ah-ha moment" that so many think is the key to everything.It's not just an "ah-ha" moment. NASA has been operating an HLV (Shuttle) with an MLV budget, which is why it took so dang long for Space Station Freedom to get built, meanwhile the Russians had their own space stations in orbit and operating. I don't have this libertarian idea that it's impossible for the "gubmint" to do anything right (nor did I vote for 'bama). But NASA obviously think that they have to have a kick-butt launcher if they will have any launcher at all, partly because they have so many people invested in launch operations. This has sucked most of the money out of human spacecraft development at NASA for generations.Unfortunately, all of that is wrong. Orion is not in the massive state of flux it is right now because of Ares 1. Orion is in the massive state of flux it is in now because of politics.
Granted, the performance of Ares 1 caused a lot of unnecessary suffering over the last several years, yet it is not just that. In addition, and to your original statement, is Orion "the" spacecraft or will there be others and different types? Again, no one knows.
As to the rest, If NASA has been operating an HLV (shuttle) on a Medium Launch Vehile budget, is that not a good thing? In addition, people like to dog on shuttle, yet it much more than a launch vehicle. It is the launch vehicle, it is the spacecraft, it is the on-orbit operations base, it is the entry vehicle, etc. That is why when folks want to compare it to someone else, it becomes difficult and why it is wrong to characterize the way you have with "obvious" conclusions that are not facts.
As to Space Station Freedom, it was never built. The reason it took so long for ISS is again politics. The same politics and policies that created X-33, SLI, etc and all the other "game-changing" proposals that never evolved anything but wanted to start from a blank-sheet and expect everything. Sound familar?
Quote from: Robotbeat on 06/16/2010 06:35 pmIMO, they are doing the best service to NASA since the whole Constellation mess (actually, since way before that... even before Shuttle): getting it out of the launcher business and back into the spacecraft and development business.This administration has “punted” exploration down the road for the next 15 years and has decided to continue to go around in circles during these next 15 years like we have for the last 30 years. I’m sure this inspires my daughter and her generation.
Now, I support DIRECT over CxP anytime.And Obama's plant is bad, not in the "killing the HSF" but in like past 30 years of USA presidents "I have nothing against space exploration but I certainly don't want to pay for it so you can only draw nice pictures while I'm in office".Still, I looked at good ol' DIRECT 2 x J-246 Lunar mission. And kept remembering ULA ACES idea. Depots in LEO and L1, reusing everything that can be... Its how space exploration should be done. DIRECT is certainly cheaper and easier to do than CxP, but it still has the terrible concern of all proposed HLVs... you spend so much for vehicle you can't afford the missions.
No, this administration didn't "punt" exploration any further down the road than it already was going to be. Whether the PoR, FY 2011, or any of the realistic constrained budget cases that A-com looked at, none of them would have what most people here consider exploration much earlier than the mid 2020s. Even DIRECT or other SDLV based exploration missions would also be into the mid 2020s before they got into real exploration without a huge budget increase. Back when Ares-I was first pitched, it was going to cost $1B and be ready in only a few years. Even when it was first started at NASA it was supposed to be quick and easy. While I think DIRECT may have less problems than Ares-I, I don't have much confidence in the team at NASA that would be developing it. Because face it, unless NASA MSFC rolls over dead, they're going to find a way to get themselves involved in the process, and the net result is going to be a lot more cost and schedule than the numbers Ross and co have been proposing.IMO, I'd rather have an administration that's honest about schedule than one that keeps blowing smoke about how Real Soon Now we'll be going back to the Moon (or wherever the location de jure is).I think we could start doing exploration faster on this budget, just not under the constraints NASA operates on. If NASA were allowed to take risks, and treated explorers like explorers instead of irreplaceable precious national assets, we could get a lot further quicker. If NASA's sponsors in Congress cared more about exploration than workforce maintenance, we could get a lot further quicker. If NASA were willing to start smaller, do things incrementally, and take extra risks along the way, we could move a lot faster.But NASA run the way Congress and NASA want to run themselves isn't going to get exploration before the mid-2020's under any realistic budget. Blaming the current administration for pointing out the imperial striptease that's been going on for at least half a decade seems a bit silly.~Jon
Quote from: grdja on 06/16/2010 08:58 pmNow, I support DIRECT over CxP anytime.And Obama's plant is bad, not in the "killing the HSF" but in like past 30 years of USA presidents "I have nothing against space exploration but I certainly don't want to pay for it so you can only draw nice pictures while I'm in office".Still, I looked at good ol' DIRECT 2 x J-246 Lunar mission. And kept remembering ULA ACES idea. Depots in LEO and L1, reusing everything that can be... Its how space exploration should be done. DIRECT is certainly cheaper and easier to do than CxP, but it still has the terrible concern of all proposed HLVs... you spend so much for vehicle you can't afford the missions.You haven't paid close enough attention to the costing profiles of the DIRECT architecture. DIRECT actually made *ALL* the mission goals of the ESAS possible within the existing budget - and more!