There's another weird piece to this puzzle: What the hell is Boeing contributing to the National Team Mark II? This may be completely unrelated, but since NorGrumm is out and Boeing is in, it kinda makes sense that Boeing must be contributing the transfer element,¹ which was presumably a mutant version of Cygnus in National Team Mark I.But what does Boeing have that could serve as a TE? DCSS? ULA is taking the line down. EUS? Way too big, and with the wrong thrust structure to be able to be chopped down to serve as a TE. Something brand new? Please. Boeing's in-house space engineering operation is a train wreck.Maybe this is more complicated than a straight sale of all assets. If ULA were to sell the DCSS/ICPS IP and production tooling back to Boeing, that could not only act as the contribution to National Team Mark II, but also be the basis of a plausible orbital transfer/tug business.After that, selling ULA to almost anybody makes more sense. Nobody wants a mostly-dead Delta line--except maybe for the DCSS.I guess this scenario doesn't rule out selling everything to Boeing and just buying out LockMart. But I'm pretty sure that Tory would last about three months in that nest of vipers, and then ULA would be close to worthless. On the other hand, selling ULA minus the Delta pieces-parts to Blue and putting Tory in charge might be viable. Of course, that assumes that Blue + Tory can figure out how to be a competitive launcher operation. I still don't think that's possible if Starship is even vaguely successful. And it certainly doesn't turn Blue into the dominant player in cislunar and lunar surface ops, which is what they need to be if they ever hope to execute on Jeff's original vision.
If BO purchased ULA, could the Vulcans Centaur V be used as a New Glenn third stage?Or, could BO swap the RL10s for a BE-3U? (Rockets aren't Legos, got it, and thrust would be more than double) plus the costs and recertification, etc. Just asking if feasible. But the loitering time ULA developed could be beneficial.Lastly, could a Jarvis upper stage work on the Vulcan?If Bezos owned the Vulcan, he may in the long run try to seep as many components in-house as possible.This is a question from a non-rocket scientist. Please respond accordingly.
, so if ULA becomes part of BO, then the latter company would be operating two differently sized rockets sharing the same first stage engines.
If BO purchased ULA, could the Vulcans Centaur V be used as a New Glenn third stage?
Would make some sense to swap out the RL-10s for BE-3U for lower energy missions as the Rl-10 is super expensive. HOWEVER it’s not like Blue is pumping out BE-3Us, and it’d require a ton of NRE (non-recurring engineering) to swap engines.
Quote from: Steve G on 03/02/2023 02:27 pmIf BO purchased ULA, could the Vulcans Centaur V be used as a New Glenn third stage?No, because of the horizontal vehicle integration.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 03/02/2023 02:40 pmWould make some sense to swap out the RL-10s for BE-3U for lower energy missions as the Rl-10 is super expensive. HOWEVER it’s not like Blue is pumping out BE-3Us, and it’d require a ton of NRE (non-recurring engineering) to swap engines.4x BE-7 is the other option, IMO the better one due to limited throttling of BE-3U.
There is no Delta "pieces" to sell. All is left is the fly of two D-IV Heavies and two ICPS. There is no more Delta production
That would require building one additional ICPS. If Boeing owns (well, re-owns) all the IP for DCSS, it would make sense to leverage the money that NASA would surely give them to reconstitute the line, which could then be used to make a perfectly reasonable TE for SLD/SLT.
Quote from: TrevorMonty on 03/02/2023 04:23 pm4x BE-7 is the other option, IMO the better one due to limited throttling of BE-3U.BE7 is 10klbs while RL10 is 25klbs.
4x BE-7 is the other option, IMO the better one due to limited throttling of BE-3U.
Quote from: TheRadicalModerate on 03/02/2023 04:52 pmThat would require building one additional ICPS. If Boeing owns (well, re-owns) all the IP for DCSS, it would make sense to leverage the money that NASA would surely give them to reconstitute the line, which could then be used to make a perfectly reasonable TE for SLD/SLT.Which people are going to do the work? All the production workers have been reassigned within ULA. The engineers are likely have only a small fraction of their time supporting Delta IV and ICPS while doing Vulcan and Atlas. The ops people will only be part time on Delta IV while supporting Atlas and Vulcan flight rate ramp up.
Northrop is my favorite. They are already ULA's solid booster supplier for Atlas/Vulcan and the new Antares 330 looks like it could use a Centaur 2nd stage. The community likes to joke about rockets != legos, but the engineers Northorp acquired from Orbital ATK seem to have made careers out of making stage mixes/swaps work.
The Artemis III ICPS is still in Decatur[/url], so they haven't reassigned everybody. If Boeing wanted to re-purpose the DCSS for new tasks, the obvious solution would be to transfer essential personnel for building more DCSSes to Boeing, along with the tooling and the IP.
I don't like it, most of the value for parents was in the Atlas and this lowers my confidence to Vulcan and BE-4.