Quote from: Olaf on 11/11/2018 03:47 pmhttps://twitter.com/thesheetztweetz/status/1061628667397357573Is $3B pipeline launches for payloads that Electron could compete for?
https://twitter.com/thesheetztweetz/status/1061628667397357573
But Rocket Lab has another launch scheduled for December, as well as 16 launches planned for 2019.Rocket Lab has a backlog of launches for the next 18 months, Beck said, which is "around a $3 billion pipeline." The factories in New Zealand and California "have been specifically designed to produce one rocket a week," Beck said. Rocket Lab aims to be launching at a weekly rate in 2020.
Let's hope this is another sign that cost/kg is not (the only thing) that's keeping the space activities from growing exponentially. With Electron flying, VG and Blue testing their suborbital vehicles and SpaceX apparently having gotten through their backlog, the next few years will show whether we really are at the start of a new space age.
Quote from: high road on 11/13/2018 09:21 amLet's hope this is another sign that cost/kg is not (the only thing) that's keeping the space activities from growing exponentially. With Electron flying, VG and Blue testing their suborbital vehicles and SpaceX apparently having gotten through their backlog, the next few years will show whether we really are at the start of a new space age.At $240K for a 3U cubesat (about $80K/kg) there will be a hard limit to how much exponential that will be. Another hard limit will be the first time a cubesat causes an in-orbit collision. That will lead to a requirement for cubesats to have on-orbit manoeuvrability and de-orbit capability, making them even more expensive. What we need is $8K/kg and the ability to remove all the space junk that's out there.
A while back I discussed using Electron for taking small payloads to ISS. At time I don't we knew about Curie.Between Curie stage and Nanoracks Bishop airlock this maybe possible.Concept is mini Cygnus using Curie as service module. Vehicle would dock with Bishop airlock while it is removed from station. Jon of Altius may have bits of technology that could help here.Once docked, pressurised cargo container separates from Curie service module which flys away for disposal.Bishop module is reattached to station so crew can access cargo. Disposal of old cargo container would be via Cygnus or Dragon trunk.
Quote from: TrevorMonty on 11/22/2018 01:16 pmA while back I discussed using Electron for taking small payloads to ISS. At time I don't we knew about Curie.Between Curie stage and Nanoracks Bishop airlock this maybe possible.Concept is mini Cygnus using Curie as service module. Vehicle would dock with Bishop airlock while it is removed from station. Jon of Altius may have bits of technology that could help here.Once docked, pressurised cargo container separates from Curie service module which flys away for disposal.Bishop module is reattached to station so crew can access cargo. Disposal of old cargo container would be via Cygnus or Dragon trunk.Conceptually similar to what Intuitive Machines was doing with their JEM airlock sized reentry vehicle design, which could in theory be delivered by a grappleable service module. Unfortunately, their old RV design seems to be no longer present on their website though.Considering current cargo regimes, a JEM/Bishop sized passable cargo module for time sensitive payloads or payloads that can't justify return on larger reentry vehicles would be an interesting market. There's also Terminal Velocity Aero for another take on the micro-RV from ISS concept, which ostensibly must be delivered.Though a service module/long life upper stage that can stay at ISS to provide the means for cargo container disposal as well as directed precision reentry and orbit dropping would be a valuable service. Especially if it was some sort of "universal" type that could fly on a number of smallsat launchers
How does Electron deal with lightning at Mahia? Lightning towers aren't obvious.
Quote from: oiorionsbelt on 12/13/2018 03:30 pmHow does Electron deal with lightning at Mahia? Lightning towers aren't obvious.They only go vertical for test and launch and they only do that if it's nice weather.Remember, Electron isn't anywhere close to the size of SpX Falcon or any of your typically large launchers.. it's tiny.
Quote from: CameronD on 12/13/2018 09:18 pmQuote from: oiorionsbelt on 12/13/2018 03:30 pmHow does Electron deal with lightning at Mahia? Lightning towers aren't obvious.They only go vertical for test and launch and they only do that if it's nice weather.Remember, Electron isn't anywhere close to the size of SpX Falcon or any of your typically large launchers.. it's tiny.They're more agile than F9 because they are smaller, therefore no need for lightning protection? ?
Weather is always a consideration in any rocket launch, but when was the last time we saw a rocket launched during lightning conditions *with lightning towers at pad? I can't recall. It may not be a relevant issue wrt to potential launch cadence.Election is definitely not launching during weather that can generate lightning conditions, at least for the foreseeable future. However, triboelecrical discharges are a factor that has been compensated for, according to Peter Beck. I'm not an electrical engineer, so am not aware of the comparative hazards between weather-induced lightning strikes vs triboelectric discharges, mayhaps a more qualified person can elaborate.
May still be case for space tug to allow for simpler cheaper and cargo vehicle. Along lines of Altius Bulldog satellite servicing vehicle.
Quote from: TrevorMonty on 11/26/2018 06:12 pmMay still be case for space tug to allow for simpler cheaper and cargo vehicle. Along lines of Altius Bulldog satellite servicing vehicle.Definitely an idea we've thought of. For pressurized cargo delivery, if you could keep the pressure shell weight small (and the size small enough to fit through the Bishop Airlock) and relatively cheap, the idea could have some real merit. To ISS inclinations and altitudes you're talking around $28k/kg for the Electron. Dragon deliveries are something like $52k/kg ($130M/flt for a typically 2500kg payload). So there's definitely room for a tug-based solution to allow you to deliver small payloads on a cost-competitive basis.I think the idea definitely makes sense for future commercial facilities, since they'll likely need smaller levels of cargo, are likely to want to divide that up over smaller more frequent batches (more Just In Time), and are likely to be a lot more willing to take calculated risks than NASA can with ISS. But those facilities are still several years in the future, so it'd be interesting to see how open the ISS community would be to something like this when they already have CRS contracts and such... Not sure. Definitely could make a lot of technical and economic sense.~Jon
Biggest hurdle for you would be strict safety requirements when approaching ISS. Lot easier with unmanned commercial station which Nanoracks are considering.
Quote from: TrevorMonty on 12/17/2018 06:22 pmBiggest hurdle for you would be strict safety requirements when approaching ISS. Lot easier with unmanned commercial station which Nanoracks are considering.Agreed. Still worth having some conversations with NASA to see if there's interest, but it's definitely more of a market for a commercial station. The two ways I could see this happening for ISS are if a) the ISS program was interested in supporting this as an ISS-based demo, and/or b) if the ISS program was interested in having a low-cost Just-in-Time payload delivery option. ~Jon
Have any idea how much cargo by mass you could deliver, by time you factor in vehicle's mass. Would need to make it two stage vehicle, with detachable cargo pod entering station via Bishop airlock and service module staying outside, attached to station. For disposal run, just reattach pod and do a deorbit burn. From NASA point of view it would be nice to have cargo vehicle that can be launched on short notice for emergency spares.I allow for scaling in design to support, 500kg LauncherOne and 1000kg Firefly or Relativity LVs.