SpaceX has about 140 positions on their 'now hiring' pages. Some of them relate to "configuration management" and Configuration analysis", a bunch of "quality engineer" and "quality engineering analyst" positions. Many titles include words like "Integrator" or "Inspector". There also seems to be a lot more "manager" positions than there used to. ...Extra overhead and oversight for ensuring things are done consistently across the board clearly adds a financial burden ($7-12M extra per year at a guess based on their available positions) . Is this enough to effectively render and stabilize processes? There are a lot of technicians shifts for around the clock work. Could they possibly get 5 F9's and 1 or more F1e in the sky in 2011 if they fill their roster soon? Or is there no hope of that?
Quote from: simcosmos on 01/08/2011 01:34 pm...The important thing, for the moment, is the top of that spreadsheet, the propulsion numbers: I'm not sure if what I'm calling of 'block2' is still the current expectation or not. In the same way, I'm not sure if what I'm calling of 'block1' is or not close to the current development state of the engines (as used in the recent COTS demo1 flight)....Thanks,AntónioWhen you use the terms block1, block2 etc. it seems like there are different engines. And that may be the case. However, it could also be that the engines are throttled back for redundancy sake. (...)
...The important thing, for the moment, is the top of that spreadsheet, the propulsion numbers: I'm not sure if what I'm calling of 'block2' is still the current expectation or not. In the same way, I'm not sure if what I'm calling of 'block1' is or not close to the current development state of the engines (as used in the recent COTS demo1 flight)....Thanks,António
Quote from: duane on 12/11/2010 08:21 pmSeems there is a lot of process engineering bickering going on about Spacex. Just reminder that Nasa HSF is not immune from process failure... SpaceX has about 140 positions on their 'now hiring' pages. Some of them relate to "configuration management" and Configuration analysis", a bunch of "quality engineer" and "quality engineering analyst" positions. Many titles include words like "Integrator" or "Inspector". There also seems to be a lot more "manager" positions than there used to. Causes?
Seems there is a lot of process engineering bickering going on about Spacex. Just reminder that Nasa HSF is not immune from process failure...
I'm going to speculate, based on talking with a senior exec from another organization, USA. They essentially have two 'sides' to their organization:The first is an efficiently run corporate structure that gets the work most of the necessary done on a daily basis.The second is essentially a mirror-image of the customer's (NASA) structure, with engineers and managers at every level that the customer wants to interface at.I'm guessing that Space-X is in the process of making a similar 'Front Office' for their NASA, and perhaps DoD, customers.
Could we move engine performance studies to it's own thread. This thread is for more generic updates, not performance studies. I'm sure once that has it's own thread many people would like to review the data and participate in the discussion.
Thanks for the link to the interview! According to Richichi, only a temperature sensor failed.SO... I have to ask again (as I have in the past) - What was the source for Chris Bergin's assertion about a Draco failing?
Quote from: Lars_J on 01/11/2011 07:56 pmThanks for the link to the interview! According to Richichi, only a temperature sensor failed.SO... I have to ask again (as I have in the past) - What was the source for Chris Bergin's assertion about a Draco failing?I heard it on the audio, too. Could've been a misinterpretation, or perhaps the temperature sensor was on a Draco (thus causing the initial appearance of a Draco failure).
which I wouldn't equate to something to causes someone to announce that a Draco had failed.
Certainly neither confirmed nor denied by SpaceX.
Then again, someone else on the public section also said one Draco did fail so there you have it. Certainly neither confirmed nor denied by SpaceX.
* the only failure AT ALL on the mission was a temperature sensor that died (not a critical one, those are triple redundant) - 8:20 in the audio