Author Topic: CANCELLED: NASA OSAM-1 (Restore-L) LEO servicing  (Read 46588 times)

Online StraumliBlight

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Re: CANCELLED: NASA OSAM-1 (Restore-L) LEO servicing
« Reply #60 on: 09/06/2024 07:45 pm »
OSAM-1 Partnership Opportunity: Request for Information [Sep 6]

Quote
NASA is exploring potential partnerships for alternate use cases for the On-orbit Servicing, Assembly, and Manufacturing 1 (OSAM-1) flight hardware, test facilities, and experienced personnel. Through a Request for Information for OSAM-1 Partnerships released Sept. 5, 2024, NASA seeks interest from U.S. organizations that will benefit commercial, civil, and national objectives, thereby advancing domestic leadership in In-space Servicing, Assembly, and Manufacturing (ISAM) capabilities. 

A comprehensive list of OSAM-1 resources and technologies organizations can consider using are outlined in the full Request for Information for OSAM-1 Partnerships available at www.sam.gov. Responses are due Sept. 30, 2024, by 11:59 p.m. EDT.

Offline Blackstar

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Re: CANCELLED: NASA OSAM-1 (Restore-L) LEO servicing
« Reply #61 on: 09/06/2024 09:46 pm »
https://spacenews.com/nasa-reaffirms-decision-to-cancel-osam-1/

NASA reaffirms decision to cancel OSAM-1
Jeff Foust September 5, 2024   

OSAM-1   
The OSAM-1 satellite servicing technology demonstration mission suffered significant cost and schedule overruns. Credit: NASA
Updated Sept. 6 with OSAM-1 RFI details.

WASHINGTON — NASA is proceeding with plans to shut down a satellite servicing mission at the end of the month after rejecting a proposal to revise the mission to meet a 2026 launch date.

In a statement posted online Sept. 5, NASA announced it would proceed with closing out the On-orbit Servicing, Assembly, and Manufacturing 1 (OSAM-1) project, ending work on the mission at the end of the current fiscal year, which concludes Sept. 30.

NASA announced March 1 that it had decided to cancel the mission, which was years behind schedule and far over budget. A fiscal year 2024 appropriations bill enacted later that month, though, directed NASA to develop a plan that would revise OSAM-1 in a way that could allow it to launch in 2026.

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