Author Topic: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?  (Read 26670 times)

Offline nicp

  • Full Member
  • **
  • Posts: 251
  • Retired software engineer.
  • UK
  • Liked: 155
  • Likes Given: 1568
Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« on: 08/13/2024 03:32 pm »
It's pretty clear that Atlas V has been more successful than Delta IV, it has flown more than twice as many times (100 vs 45) and is not done yet - but it is out of production.
So why is A-V so much more successful?

An obvious reason is of course the use of hydrogen on D-IV - deeply cryogenic, metal embrittlement potential etc, which all adds to cost.
After some years it almost seemed that the Delta IV was irrelevent - except for the heavy variant. Atlas V could do the rest.

I'm curious if anyone has anything to add beyond 'hydrogen is a royal pain in the rear' for Delta IV's comparative lack of success.
For Vectron!

Online DanClemmensen

  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 6935
  • Earth (currently)
  • Liked: 5651
  • Likes Given: 2350
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #1 on: 08/13/2024 03:53 pm »
It's pretty clear that Atlas V has been more successful than Delta IV, it has flown more than twice as many times (100 vs 45) and is not done yet - but it is out of production.
So why is A-V so much more successful?

An obvious reason is of course the use of hydrogen on D-IV - deeply cryogenic, metal embrittlement potential etc, which all adds to cost.
After some years it almost seemed that the Delta IV was irrelevent - except for the heavy variant. Atlas V could do the rest.

I'm curious if anyone has anything to add beyond 'hydrogen is a royal pain in the rear' for Delta IV's comparative lack of success.
I think it's better to exclude the Delta IV heavy from the comparison, since its 16 launches carried payloads too heavy for Atlas V. Thus, we have 29 Delta IV medium versus 100+ Atlas V.

One advantage of Atlas V is the ability to configure from zero to five SRBs. Thus, cost varies more finely with payload requirements. Delta IV had only 0,2, or 4 SRBs.
« Last Edit: 08/13/2024 03:57 pm by DanClemmensen »

Offline dj_fan

  • Member
  • Posts: 14
  • Liked: 7
  • Likes Given: 156
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #2 on: 08/13/2024 03:56 pm »
Atlas V used the crown jewel of the USSR Cold War - the RD-180.  Delta IV used RS-68A, which was the largest hydrogen-fueled rocket engine ever flown (LH2).  You could even probably find a Youtube video of Senator Bill Nelson extolling the benefits of the RD-180s in Senate testimony.

Offline Jim

  • Night Gator
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 38016
  • Cape Canaveral Spaceport
  • Liked: 22400
  • Likes Given: 432
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #3 on: 08/13/2024 04:22 pm »
Delta IV had weight growth and RS-68 didn't meet target
The plain single core could not meet performance requirements and needed SRMs. 
To meet performance requirements, the core could not generic and was designed specifically to each configuration: single core, core with 2 SRMs, core with 4 SRMs, heavy core, heavy right booster and heavy left booster.  This drove up costs and reduced flexibility.   Regardless of performance, the concept of horizontal integration with tail service masts fixed at the pad meant that the side boosters of the heavy were mirror images of each other.  Atlas and Falcon had ways to work around this.

Atlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavy,

Delta IV also needed more hands on
« Last Edit: 08/13/2024 04:24 pm by Jim »

Offline edzieba

  • Virtual Realist
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 6832
  • United Kingdom
  • Liked: 10451
  • Likes Given: 48
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #4 on: 08/13/2024 05:23 pm »
Atlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavy
I thought the triple-core configuration never made its way past the proposal stage, was there actual hardware (or vestiges) of that in some Atlas V cores?

Offline AmigaClone

Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #5 on: 08/13/2024 06:10 pm »
I suspect the cost might have been a factor in Atlas V launching more than three times that a Delta IV. The bulk of the price difference for a particular mission likely depended on the difference in cost of the respective first stages as well as the boosters used by each vehicle.

Offline nicp

  • Full Member
  • **
  • Posts: 251
  • Retired software engineer.
  • UK
  • Liked: 155
  • Likes Given: 1568
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #6 on: 08/13/2024 10:46 pm »
Atlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavy
I thought the triple-core configuration never made its way past the proposal stage, was there actual hardware (or vestiges) of that in some Atlas V cores?
I don't know - it does seem odd that Atlas V Heavy never got to fly, especially as Jim points out they could do this with little or no modification - something I didn't know.
Perhaps GSE updates, or ensuring two dissimilar systems... Again. :)
For Vectron!

Offline Coastal Ron

  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 9180
  • I live... along the coast
  • Liked: 10619
  • Likes Given: 12239
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #7 on: 08/13/2024 10:53 pm »
Atlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavy
I thought the triple-core configuration never made its way past the proposal stage, was there actual hardware (or vestiges) of that in some Atlas V cores?
I don't know - it does seem odd that Atlas V Heavy never got to fly, especially as Jim points out they could do this with little or no modification - something I didn't know.
Perhaps GSE updates, or ensuring two dissimilar systems... Again. :)

Delta IV Heavy already existed, and was certified for all USAF payloads, so why spend money on bringing Atlas V Heavy online?

The USAF would not spend the money to create and certify Altas V Heavy unless there was a payload they planned to build that would not fit on Delta IV Heavy, and apparently there never was such a payload.

Don't look at these types of situations from an engineering standpoint, you have to look at it from a money standpoint - who is paying for what, and why?
If we don't continuously lower the cost to access space, how are we ever going to afford to expand humanity out into space?

Offline ccdengr

  • Full Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 744
  • Liked: 557
  • Likes Given: 82
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #8 on: 08/13/2024 10:59 pm »
I thought the triple-core configuration never made its way past the proposal stage, was there actual hardware (or vestiges) of that in some Atlas V cores?
From the 2010 Atlas V User's Guide: https://web.archive.org/web/20130514051638/http://www.unitedlaunchalliance.com/site/docs/product_cards/guides/AtlasVUsersGuide2010.pdf

Quote
The Atlas V Heavy Lift Vehicle has been developed up to a Critical Design Review (CDR) level of
completeness. The completion of the design is currently on hold pending firm mission requirements for this
level of performance capability. At the time of this publication, the Atlas V HLV is approximately 30 months
from authority to proceed (ATP) to launch, but would require a 36-month integration cycle instead of the
typical 24-month integration shown for the Atlas V 400 and 500 series missions.

I don't know what would have happened if someone had ordered one.


Offline sdsds

  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 7622
  • “With peace and hope for all mankind.”
  • Seattle
  • Liked: 2400
  • Likes Given: 2232
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #9 on: 08/14/2024 04:18 pm »
I'm going with engine choice, despite Jim's cogent point about how the DIV "Common" Booster Cores were each practically unique. For AV LM chose a reliable supplier of a high performance ORSC engine that met its performance specs from flight 1. Boeing chose a heritage supplier that didn't meet the basic spec requirement until RS-68A.

Because ... reasons ... USAF had chosen the DIVH over the AVH. NASA gave up on RS-68 and left USAF to pick up the tab for the RS-68A "upgrade."

AV could still be offered competitively today except for ... unexpected engine acceptability constraints.
— 𝐬𝐝𝐒𝐝𝐬 —

Offline Blackstar

  • Veteran
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 16131
  • Liked: 9001
  • Likes Given: 2
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #10 on: 08/14/2024 05:37 pm »
I think it's better to exclude the Delta IV heavy from the comparison, since its 16 launches carried payloads too heavy for Atlas V. Thus, we have 29 Delta IV medium versus 100+ Atlas V.

I'm going to quibble over semantics (don't you just love it when people do that?):

The fact that the DIV Heavy could carry payloads that Atlas V could not was a capability, and therefore I would count it as a positive. By excluding those launches, you make DIV look even worse than Atlas V, but it's not fair to exclude it because it could do more than Atlas V.

It's now mostly forgotten now that we have Falcon 9 all the time, but there were a lot of decisions made about Atlas V and Delta IV that led to the programs that we got. There were a lot of assumptions as well that did not ultimately happen. For instance, there was an assumption that there would be a very vigorous commercial space sector that would require a lot of launches, and that the rockets would have high production rates, and that DoD would not get stuck with so much of the cost. I toured the Alabama production facility many years ago and it was huge, and built for a much bigger production run.

I guess I have a bit of a chip on my shoulder that so much of this history gets lost and ignored.

Online DanClemmensen

  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 6935
  • Earth (currently)
  • Liked: 5651
  • Likes Given: 2350
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #11 on: 08/14/2024 07:19 pm »
I think it's better to exclude the Delta IV heavy from the comparison, since its 16 launches carried payloads too heavy for Atlas V. Thus, we have 29 Delta IV medium versus 100+ Atlas V.

I'm going to quibble over semantics (don't you just love it when people do that?):

The fact that the DIV Heavy could carry payloads that Atlas V could not was a capability, and therefore I would count it as a positive. By excluding those launches, you make DIV look even worse than Atlas V, but it's not fair to exclude it because it could do more than Atlas V.

It's now mostly forgotten now that we have Falcon 9 all the time, but there were a lot of decisions made about Atlas V and Delta IV that led to the programs that we got. There were a lot of assumptions as well that did not ultimately happen. For instance, there was an assumption that there would be a very vigorous commercial space sector that would require a lot of launches, and that the rockets would have high production rates, and that DoD would not get stuck with so much of the cost. I toured the Alabama production facility many years ago and it was huge, and built for a much bigger production run.

I guess I have a bit of a chip on my shoulder that so much of this history gets lost and ignored.
I thought the partition was more useful, because DIVH was not in competition with AV and was therefore completely successful against AV, which contradicts the topic title. DIVH was an enabler for AV, because USAF forced 'all bidders" (i.e., ULA) to support all NSSL profiles. In theory ULA could not bid AV unless DIVH was available in its lineup. So yes it was absolutely a positive and critical ULA capability of the Delta IV.

Offline Blackstar

  • Veteran
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 16131
  • Liked: 9001
  • Likes Given: 2
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #12 on: 08/14/2024 09:19 pm »
In theory ULA could not bid AV unless DIVH was available in its lineup.

And that reveals something important--this was not really a competitive market, it was essentially DoD procurement, with a little bit of commercial on the side. DoD called the shots, and that determined the "success" of one vehicle over another.

I seem to remember--somebody who has more facts can step in--that the original plan was to downselect to a single launch vehicle, but the decision was made to keep both. That resulted in greater inefficiency, but more redundancy.

Online tbellman

  • Full Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 698
  • Sweden
  • Liked: 1027
  • Likes Given: 1
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #13 on: 08/15/2024 12:11 pm »
I seem to remember--somebody who has more facts can step in--that the original plan was to downselect to a single launch vehicle, but the decision was made to keep both. That resulted in greater inefficiency, but more redundancy.

There was this tiny little industrial espionage affair that forced Boeing and Lockheed to create United Launch Alliance...

Boeing / McDonnell Douglas originally won the EELV procurement with the Delta IV rockets, leaving Lockheed with nothing.  And yes, there was some assumption going in to that procurement that the loser would survive anyway, due to expected commercial business (from e.g. the Iridium satellite constellation).  But then it turned out that the reason Boeing / McDonnell could win, was that they had had access to lots of internal Lockheed documentation.  DoD realized that, since the commercial market had failed to build up, just giving the contract to Lockheed instead would not give them the redundancy they wanted.  And then more or less forced the creation of ULA.

Here's an old article about the espionage case (written a few months before the formation of ULA):
The Seattle Times: Boeing probe intensifies over secret Lockheed papers

Offline sdsds

  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 7622
  • “With peace and hope for all mankind.”
  • Seattle
  • Liked: 2400
  • Likes Given: 2232
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #14 on: 08/15/2024 01:41 pm »
There were also some court cases involved in the formation of ULA:
Quote from: William E. Kovacic, George Washington University Law School
For several years before the ULA venture was
announced, Boeing and LM had engaged in bitter litigation involving
competition to provide launch services to the DOD. Lockheed Martin had
sued Boeing for alleged misconduct in competing for awards in the Air Force
Extended Expendable Launch Vehicle Program (EELV) and accused Boeing
of violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, the
Florida Civil Remedies for Criminal Activities Act, the Sherman Act, and
the Florida Antitrust Act.56 In the same case Boeing filed a counterclaim
alleging that LM had engaged in unfair competition and tortious interference
with contractual relations and had violated the Lanham Act and the Florida
Unfair Deceptive and Trade Practices Act.57 The agreement to create ULA
stipulated that, upon the closing of the transaction, the companies would seek
an order to suspend their litigation in federal district court concerning the Air
Force EELV program.58
From page 11, https://scholarship.law.gwu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2757&context=faculty_publications

More on the original question,
One advantage of Atlas V is the ability to configure from zero to five SRBs. Thus, cost varies more finely with payload requirements. Delta IV had only 0,2, or 4 SRBs.

Agreed. Atlas V executed on the dial-a-rocket concept really well. AV-411 was ... spectacular.
https://blog.ulalaunch.com/blog/meet-the-truly-unique-atlas-v-411-rocket
— 𝐬𝐝𝐒𝐝𝐬 —

Offline Jim

  • Night Gator
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 38016
  • Cape Canaveral Spaceport
  • Liked: 22400
  • Likes Given: 432
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #15 on: 08/15/2024 02:35 pm »
Atlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavy
I thought the triple-core configuration never made its way past the proposal stage, was there actual hardware (or vestiges) of that in some Atlas V cores?

It went to CDR.  Facilities were scarred for it.  Just needed to add propellant lines and tail service masts to the MLP.  Nose cone and booster attach hardware would just need to be manufactured and qualified.

Offline Proponent

  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 7347
  • Liked: 2842
  • Likes Given: 1489
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #16 on: 08/15/2024 06:06 pm »
This is merely an impression, but ....

Somewhere there is a video of an Atlas V and a Delta IV and the trucks carrying them arriving at the Cape on the same barge. The trucks drive off. The truck carrying the Atlas looks like the sort of mass-produced vehicle you routinely see on a highways. The truck carrying the larger Delta is an over-sized machine that looks looks like it was built for some specialized application and very likely produced only in small numbers. I'm sure neither truck accounted for much of the cost of either rocket, but it gives the impression of the Delta having been designed as a military-style, cost-is-no-object vehicle.
« Last Edit: 08/15/2024 06:09 pm by Proponent »

Offline Jim

  • Night Gator
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 38016
  • Cape Canaveral Spaceport
  • Liked: 22400
  • Likes Given: 432
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #17 on: 08/15/2024 08:02 pm »
The truck carrying the larger Delta is an over-sized machine that looks looks like it was built for some specialized application and very likely produced only in small numbers. I'm sure neither truck accounted for much of the cost of either rocket,


It didn't and it was used for multiple tasks like transporting payloads to the pad.  It also took the completed launch vehicle (single core or heavy) to the pad.   Atlas had a similar vehicle for only payloads.  And Trackmobiles for pushing the MLP to the pad.

So Delta had one vehicle to do everything and Atlas has 3 different ones.

but it gives the impression of the Delta having been designed as a military-style, cost-is-no-object vehicle.

Not at the beginning.

Offline Coastal Ron

  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 9180
  • I live... along the coast
  • Liked: 10619
  • Likes Given: 12239
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #18 on: 08/15/2024 09:38 pm »
...
It's now mostly forgotten now that we have Falcon 9 all the time, but there were a lot of decisions made about Atlas V and Delta IV that led to the programs that we got. There were a lot of assumptions as well that did not ultimately happen. For instance, there was an assumption that there would be a very vigorous commercial space sector that would require a lot of launches, and that the rockets would have high production rates, and that DoD would not get stuck with so much of the cost. I toured the Alabama production facility many years ago and it was huge, and built for a much bigger production run.

IIRC the Delta production facility was sized for producing 40 Common Booster Core (CBC) per year, but the amount of demand never got close to that.

And yeah, the reason for why ULA came to be was, in part, due to a lack of demand for both Atlas V and Delta IV M/H. And between both Atlas V and Delta IV M/H, Atlas V was more popular with the USAF, which constituted the majority of the demand for ULA. Customer demand is a great indicator of how well your product is doing...
If we don't continuously lower the cost to access space, how are we ever going to afford to expand humanity out into space?

Offline hoku

  • Full Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 811
  • Liked: 702
  • Likes Given: 343
Re: Why was Delta IV less successful than Atlas V?
« Reply #19 on: 08/15/2024 10:38 pm »
...
It's now mostly forgotten now that we have Falcon 9 all the time, but there were a lot of decisions made about Atlas V and Delta IV that led to the programs that we got. There were a lot of assumptions as well that did not ultimately happen. For instance, there was an assumption that there would be a very vigorous commercial space sector that would require a lot of launches, and that the rockets would have high production rates, and that DoD would not get stuck with so much of the cost. I toured the Alabama production facility many years ago and it was huge, and built for a much bigger production run.
<snip>
Atlas V was more popular with the USAF, which constituted the majority of the demand for ULA. Customer demand is a great indicator of how well your product is doing...
True, though with the retirement of Delta II ULA might have forced some of its customers to use an (overpowered) Atlas V. Else WorldView-3/4, Landsat 9, or NOAA-21 might have been launched by a Delta II.

Tags: Delta IV Atlas V 
 

Advertisement NovaTech
Advertisement
Advertisement Margaritaville Beach Resort South Padre Island
Advertisement Brady Kenniston
Advertisement NextSpaceflight
Advertisement Nathan Barker Photography
1