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.
Atlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavy
Quote from: Jim on 08/13/2024 04:22 pmAtlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavyI 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?
Quote from: edzieba on 08/13/2024 05:23 pmQuote from: Jim on 08/13/2024 04:22 pmAtlas V cores were identical and could do any configuration including the heavyI 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.
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?
The Atlas V Heavy Lift Vehicle has been developed up to a Critical Design Review (CDR) level ofcompleteness. The completion of the design is currently on hold pending firm mission requirements for thislevel of performance capability. At the time of this publication, the Atlas V HLV is approximately 30 monthsfrom authority to proceed (ATP) to launch, but would require a 36-month integration cycle instead of thetypical 24-month integration shown for the Atlas V 400 and 500 series missions.
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.
Quote from: DanClemmensen on 08/13/2024 03:53 pmI 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.
In theory ULA could not bid AV unless DIVH was available in its lineup.
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.
For several years before the ULA venture wasannounced, Boeing and LM had engaged in bitter litigation involvingcompetition to provide launch services to the DOD. Lockheed Martin hadsued Boeing for alleged misconduct in competing for awards in the Air ForceExtended Expendable Launch Vehicle Program (EELV) and accused Boeingof violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, theFlorida Civil Remedies for Criminal Activities Act, the Sherman Act, andthe Florida Antitrust Act.56 In the same case Boeing filed a counterclaimalleging that LM had engaged in unfair competition and tortious interferencewith contractual relations and had violated the Lanham Act and the FloridaUnfair Deceptive and Trade Practices Act.57 The agreement to create ULAstipulated that, upon the closing of the transaction, the companies would seekan order to suspend their litigation in federal district court concerning the AirForce EELV program.58
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.
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.
...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.
Quote from: Blackstar on 08/14/2024 05:37 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...