Quote from: JohnFornaro on 11/24/2022 01:47 pmThe "crew rated" discussion up thread has me confused:The system can't be crew rated until it has a crew, and it can't have a crew until it's been crew rated.Is that about right?As I explained upthread (see the link below), there is two types of certifications: one is for the system which is certified for safety after it has flown its crewed demo missions and met a number of other criteria (whitelancer64 calls this operational certification; that is not the official term in the relevant documents but it describes the general idea). However, each individual crewed mission must also be certified that it is human rated and this applies regardless of whether it is a crewed demo or a post certification/operational mission (i.e., it applies if there is NASA astronauts on board the mission). https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=56067.msg2433889#msg2433889
The "crew rated" discussion up thread has me confused:The system can't be crew rated until it has a crew, and it can't have a crew until it's been crew rated.Is that about right?
Quote from: yg1968 on 11/24/2022 02:29 pmQuote from: JohnFornaro on 11/24/2022 01:47 pmThe "crew rated" discussion up thread has me confused:The system can't be crew rated until it has a crew, and it can't have a crew until it's been crew rated.Is that about right?As I explained upthread (see the link below), there is two types of certifications: one is for the system which is certified for safety after it has flown its crewed demo missions and met a number of other criteria (whitelancer64 calls this operational certification; that is not the official term in the relevant documents but it describes the general idea). However, each individual crewed mission must also be certified that it is human rated and this applies regardless of whether it is a crewed demo or a post certification/operational mission (i.e., it applies if there is NASA astronauts on board the mission). https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=56067.msg2433889#msg2433889The crew rating is about the hardware and software design of the spacecraft or LV meeting the design crew rating criteria not about demos. But a flight without crew to show that the hardware and software work as designed can be a part of the testing program to validate design. Hence the award of the design being crew rated. Without a crew rating. Not even a demo crew would step aboard. The F9 was designed from the beginning to fully meet all the design standards for crew rating of a LV as well as Starship from the standpoint of an LV. The Atlas V was deficient in some that had to be rectified before it could be certified a crew rating design LV. Though the Vulcan was designed ground up to meet the crew rating standards.But there is always a step beyond the design and that is testing proof that the actual meets the design. This is the final certification to allow use to carry crew on a regular basis. Sometimes called the crew operational certification. Meaning the design to crew standards is actually met in practice.What has not been shown for Starship is that its design as reviewed meets the crew standards. Mostly because some of the designs are not yet completed such as the cabin, software, human/ship interfaces for its control, entry/exit, emergency features and procedures, and other features related to crew but not propulsion or structure.
Quote from: oldAtlas_Eguy on 11/24/2022 06:46 pmQuote from: yg1968 on 11/24/2022 02:29 pmQuote from: JohnFornaro on 11/24/2022 01:47 pmThe "crew rated" discussion up thread has me confused:The system can't be crew rated until it has a crew, and it can't have a crew until it's been crew rated.Is that about right?As I explained upthread (see the link below), there is two types of certifications: one is for the system which is certified for safety after it has flown its crewed demo missions and met a number of other criteria (whitelancer64 calls this operational certification; that is not the official term in the relevant documents but it describes the general idea). However, each individual crewed mission must also be certified that it is human rated and this applies regardless of whether it is a crewed demo or a post certification/operational mission (i.e., it applies if there is NASA astronauts on board the mission). https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=56067.msg2433889#msg2433889The crew rating is about the hardware and software design of the spacecraft or LV meeting the design crew rating criteria not about demos. But a flight without crew to show that the hardware and software work as designed can be a part of the testing program to validate design. Hence the award of the design being crew rated. Without a crew rating. Not even a demo crew would step aboard. The F9 was designed from the beginning to fully meet all the design standards for crew rating of a LV as well as Starship from the standpoint of an LV. The Atlas V was deficient in some that had to be rectified before it could be certified a crew rating design LV. Though the Vulcan was designed ground up to meet the crew rating standards.But there is always a step beyond the design and that is testing proof that the actual meets the design. This is the final certification to allow use to carry crew on a regular basis. Sometimes called the crew operational certification. Meaning the design to crew standards is actually met in practice.What has not been shown for Starship is that its design as reviewed meets the crew standards. Mostly because some of the designs are not yet completed such as the cabin, software, human/ship interfaces for its control, entry/exit, emergency features and procedures, and other features related to crew but not propulsion or structure.Thanks for your explanations. If I understood your post correctly, it doesn't contradict anything I said. Right?
Progress for Options A and B can be tracked at this link (it hasn't been updated yet):https://www.usaspending.gov/award/CONT_AWD_80MSFC20C0034_8000_-NONE-_-NONE-As of now the award for Option A is $3B, so the combined amount should be updated to $4.15B in a few days.So for Option A, here are the current amounts:Quote from: USA SpendingOutlayed Amount: $799,409,616.24Obligated Amount: $1,258,400,016.25Current Award Amount: $3,031,455,921.24Potential Award Amount: $3,031,455,921.24Start Date: May 13, 2020Current End Date: Jul 27, 2025Potential End Date: Jul 27, 2025
Outlayed Amount: $799,409,616.24Obligated Amount: $1,258,400,016.25Current Award Amount: $3,031,455,921.24Potential Award Amount: $3,031,455,921.24Start Date: May 13, 2020Current End Date: Jul 27, 2025Potential End Date: Jul 27, 2025
The National Team has submitted its proposal for NASA’s SLD program to help the US establish a sustained lunar presence. The National Team partners are @BlueOrigin, @LockheedMartin, @DraperLab, @Boeing, @Astrobotic, and @Honeybee_Ltd. https://www.blueorigin.com/blue-moon/sld-national-team/
Sustaining Lunar DevelopmentThe National Team of Blue Origin, Lockheed Martin, Draper, Boeing, Astrobotic, and Honeybee Robotics is competing for a NASA Sustaining Lunar Development contract to develop a human landing system for the Artemis program. In partnership with NASA, this team will achieve sustained presence on the Moon.
Blue Origin confirms it submitted another proposal to NASA for a lunar lander, this time without Northrop Grumman as a partner
Northrop Grumman submitted its own SLD bid, per sources. They have a corporate partner but idk who it is.
twitter.com/joroulette/status/1600234093144219649QuoteBlue Origin confirms it submitted another proposal to NASA for a lunar lander, this time without Northrop Grumman as a partnerhttps://twitter.com/joroulette/status/1600241377639821312QuoteNorthrop Grumman submitted its own SLD bid, per sources. They have a corporate partner but idk who it is.
Sierra Space was/is with Dynetics for Appendix N (and for the base period).
Dynetics could be the NG partner this time around.
Dynetics confirms it has bid for NASA’s sustaining Human Landing System contract. Northrop Grumman is a partner.
Leidos Dynetics Team and Northrop Grumman to Collaborate on NASA Human Landing System BidNEWS PROVIDED BYLeidos Dec 07, 2022, 08:00 ETHUNTSVILLE, Ala., Dec. 7, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Dynetics, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Leidos, today announced it has submitted a bid on the Human Landing System (HLS) Sustaining Lunar Development (SLD) contract for NASA's Artemis Mission. Northrop Grumman will join the Dynetics team in this pursuit."We're excited to enter the competition to support NASA's Sustaining Lunar Development efforts, adding Northrop Grumman to our team," said Leidos Dynetics Group President Steve Cook. "As the only company to successfully build a crewed lunar lander, Northrop Grumman will be an excellent partner as we support NASA's inspiring efforts to return humans to the lunar surface. We will leverage their expertise and legacy of human space exploration, including their ongoing contracts to build the Habitation and Logistics Outpost for NASA's lunar Gateway and to provide commercial resupply services to the International Space Station, significantly bolstering our pursuit. We're pleased they have joined us in this historic effort."For more than three years, the Dynetics team has been a prime contractor for HLS. It was one of 11 companies selected in 2019 under the Next Space Technologies for Exploration Partnership (NextSTEP-2) Appendix E contract. The Leidos subsidiary was then selected under NextSTEP-2 Appendix H in 2020, alongside SpaceX and Blue Origin.In September 2021, Dynetics was one of five companies selected under Appendix N, which allows industry partners to collaborate with NASA to mature lander designs and conduct risk reduction activities in support of sustainable lander development. The recent SLD solicitation – also known as NextSTEP-2 Appendix P – was released on September 16, 2022.Northrop Grumman has also been a primary supporter of HLS, winning prime contracts under Appendices E and N."Our capabilities and experience in pioneering human exploration and space logistics will help provide a lunar transportation system that our nation can rely on for years to come," said Steve Krein, Vice President, Civil and Commercial Space, Northrop Grumman."NASA is counting on industry to lead the development of returning astronauts to the moon," Cook said. "We believe our partnership with Northrop Grumman makes us more than ready for the challenge. We look forward to the hard work ahead."Certain statements in this announcement constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the rules and regulations of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). These statements are based on management's current beliefs and expectations and are subject to significant risks and uncertainties. These statements are not guarantees of future results or occurrences. A number of factors could cause our actual results, performance, achievements, or industry results to be different from the results, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These factors include, but are not limited to, the "Risk Factors" set forth in Leidos' Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2021, and other such filings that Leidos makes with the SEC from time to time. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof. Leidos does not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect the impact of circumstances or events that arise after the date the forward-looking statements were made.
Human Landing System rendering provided by the Leidos Dynetics team.(PRNewsfoto/Dynetics)
Where does that leave Sierra Space?
Quote from: yg1968 on 12/07/2022 12:51 pmWhere does that leave Sierra Space?I don't know. Does anyone know if they submitted a proposal?
Quote from: clongton on 12/07/2022 12:54 pmQuote from: yg1968 on 12/07/2022 12:51 pmWhere does that leave Sierra Space?I don't know. Does anyone know if they submitted a proposal?Sierra is supporting the Blue National Team this time around. Blue was insisting on exclusivity for nearly all of their partners, so they may only have been able to support NT rather than be a merchant provider.