After reading the article I don't think it's "what they are trying to do". I think it's what their upper management and business development folks are trying to pitch to NASA. I strongly suspect this will go absolutely nowhere, just like "commercialized SLS" in 2022.
I imagine the surviving Apollo astronauts are pretty jealous right now.
From what I see in the Athena Document, Jared seemed to favor the idea of using Orion by launching it on other rockets; I imagine that would be the New Glenn.
What Isaacman should do is follow PBR [...]
Quote from: thespacecow on 12/08/2025 09:37 amWhat Isaacman should do is follow PBR [...]What Isaacman should do is follow the law.
Quote from: pochimax on 12/06/2025 03:49 pmFrom what I see in the Athena Document, Jared seemed to favor the idea of using Orion by launching it on other rockets; I imagine that would be the New Glenn.Can't say that. NASA would have to compete it.
The Orion Integrated Test Lab (ITL) brings the spacecraft to life on Earth, offering a one‑to‑one, high‑fidelity replica of NASA's Orion where every cable, switch, display and piece of avionics mirrors the flight vehicle. The lab supports end‑to‑end rehearsals of Artemis II—testing launch, orbit insertion, splashdown and fault‑injection scenarios—while also providing critical training for the Artemis II crew.
Lockheed is now setting the stage to begin “offering commercial flights to individuals as well as other space agencies” aboard the Orion, Byers told me during an extensive interview.[...]Beginning with the Artemis III mission - the first astronaut landing on the Moon’s powdered surface in the new century - Lockheed’s engineers aim to restore the entire craft after each flight for future missions, Byers says.[...]They project the Artemis V capsule will cost less than half of the Artemis II version, and predict more dramatic drops running through the Artemis VIII iteration.[...]“We launch Orion on one commercial launch vehicle, and then we launch an in-space transfer stage or a kick stage or boost stage on a separate launch vehicle.”“They mate in low Earth orbit and that transfer stage does the translunar injection burn that pushes us to the Moon.”“There are upper stages that are currently available on the market that could be easily modified to support this mission,” he says, “and then we are also exploring a Lockheed Martin variant.”He says he was impressed by Blue Origin’s recent picture-perfect launch of its New Glenn booster: “We’re absolutely open to working with Blue Origin and exploring the New Glenn.”
Quote from: Jim on 12/06/2025 03:58 pmQuote from: pochimax on 12/06/2025 03:49 pmFrom what I see in the Athena Document, Jared seemed to favor the idea of using Orion by launching it on other rockets; I imagine that would be the New Glenn.Can't say that. NASA would have to compete it.It's difficult to compete when there is no real candidate. No existing launcher can send Orion directly to TLI. The only theoretical option would be to tug Orion using a separately launched propulsion stage, but Orion was not designed to withstand the loads in the opposite (eyeballs out) direction.
Quote from: hektor on 12/08/2025 05:04 pmQuote from: Jim on 12/06/2025 03:58 pmQuote from: pochimax on 12/06/2025 03:49 pmFrom what I see in the Athena Document, Jared seemed to favor the idea of using Orion by launching it on other rockets; I imagine that would be the New Glenn.Can't say that. NASA would have to compete it.It's difficult to compete when there is no real candidate. No existing launcher can send Orion directly to TLI. The only theoretical option would be to tug Orion using a separately launched propulsion stage, but Orion was not designed to withstand the loads in the opposite (eyeballs out) direction.Why would a tug have to attach to the docking port? A tug could have a fixture on its nose that could attach to the Orion Service Module. It might require some modifications to the service module. So why not?