Quote from: whitelancer64 on 01/24/2023 11:12 pmCan you explain how your comment relates to the the NSSL contract's development milestones (which we have already established we do not know what they were for each company)? If not, then your post is wholly irrelevant. You're just vomiting up mindless anti-Blue Origin rhetoric, which is both off-topic to the conversation at hand, and unproductive to the furtherance of any other possible discussion. We don't need any more of that nonsense here.Call it the "mean value theorem of dysfunction". It is 2023 now. NG won't be flying even in 2024. If some milestones were met, then the project got stuck after them. Or, they were never met. Given the cancellation, the second option is likelier, but it doesn't really matter.Where. Is. The. Progress.You keep demanding that everyone present proof of absence, whereas everyone else is saying how about BO present some bone-fide rockets.
Can you explain how your comment relates to the the NSSL contract's development milestones (which we have already established we do not know what they were for each company)? If not, then your post is wholly irrelevant. You're just vomiting up mindless anti-Blue Origin rhetoric, which is both off-topic to the conversation at hand, and unproductive to the furtherance of any other possible discussion. We don't need any more of that nonsense here.
Quote from: meekGee on 01/25/2023 01:43 amQuote from: whitelancer64 on 01/24/2023 11:12 pmCan you explain how your comment relates to the the NSSL contract's development milestones (which we have already established we do not know what they were for each company)? If not, then your post is wholly irrelevant. You're just vomiting up mindless anti-Blue Origin rhetoric, which is both off-topic to the conversation at hand, and unproductive to the furtherance of any other possible discussion. We don't need any more of that nonsense here.Call it the "mean value theorem of dysfunction". It is 2023 now. NG won't be flying even in 2024. If some milestones were met, then the project got stuck after them. Or, they were never met. Given the cancellation, the second option is likelier, but it doesn't really matter.Where. Is. The. Progress.You keep demanding that everyone present proof of absence, whereas everyone else is saying how about BO present some bone-fide rockets.We are talking about the milestones of the NSSL competition, not whatever you have dreamed up in your head. Per a prior comment by Woods, Blue Origin met at least half of the milestones set by the NSSL development contract. I'd like to know their source for that. I have not demanded any proof of absence. You are gibbering nonsense in that respect.
Maybe you should step back for a day or two. Almost 50% of posts in anything related to blue are you responding to literally everything.
IF Blue actually gets a rocket to orbit, they might win a contract. Until then, we have to wait and see. As pointed out, they are slow, and they are slower than ULA. They also keep things very secret as far as engines, and other developments.
Quote from: spacenut on 01/25/2023 05:08 pmIF Blue actually gets a rocket to orbit, they might win a contract. Until then, we have to wait and see. As pointed out, they are slow, and they are slower than ULA. They also keep things very secret as far as engines, and other developments. You do not have to put a rocket into orbit to win a contract. That is not and never has been a prerequisite.
Quote from: whitelancer64 on 01/25/2023 02:05 pmQuote from: meekGee on 01/25/2023 01:43 amQuote from: whitelancer64 on 01/24/2023 11:12 pmCan you explain how your comment relates to the the NSSL contract's development milestones (which we have already established we do not know what they were for each company)? If not, then your post is wholly irrelevant. You're just vomiting up mindless anti-Blue Origin rhetoric, which is both off-topic to the conversation at hand, and unproductive to the furtherance of any other possible discussion. We don't need any more of that nonsense here.Call it the "mean value theorem of dysfunction". It is 2023 now. NG won't be flying even in 2024. If some milestones were met, then the project got stuck after them. Or, they were never met. Given the cancellation, the second option is likelier, but it doesn't really matter.Where. Is. The. Progress.You keep demanding that everyone present proof of absence, whereas everyone else is saying how about BO present some bone-fide rockets.We are talking about the milestones of the NSSL competition, not whatever you have dreamed up in your head. Per a prior comment by Woods, Blue Origin met at least half of the milestones set by the NSSL development contract. I'd like to know their source for that. I have not demanded any proof of absence. You are gibbering nonsense in that respect."don't look at reality, look at the sock puppet over here, that's what's important"---You're saying that it's not impossible that the project was humming along just fine, met milestones on time, and then stalled on a dime... and you're asking for people to prove you're wrong even though BO keeps those things a secret.I'm telling you that realistically if your project drags for so many years then the milestones were likely equally late.I'm also telling you that the state of the project is a lot more important than whether the milestones were achieved on time.
"I'm also telling you that the state of the project is a lot more important than whether the milestones were achieved on time."
Quote from: whitelancer64 on 01/25/2023 02:05 pmQuote from: meekGee on 01/25/2023 01:43 amQuote from: whitelancer64 on 01/24/2023 11:12 pmCan you explain how your comment relates to the the NSSL contract's development milestones (which we have already established we do not know what they were for each company)? If not, then your post is wholly irrelevant. You're just vomiting up mindless anti-Blue Origin rhetoric, which is both off-topic to the conversation at hand, and unproductive to the furtherance of any other possible discussion. We don't need any more of that nonsense here.Call it the "mean value theorem of dysfunction". It is 2023 now. NG won't be flying even in 2024. If some milestones were met, then the project got stuck after them. Or, they were never met. Given the cancellation, the second option is likelier, but it doesn't really matter.Where. Is. The. Progress.You keep demanding that everyone present proof of absence, whereas everyone else is saying how about BO present some bone-fide rockets.We are talking about the milestones of the NSSL competition, not whatever you have dreamed up in your head. Per a prior comment by Woods, Blue Origin met at least half of the milestones set by the NSSL development contract. I'd like to know their source for that. I have not demanded any proof of absence. You are gibbering nonsense in that respect.Maybe you should step back for a day or two. Almost 50% of posts in anything related to blue are you responding to literally everything.
I have NOT asked anyone to prove me wrong. You're thinking of Deadman, ....What matters is how the military thought things were going. Clearly ULA and SpaceX came out on top. That does not mean that Blue Origin was making no progress.
Quote from: whitelancer64 on 01/26/2023 02:11 pmI have NOT asked anyone to prove me wrong. You're thinking of Deadman, ....What matters is how the military thought things were going. Clearly ULA and SpaceX came out on top. That does not mean that Blue Origin was making no progress.Focus.The *secret progress theory" was semi plausible 3-4 years ago. With every passing year, it is less so.Same with the secret milestones that were met and yet yielded no progress except for the aforementioned secret progress.Your claims boil down to the unfalsifiable assertion that there's a surprisingly mature NG hiding inside the big hangar. I think it's ridiculous, but people are entitled to believe whatever they want.
Quote from: meekGee on 01/26/2023 07:17 pmQuote from: whitelancer64 on 01/26/2023 02:11 pmI have NOT asked anyone to prove me wrong. You're thinking of Deadman, ....What matters is how the military thought things were going. Clearly ULA and SpaceX came out on top. That does not mean that Blue Origin was making no progress.Focus.The *secret progress theory" was semi plausible 3-4 years ago. With every passing year, it is less so.Same with the secret milestones that were met and yet yielded no progress except for the aforementioned secret progress.Your claims boil down to the unfalsifiable assertion that there's a surprisingly mature NG hiding inside the big hangar. I think it's ridiculous, but people are entitled to believe whatever they want.I could say the same to you: Focus on the conversation at hand - the one that's actually going on in this thread - not the one you're having in your head. They're not "secret" milestones, the people running the NSSL competition know about them. And, so, at least so he claims, does Woods. If that information is available to a nobody me, I'd like to see it. That's it. That's all I'm asking for. That's all that's going on here. If you think it's something else, you are wrong. So -you need to focus on what's happening in this thread, not what you wish was happening. I have not here, and never have claimed elsewhere, that Blue Origin has a mature New Glenn in their hangar. I agree that such an assertion would be ridiculous.
Quote from: whitelancer64 on 01/26/2023 07:29 pmI could say the same to you: Focus on the conversation at hand - the one that's actually going on in this thread - not the one you're having in your head. They're not "secret" milestones, the people running the NSSL competition know about them. And, so, at least so he claims, does Woods. If that information is available to a nobody me, I'd like to see it. That's it. That's all I'm asking for. That's all that's going on here. If you think it's something else, you are wrong. So -you need to focus on what's happening in this thread, not what you wish was happening. I have not here, and never have claimed elsewhere, that Blue Origin has a mature New Glenn in their hangar. I agree that such an assertion would be ridiculous.You're the only one here having this conversation...Everyone else is telling you that you're stuck on an unfalsifiable assertion that obviously nobody can disprove and that at the end of the day doesn't even matter.
I could say the same to you: Focus on the conversation at hand - the one that's actually going on in this thread - not the one you're having in your head. They're not "secret" milestones, the people running the NSSL competition know about them. And, so, at least so he claims, does Woods. If that information is available to a nobody me, I'd like to see it. That's it. That's all I'm asking for. That's all that's going on here. If you think it's something else, you are wrong. So -you need to focus on what's happening in this thread, not what you wish was happening. I have not here, and never have claimed elsewhere, that Blue Origin has a mature New Glenn in their hangar. I agree that such an assertion would be ridiculous.
Quote from: whitelancer64 on 01/25/2023 06:02 pmQuote from: spacenut on 01/25/2023 05:08 pmIF Blue actually gets a rocket to orbit, they might win a contract. Until then, we have to wait and see. As pointed out, they are slow, and they are slower than ULA. They also keep things very secret as far as engines, and other developments. You do not have to put a rocket into orbit to win a contract. That is not and never has been a prerequisite. So, they haven't won a contract because they are either too expensive, or their estimated time of an orbital rocket is too long. So, again, if they put a rocket into orbit, they prove they can launch stuff, then they might win a contract. The Air Force required SpaceX to have several successful launches before they would let them bid, then it was after a lawsuit by SpaceX.
Blue Origin was now nakedly opportunistic. After Donald Trump won the presidency and announced the goal of returning Americans to the moon by 2024, Blue executives quickly put together a seven-page proposal outlining a lunar service to the Shackleton crater on the moon’s south pole, paving the way for human colonies there. “It is time for America to return to the Moon—this time to stay,” Bezos emailed the Washington Post, after it obtained a copy of the proposal. The idea would evolve into another massive undertaking, called Blue Moon.
Nevertheless, the story ULA execs eventually heard from employees at Blue, Sowers said, was that Bezos was frustrated that the government was funding Elon Musk’s space dreams and wanted to get in on the action. To compete for those lucrative contracts and to “get paid to practice,” as Bezos put it to colleagues
I think that situation was and will be unique to spaceX. Before that point, the contracts were a ULA monopoly. SpaceX had to sue to break the monopoly. The hard work has now been done, and ULA doesn't solely own gov launch.And this is great - more competition is ALWAYS better for the space force and for all tax payers.
Quote from: deadman1204 on 01/30/2023 03:16 pmI think that situation was and will be unique to spaceX. Before that point, the contracts were a ULA monopoly. SpaceX had to sue to break the monopoly. The hard work has now been done, and ULA doesn't solely own gov launch.And this is great - more competition is ALWAYS better for the space force and for all tax payers.While I wish Blue Origin the best of luck in being able to win some of those contracts, they really need to get something up into orbit. Even if they have to do it on their own dime (something they have no lack of). The company has existed for over twenty years now. They have an expensive joy ride that works most of the time, and they have a really nice Methalox engine which will hopefully be flight tested in a few months. And some big buildings. But their silence on all else is not a good thing, considering that they have tended to trumpet their successes quite loudly in the past.