<snip>-SUSIE is not supposed to be a reusable upper stage, it is a mixed crew-cargo reusable VTVL orbiter without main propulsion (engines are only doing orbital insertions and landing) Its closest comparison would be Buran, but Downscaled to Hermes-scale and with Starship’s landing methods, definitely technologically interesting, but practically useless.<snip>
Quote from: TheKutKu on 11/01/2023 09:34 am<snip>-SUSIE is not supposed to be a reusable upper stage, it is a mixed crew-cargo reusable VTVL orbiter without main propulsion (engines are only doing orbital insertions and landing) Its closest comparison would be Buran, but Downscaled to Hermes-scale and with Starship’s landing methods, definitely technologically interesting, but practically useless.<snip>It seems that a closer SUSIE analog is the forthcoming Dreamchaser series 200 on a reusable launcher like the Falcon 9. Which have the advantage of able to landed on a runway. So the business case for SUSIE appears to be extremely weak. Probably might wind up as an expensive LEO crew taxi for a few missions as a prestige ESA project, IMO.
Quote from: Zed_Noir on 11/01/2023 02:01 pm.....The communications around SUSIE emphasise its cargo capabilities, particularly its return capabilities, calling it a "fairing", And having modular cargo capabilities as the main difference between its two versions. With its huge unpressurised cargo bay, it distinctively seems like a downscaled Buran orbiter, or maybe more accurately the unbuilt LKS spacecraft (or some of the earlier glider-small shuttle proposals of the early 70s). The larger diameter may improve the Cargo bay volume.
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Quote from: TheKutKu on 11/01/2023 06:16 pmQuote from: Zed_Noir on 11/01/2023 02:01 pm.....The communications around SUSIE emphasise its cargo capabilities, particularly its return capabilities, calling it a "fairing", And having modular cargo capabilities as the main difference between its two versions. With its huge unpressurised cargo bay, it distinctively seems like a downscaled Buran orbiter, or maybe more accurately the unbuilt LKS spacecraft (or some of the earlier glider-small shuttle proposals of the early 70s). The larger diameter may improve the Cargo bay volume.How useful SUSIE may turns out to be. Depends on the up mass and the down mass numbers not the volume available for payload. Do we have any mass numbers?
Quote from: Zed_Noir on 11/01/2023 07:33 pmQuote from: TheKutKu on 11/01/2023 06:16 pmQuote from: Zed_Noir on 11/01/2023 02:01 pm.....The communications around SUSIE emphasise its cargo capabilities, particularly its return capabilities, calling it a "fairing", And having modular cargo capabilities as the main difference between its two versions. With its huge unpressurised cargo bay, it distinctively seems like a downscaled Buran orbiter, or maybe more accurately the unbuilt LKS spacecraft (or some of the earlier glider-small shuttle proposals of the early 70s). The larger diameter may improve the Cargo bay volume.How useful SUSIE may turns out to be. Depends on the up mass and the down mass numbers not the volume available for payload. Do we have any mass numbers?They claim 7 tons up- and down-mass in a 40m3 payload bah (I don’t think this fits with the renders, I may be wrong)
Quote from: TheKutKu on 11/01/2023 09:08 pmQuote from: Zed_Noir on 11/01/2023 07:33 pmQuote from: TheKutKu on 11/01/2023 06:16 pmQuote from: Zed_Noir on 11/01/2023 02:01 pm.....The communications around SUSIE emphasise its cargo capabilities, particularly its return capabilities, calling it a "fairing", And having modular cargo capabilities as the main difference between its two versions. With its huge unpressurised cargo bay, it distinctively seems like a downscaled Buran orbiter, or maybe more accurately the unbuilt LKS spacecraft (or some of the earlier glider-small shuttle proposals of the early 70s). The larger diameter may improve the Cargo bay volume.How useful SUSIE may turns out to be. Depends on the up mass and the down mass numbers not the volume available for payload. Do we have any mass numbers?They claim 7 tons up- and down-mass in a 40m3 payload bah (I don’t think this fits with the renders, I may be wrong)So that leave about 14 tonnes from the Ariane 64's maximum LEO payload mass of about 21 tonnes for the SUSIE spacecraft dry mass and enough propellants for a non-hoverslam powered landing plus orbital maneuvering. Interesting.
All the mistakes of shuttle except smaller . What is needed is a small ship like Soyuz on a small handy launcher that launches a lot th a goes up and down a lot .To put it in cars the shuttle is a lorry ,Susie is a pick-up Truck what we need is a mini .3 people able to dock and lands with a paragliding wing as simple as possible .
The amount of space debris in Earth's orbit is constantly rising as more space trash is left behind. Limiting the risks of collision with satellites or space stations or to protect our communications networks, protecting the space environment matters at #ArianeGroup. #SUSIE 1/2
#SUSIE is part of this philosophy and could help reduce space debris and assist with removing or de-orbiting end-of-life satellites. #ArianeGroup 2/2
To remove space debris/junk, SUSIE will have to fly frequently. This does not seam to be the case since Ariane 6 won't fly often enough because of it's expense.
Susie is really a really expensive way to remove space junk .
It would also be kind of hilarious if it was capable of recovering its own 2nd stage.