"The Augustine Commission and Aerospace Corporation are in essence trying to create an objective baseline on which to evaluate all cost proposals. Although it is still preliminary we believe that the Aerospace Corporation has been able to validate our figures." (Ross Tierney-July 23,2009 Next Big Picture Interview) This statement is extremely significant. In my opinion, it means that Direct now stands an extremey good chance of becoming the next US Manned Spacelight Launch System. http://nextbigfuture.com/2009/07/interview-with-ross-tierney-of-direct.html
Or more recently, Alan Bean and Harrison Schmitt...
Quote from: Drapper23 on 07/24/2009 03:41 am"The Augustine Commission and Aerospace Corporation are in essence trying to create an objective baseline on which to evaluate all cost proposals. Although it is still preliminary we believe that the Aerospace Corporation has been able to validate our figures." (Ross Tierney-July 23,2009 Next Big Picture Interview) This statement is extremely significant. In my opinion, it means that Direct now stands an extremey good chance of becoming the next US Manned Spacelight Launch System. http://nextbigfuture.com/2009/07/interview-with-ross-tierney-of-direct.html Absolutely not true at this point. I am not sure where this information came from.
Quote from: Lab Lemming on 07/24/2009 12:38 pmAnd outside of the magnetic field, it means that anyone working there gets roasted when there is a CME.EML1 is great for a depot, but unless you are actually going to make spacecraft on the moon, it doesn't make much sense to put your shipyard so far from Earth.We have 25+ years experience working in the LEO environment with MIR, ISS, and the earlier space stations. Why throw all that away?Because an extra delta-v of 3.77 is km/s needed to bring spaceships back from L1. Eventually the interplanetary spaceships will be built at LEO but refuelled and repaired at the L1 Spaceyard IMHO.
And outside of the magnetic field, it means that anyone working there gets roasted when there is a CME.EML1 is great for a depot, but unless you are actually going to make spacecraft on the moon, it doesn't make much sense to put your shipyard so far from Earth.We have 25+ years experience working in the LEO environment with MIR, ISS, and the earlier space stations. Why throw all that away?
Goodness gracious, no need to shout me down, I want Direct to succeed, it's not like I'm trying to kill it. Just opening some constructive dialogue...If NASA used aerospace corp. to confirm their costs for AresI/V as well, does that make the Direct less favorable? If aerospace corp used better methodology for Direct, maybe you should emphasize it when you reference Aerospace corp, otherwise people would confuse their cost analysis as being the same one that NASA used for Ares (like I did).My point is: the general consensus on this tread is CxP and NASA management lie to us about Ares I/V all the time. If we assume they lied to us about original costs, then saying Direct uses the same methodology as NASA leads to the logical conclusion that Direct is likely to lie to us. This (hopefully) is not true, but the conclusion is reached nevertheless. I think you should change the emphasis to explain why you think your numbers not only match NASA critera, but exceed it.
Lancer525:Touche'. My point exactly.DIRECT got what they wanted, an independent review of their idea and data.
Quote from: brihath on 07/24/2009 06:37 pmLancer525:Touche'. My point exactly.DIRECT got what they wanted, an independent review of their idea and data.So, where does that leave us? Correct me if I am wrong but has not the biggest point of contention with DIRECT and its members been credibility (of the data)? Now *if* it were true that this has been put to rest, again where does that leave us?
1. AeroSpace Corp has essentially validated our cost data. We're on the board.
.. .. ..If you are used to hearing "$35 billion, $35 billion" all the time and someone comes along and says "no, $8.5 billion".. .. ..
Quote from: clongton on 07/24/2009 11:45 am1. AeroSpace Corp has essentially validated our cost data. We're on the board.What exactly "essentially" means ?The devil is in the details... ?Can you expand on "We're on the board." statement? With my limited English I could understand "we're on board", but there's a difference.Quote from: clongton on 07/24/2009 12:00 pm.. .. ..If you are used to hearing "$35 billion, $35 billion" all the time and someone comes along and says "no, $8.5 billion".. .. ..I think the $35 ($36 in other places) billion is the total cost from now to IOC (2015, 65% confidence), for CxP. All included.Orion alone is $6-to-$9 billion. Are you sure $8.5 bln "Direct" / $35 bln CxP is apples-to-apples ?
Ok, I think you guys are misunderstanding my point: I AM NOT SAYING DIRECT IS LYING. I AM NOT SAYING I DON'T BELIEVE THE COST ANALYSIS. You guys are a little overzealous to attack criticisms that aren't there.What I am saying is that emphasizing similarities between NASA and Direct is not exactly a good thing. I have seen time and again arguments from Direct that said "the same people who are running our numbers are the same ones who run NASAs, so we're fine". Saying that alone is not sufficient, you must say that Direct was much more agressive in terms of margins, in how it was BETTER. The status quo at NASA for years has been a day late and a dollar short, so saying you are equal does nothing in your favor. This is not about the facts themselves, but about conveying them in a way that is more positive for Direct. I honestly don't know who did Ares' numbers, if it wasn't aerospace corp then we have no real problems to begin with.If we assume NASA lied to us about Ares, then saying "we are just like NASA" is not a good thing. This is not about numbers, this about communicating that Direct can be trusted. I know that everyone here besides maybe Analyst believes that Direct's numbers are legit, but when you put it to the public who hasn't been following since day 0, they are going to be sceptical.If NASA adopts Direct do you think critics of NASA won't start making the same argument? They'll say this is NASA wasting our money again, because they won't be informed that the cost analysis was more legit than what was done for Ares.Perhaps it is because I'm cynical, but when I hear independent review, I have to ask how "independent" is it? Was the Ares cost analysis "independent"? To be clear I am not accussing the independent reviews of being biased, I'm saying people won't always just simply take your word as the truth, because NASA has lied to us so many times. People in this forum may trust Direct, but I think that trust may not extend so easily to people outside.
The status quo at NASA for years has been a day late and a dollar short, so saying you are equal does nothing in your favor. This is not about the facts themselves, but about conveying them in a way that is more positive for Direct. I honestly don't know who did Ares' numbers, if it wasn't aerospace corp then we have no real problems to begin with.
Quote from: cixelsyD on 07/24/2009 07:07 pmThe status quo at NASA for years has been a day late and a dollar short, so saying you are equal does nothing in your favor. This is not about the facts themselves, but about conveying them in a way that is more positive for Direct. I honestly don't know who did Ares' numbers, if it wasn't aerospace corp then we have no real problems to begin with.Though DIRECT is far less ambitious than Ares as a technological step forward, so there should be a lot more certainty about costs, performance and safety than with Ares.
Ok, I think you guys are misunderstanding my point: I AM NOT SAYING DIRECT IS LYING. I AM NOT SAYING I DON'T BELIEVE THE COST ANALYSIS. You guys are a little overzealous to attack criticisms that aren't there.What I am saying is that emphasizing similarities between NASA and Direct is not exactly a good thing. I have seen time and again arguments from Direct that said "the same people who are running our numbers are the same ones who run NASAs, so we're fine". Saying that alone is not sufficient, you must say that Direct was much more agressive in terms of margins, in how it was BETTER. <snip>