...insane...unrealistic...fantastical...unrealistic...implausible...never have closed in reality...doomed effort
Quote from: Redclaws on 05/21/2021 03:24 pm...insane...unrealistic...fantastical...unrealistic...implausible...never have closed in reality...doomed effortWow! Such arrogance. Maybe if you'd start from the premise that the people attempting this were not morons but instead some of the best aerospace engineers of their day you'd have a better chance of understanding.
Quote from: mkent on 05/21/2021 10:10 pmQuote from: Redclaws on 05/21/2021 03:24 pm...insane...unrealistic...fantastical...unrealistic...implausible...never have closed in reality...doomed effortWow! Such arrogance. Maybe if you'd start from the premise that the people attempting this were not morons but instead some of the best aerospace engineers of their day you'd have a better chance of understanding.Thanks for your polite words. I notice you’re the only person so far to suggest these efforts *weren’t* doomed or disagree with the language. Have you considered that with the benefit of hindsight, yours might not be the majority view?I did specifically start with the premise they were excellent engineers, but their projects failed and sank with basically no trace whatsoever in modern practice. Seriously - what from these programs is ... anywhere in current practice? So, I asked *why*. Because presumably people today - hell, it hasn’t been that long, some of them are the same people - aren’t fools either.
The program was moved to NASA who, quite frankly, didn't want it. They plodded along with a few tests until a maintenance error led to the destruction of the test vehicle, allowing NASA to happily kill the program.
How were the 90s SSTO proposals *ever* supposed to close on realistic systems?
Thanks all, this is exactly the kind of interesting reflection I was hoping for.And to be clear, I think there were some impressive accomplishments - DC-X was definitely not a failure in any sense. It’s just the programs as a whole mostly sank without a trace, and I think the whys of all that are fascinating.
in the DC-X after they inherited it from DARPA