William Barton - 3/5/2007 12:18 PMAssuming at least a Gemini-class spacecraft, and not getting a leg up from somebody already there, I think the path from program start to flight is about five years. At the moment, I think SpaceX is closest. That could change, though, if the Falcon 9 fails, and one of the other competing entities such as RpK succeeds, or one of the national space agencies suddenly gets a crash-program budget.
GncDude - 3/5/2007 12:28 PMQuoteWilliam Barton - 3/5/2007 12:18 PMAssuming at least a Gemini-class spacecraft, and not getting a leg up from somebody already there, I think the path from program start to flight is about five years. At the moment, I think SpaceX is closest. That could change, though, if the Falcon 9 fails, and one of the other competing entities such as RpK succeeds, or one of the national space agencies suddenly gets a crash-program budget.I wouldn't count on RpK. Suppose that they get the money they need and build the K1 to resupply the ISS. The mods required to make it manned are massive. It's simply not designed for it. They are going for the unmanned resupply mainly.
Joffan - 3/5/2007 2:03 PMDuh. Hijacked poll, a private US company is not a nation, however much GE would like to think otherwise.
mr.columbus - 4/5/2007 2:35 AMQuoteJoffan - 3/5/2007 2:03 PMDuh. Hijacked poll, a private US company is not a nation, however much GE would like to think otherwise.Yep, the poll is also flawed because a. the EU is not a nation rather a supernational entity b. the EU has not much to do with ESA, which is engaged in space flight c. "space" also means suborbital flights and d. does that question exclude any cooperation between two space agencies (ESA/Roskosmos) because it speaks of "independent" space flight?I think the more precise question would be:Which governmental space agency or private corporation will make the next orbital spaceflight with a vehicle developed by it / or jointly developed by it and another entity?a. ESA b. JAXA c. ISRO d. SpaceX e. RpK f. Boeing/*Partner* g. Other private entity or governmental space agency
GW_Simulations - 4/5/2007 4:56 PMI think it will be close between a private American company, and the Indian government.
mianbentley - 4/5/2007 10:47 PMMay I be so bold as to suggest the country of Iran next, because they already have missiles that can travel 5000km, the Shehab-5 I believe its called. Clearly the intention to put satellites into orbit is there, but human cargo? Worth a thought.
mianbentley - 4/5/2007 8:47 PMMay I be so bold as to suggest the country of Iran next, because they already have missiles that can travel 5000km, the Shehab-5 I believe its called. Clearly the intention to put satellites into orbit is there, but human cargo? Worth a thought.
whitewatcher - 8/5/2007 4:31 AMIndian launchers are quite advanced but not yet safe enough (GSLV with 50% failure rate). Keep in mind that chinese shenzhou developement took 11 years (1992-2003). But maybe they'll use different safety standards ...... they won't run out of people to blow up. ;-)
Israel? Their Shavit-2 can put only 550kg into a LEO. No candidate.