I think we are going to see, if this comes up to a vote, exactly how strong NASA's support in Congress really is and the degree to which local interests, such as lobbying from certain potential contractors, influence NASA policy.
Quote from: yinzer on 06/15/2010 02:08 amThe problem with an HLV has always been finding payloads for it. What are the payloads for this new HLV supposed to be, and where is the money for them supposed to come from?I respectfully disagree with your first statement. I guess the money will come customers and from the tax payer - same as who will pay for the future SpaceX flights.
The problem with an HLV has always been finding payloads for it. What are the payloads for this new HLV supposed to be, and where is the money for them supposed to come from?
Quote from: savuporo on 06/15/2010 03:09 amQuote from: sdsds on 06/15/2010 02:56 amGiven that context, Nelson strongly hints his "HLV" is human-rated.The only thing Nelson hints at, is keeping some of the jobs. No more, no less. I doubt if he honestly cares if his HLV is human, monkey or fish-rated.What about whale rated?
Quote from: sdsds on 06/15/2010 02:56 amGiven that context, Nelson strongly hints his "HLV" is human-rated.The only thing Nelson hints at, is keeping some of the jobs. No more, no less. I doubt if he honestly cares if his HLV is human, monkey or fish-rated.
Given that context, Nelson strongly hints his "HLV" is human-rated.
Quote from: KSC Engineer on 06/15/2010 02:47 amQuote from: yinzer on 06/15/2010 02:08 amThe problem with an HLV has always been finding payloads for it. What are the payloads for this new HLV supposed to be, and where is the money for them supposed to come from?I respectfully disagree with your first statement. I guess the money will come customers and from the tax payer - same as who will pay for the future SpaceX flights. What customers? It is too big for commercial payloads and it does not compete in Spacex's range. Also what NASA payloads? there are none on the books.
The President has proposed that we delay any BEO mission until 2025 (with that mission being a flags and footprints NEO mission at that) however Congress has yet to dispose of that proposal.
Quote from: Bill White on 06/15/2010 02:12 pmThe President has proposed that we delay any BEO mission until 2025 (with that mission being a flags and footprints NEO mission at that) however Congress has yet to dispose of that proposal.This is completely FALSE. The 2025 BEO mission is to an asteroid. It did not rule out precursor missions. 1) The documents released during that conference at KSC indicate a number of BEO precursor missions starting in 20202) Regardless of what value anyone places on those documents, Bolden has testified in congress that missions start in 2020.It is documented that NASA intends to start BEO missions in 2020/1, anything else is nothing more than odds-making. Probabilities are valid but they should be made in light of stated intentions.
Quote from: Bill White on 06/15/2010 02:12 pmThe President has proposed that we delay any BEO mission until 2025 (with that mission being a flags and footprints NEO mission at that) however Congress has yet to dispose of that proposal.This is completely FALSE. The 2025 BEO mission is to an asteroid. It did not rule out precursor missions.
Quote from: DigitalMan on 06/15/2010 03:40 pmQuote from: Bill White on 06/15/2010 02:12 pmThe President has proposed that we delay any BEO mission until 2025 (with that mission being a flags and footprints NEO mission at that) however Congress has yet to dispose of that proposal.This is completely FALSE. The 2025 BEO mission is to an asteroid. It did not rule out precursor missions. Offer me a credible link showing firm plans to leave LEO by 2020/2021 and I will retract that portion of my comment.Anyway, what is your understanding of the destination to be aimed at in 2020/2021 and what vehicles do you believe shall be used?
The proposed design for the large SEP tug has 84 mT of solar arrays. Something will have to lift that large mass.
Quote from: Bill White on 06/15/2010 04:05 pmQuote from: DigitalMan on 06/15/2010 03:40 pmQuote from: Bill White on 06/15/2010 02:12 pmThe President has proposed that we delay any BEO mission until 2025 (with that mission being a flags and footprints NEO mission at that) however Congress has yet to dispose of that proposal.This is completely FALSE. The 2025 BEO mission is to an asteroid. It did not rule out precursor missions. Offer me a credible link showing firm plans to leave LEO by 2020/2021 and I will retract that portion of my comment.Anyway, what is your understanding of the destination to be aimed at in 2020/2021 and what vehicles do you believe shall be used?Ahh, the crux of the situation.
Quote from: DigitalMan on 06/15/2010 03:40 pmQuote from: Bill White on 06/15/2010 02:12 pmThe President has proposed that we delay any BEO mission until 2025 (with that mission being a flags and footprints NEO mission at that) however Congress has yet to dispose of that proposal.This is completely FALSE. The 2025 BEO mission is to an asteroid. It did not rule out precursor missions. 1) The documents released during that conference at KSC indicate a number of BEO precursor missions starting in 20202) Regardless of what value anyone places on those documents, Bolden has testified in congress that missions start in 2020.It is documented that NASA intends to start BEO missions in 2020/1, anything else is nothing more than odds-making. Probabilities are valid but they should be made in light of stated intentions.That is probably assuming that the ISS is deorbited in 2020. If it is extended to 2028 (as many of the international partners are hoping), you would still need to fund the ISS along with commercial crew until that time. I suspect that the only missions that we will be doing in the early 2020s (i.e. until the ISS is deorbited) is preparations for BEO using the ISS. In a nutshell, I doubt that we can afford BEO until the ISS is deorbited.
Quote from: A_M_Swallow on 06/15/2010 05:47 pmThe proposed design for the large SEP tug has 84 mT of solar arrays. Something will have to lift that large mass.That's too big. Make it smaller. No need for a tug bigger than can be launched dry into LEO in a single piece on an EELV Heavy. That will give us a tug of at LEAST 1MW, on the high end (though I certainly expect the first tug to be smaller).
Quote from: Robotbeat on 06/15/2010 07:17 pmQuote from: A_M_Swallow on 06/15/2010 05:47 pmThe proposed design for the large SEP tug has 84 mT of solar arrays. Something will have to lift that large mass.That's too big. Make it smaller. No need for a tug bigger than can be launched dry into LEO in a single piece on an EELV Heavy. That will give us a tug of at LEAST 1MW, on the high end (though I certainly expect the first tug to be smaller).The 1.2MW SEP tug is basically the Earth Departure Stage for the HLV.I agree that the first tug is likely to have two VASIMR thrusters (200kW) rather than six thrusters. However transporting a heavy cargo such as a lunar base will need both a heavy launch vehicle and a heavy tug.
Quote from: OV-106 on 06/15/2010 04:06 pmQuote from: Bill White on 06/15/2010 04:05 pmQuote from: DigitalMan on 06/15/2010 03:40 pmQuote from: Bill White on 06/15/2010 02:12 pmThe President has proposed that we delay any BEO mission until 2025 (with that mission being a flags and footprints NEO mission at that) however Congress has yet to dispose of that proposal.This is completely FALSE. The 2025 BEO mission is to an asteroid. It did not rule out precursor missions. Offer me a credible link showing firm plans to leave LEO by 2020/2021 and I will retract that portion of my comment.Anyway, what is your understanding of the destination to be aimed at in 2020/2021 and what vehicles do you believe shall be used?Ahh, the crux of the situation. That really is the crux of the situation because when Obama proposed to cancel Constellation, that essentially wiped out the VSE at the same time. And *that* is unfortunate because it is the VSE that defined where we were going and what we were going to do when we got there. It was *the* roadmap for American HSF for the next half century. So here we are now with an extended ISS and no way to effectively resupply it, and nowhere to actually go from there. All I see is a space agency imploding. And all I hear from those "knowledgeable sources" (snicker) is a lot of hot air and bellicose about Mars and NEO's but I have yet to see even ONE single concrete expression of a plan or ANY sign of actual commitment to do anything beyond selling out the American HSF program to Russia. CCDev? That's many, many years away. Yes, the crux of the situation.