And, as Musk noted in his presser yesterday, will the US allow ULA to buy engines from Russia given the potential sanction violations? It seems hard to imagine that they would if things continue on their current course.
I think ULA recently received a commercial launch contract, and satellite companies have said they have no problem flying on either Atlas V or Delta IV - depending on price....[snip]...But if customers are looking for non-Russian alternatives, I think ULA might pick up a few orders. And ironically they could fulfill them with the Russian powered Atlas V!...[snip]...
Quote from: Robotbeat on 04/26/2014 09:14 pmSpaceX will have 3 east coast pads in about 2 years. I think they'll have the capability at that time. In the mean time, well, yeah, it's a problem if companies didn't have enough foresight to pick a domestic (or at least non-Russian) launch provider. Geopolitical risk is always an issue. Same deal with China, honestly. They're growing bolder and more powerful. Who knows if they'll move on Taiwan in 5 years time? I mean, probably not (and I think EVERYONE hopes not right now, in China, Taiwan, Japan, etc), but it must be included in any risk assessment. and if you didn't include that in your risk assessment, then you have no one to blame but yourself (okay, and Putin).Yeah, it appears SpaceX will be the one to benefit most over the coming few years if current geopolitical trends continue. They are poised to meet the demand with tremendous cost savings, so it's not a matter of satellite operators settling for a more expensive launch provider like ULA.Where will the third east coast launch pad be, Georgia?
SpaceX will have 3 east coast pads in about 2 years. I think they'll have the capability at that time. In the mean time, well, yeah, it's a problem if companies didn't have enough foresight to pick a domestic (or at least non-Russian) launch provider. Geopolitical risk is always an issue. Same deal with China, honestly. They're growing bolder and more powerful. Who knows if they'll move on Taiwan in 5 years time? I mean, probably not (and I think EVERYONE hopes not right now, in China, Taiwan, Japan, etc), but it must be included in any risk assessment. and if you didn't include that in your risk assessment, then you have no one to blame but yourself (okay, and Putin).
If there i s demand, maybe a fourth East coast pad at Wallops. Taking over the Antares pad. Since Orbital will likely not be able to find a non-Russian engine for their LV if geopolitics intervenes.
Quote from: gommtu on 04/26/2014 09:19 pmQuote from: Robotbeat on 04/26/2014 09:14 pmSpaceX will have 3 east coast pads in about 2 years. I think they'll have the capability at that time. In the mean time, well, yeah, it's a problem if companies didn't have enough foresight to pick a domestic (or at least non-Russian) launch provider. Geopolitical risk is always an issue. Same deal with China, honestly. They're growing bolder and more powerful. Who knows if they'll move on Taiwan in 5 years time? I mean, probably not (and I think EVERYONE hopes not right now, in China, Taiwan, Japan, etc), but it must be included in any risk assessment. and if you didn't include that in your risk assessment, then you have no one to blame but yourself (okay, and Putin).Yeah, it appears SpaceX will be the one to benefit most over the coming few years if current geopolitical trends continue. They are poised to meet the demand with tremendous cost savings, so it's not a matter of satellite operators settling for a more expensive launch provider like ULA.Where will the third east coast launch pad be, Georgia?Currently the third SpaceX East coast pad will be at South Texas.If there i s demand, maybe a fourth East coast pad at Wallops. Taking over the Antares pad. Since Orbital will likely not be able to find a non-Russian engine for their LV if geopolitics intervenes.
Quote from: Zed_Noir on 04/26/2014 10:52 pmIf there i s demand, maybe a fourth East coast pad at Wallops. Taking over the Antares pad. Since Orbital will likely not be able to find a non-Russian engine for their LV if geopolitics intervenes.They will never take over the Antares Pad, where did you hear this? Orbital currently has 3 bids for replacement engines 2 Russian and 1 American.
SpaceX plans to refly a stage next year. Having desperate former Proton customers around might make it easier for them to find customers for early flights of F9 using used stages.
Even with cheap Russian engines, Antares seems to be only marginally commercially viable at best.
Quote from: ChrisWilson68 on 04/26/2014 09:43 pmSpaceX plans to refly a stage next year. Having desperate former Proton customers around might make it easier for them to find customers for early flights of F9 using used stages.Except that Falcon 9 v1.1 can't lift a Proton class GTO payload. It is EELV or nothing, and of those really only Atlas 5 with four or five boosters - but if Proton is put out of business will Russia want to keep supporting Atlas 5 with engines? - Ed Kyle
Quote from: ChrisWilson68 on 04/26/2014 09:43 pmSpaceX plans to refly a stage next year. Having desperate former Proton customers around might make it easier for them to find customers for early flights of F9 using used stages.Except that Falcon 9 v1.1 can't lift a Proton class GTO payload. It is EELV or nothing, and of those really only Atlas 5 with four or five boosters - but if Proton is put out of business will Russia want to keep supporting Atlas 5 with engines?
Quote from: edkyle99 on 04/27/2014 12:47 amQuote from: ChrisWilson68 on 04/26/2014 09:43 pmSpaceX plans to refly a stage next year. Having desperate former Proton customers around might make it easier for them to find customers for early flights of F9 using used stages.Except that Falcon 9 v1.1 can't lift a Proton class GTO payload. It is EELV or nothing, and of those really only Atlas 5 with four or five boosters - but if Proton is put out of business will Russia want to keep supporting Atlas 5 with engines? - Ed KyleDon't forget that SpaceX will launch SES-9 and SES-10 in GTO, both weighing about 5,300 kilograms, on two Falcon 9 v1.1. So it seems SpaceX can lift a Proton class GTO payload with the current v1.1, maybe not the heaviest ones but sure a lot of them.
1. Delta 4 Heavy 11.4 tonnes2. Ariane 5 ECA 10.0 tonnes3. H-2B-304 ~7.0 tonnes4. Atlas 551 6.7 tonnes5. Atlas 541 6.3 tonnes6. Proton M/Briz M 6.1 tonnes7. Zenit 3SL 6.1 tonnes8. Delta 4 5,4 5.8 tonnes H-2A-204 ~4.5 tonnes Falcon 9 v1.1 ~3.5 tonnes Soyuz 2.1b/Freg 3.0 tonnes (Kourou)