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#2
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Study was done in the past concerning space flight cost. The conclusion was
that space flight cost will never come down close to jet flight cost. Typical airliner flight consists of flying to point A to B, refuel, pilot gets out and kick the tire, and fly back to point A. Typical space flight is totally different. Space craft leave for orbit, come back, technicians must go over and certify all systems for flight worthiness before the next flight. That includes checking every inch of external surface. The space system consequently has terrible turnover, not to mention capacity of delivery is a fraction of system weight. Emilio. "robert arndt" wrote in message om... http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/01/sc...=1057636800&am p;en=e08df88fc4310282&ei=5062&partner=GOOG LE Rob |
#3
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![]() "Emilio" wrote in message ... Study was done in the past concerning space flight cost. The conclusion was that space flight cost will never come down close to jet flight cost. Typical airliner flight consists of flying to point A to B, refuel, pilot gets out and kick the tire, and fly back to point A. Typical space flight is totally different. Space craft leave for orbit, come back, technicians must go over and certify all systems for flight worthiness before the next flight. That includes checking every inch of external surface. The space system consequently has terrible turnover, not to mention capacity of delivery is a fraction of system weight. Emilio. The problem is much more fundamental IMHO 1) Putting an object into orbit requires a considerable expenditure in energy since you have to accelerate it to around 18,000 mph 2) You have to dissipate that energy to come home, currently that means using atmospheric friction with its resultant high temperatures. Given that we havent been able to manufacture aircraft that could operate economically at mach 2 expecting that a space vehicle could match the costs of subsonic airliners is unrealistic. Keith |
#4
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"Emilio" wrote in message
... Study was done in the past concerning space flight cost. The conclusion was that space flight cost will never come down close to jet flight cost. Typical airliner flight consists of flying to point A to B, refuel, pilot gets out and kick the tire, and fly back to point A. Typical space flight is totally different. Space craft leave for orbit, come back, technicians must go over and certify all systems for flight worthiness before the next flight. That includes checking every inch of external surface. The space system consequently has terrible turnover, not to mention capacity of delivery is a fraction of system weight. Only if it is something designed by NASA. It is possible to build craft that opperate in very demanding environments that don't require a standing army. The SR-71 and DC-X are the classic examples. You'll never make something that is as cheap to operate as a 737 but there is a three orders of magnitude difference between the cost of a flight and the cost of a launch. There should be some room for improvement. |
#5
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One more Shuttle disaster and Congress will put us out of
the manned space flight business permanently. But NASA will never give up the Shuttle cash cow it has been riding for almost half a century for a safer, better industry designed system. WDA end "David Pugh" -cay wrote in message ... "Emilio" wrote in message ... Study was done in the past concerning space flight cost. The conclusion was that space flight cost will never come down close to jet flight cost. Typical airliner flight consists of flying to point A to B, refuel, pilot gets out and kick the tire, and fly back to point A. Typical space flight is totally different. Space craft leave for orbit, come back, technicians must go over and certify all systems for flight worthiness before the next flight. That includes checking every inch of external surface. The space system consequently has terrible turnover, not to mention capacity of delivery is a fraction of system weight. Only if it is something designed by NASA. It is possible to build craft that opperate in very demanding environments that don't require a standing army. The SR-71 and DC-X are the classic examples. You'll never make something that is as cheap to operate as a 737 but there is a three orders of magnitude difference between the cost of a flight and the cost of a launch. There should be some room for improvement. |
#6
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![]() "W. D. Allen Sr." wrote in message t... One more Shuttle disaster and Congress will put us out of the manned space flight business permanently. But NASA will never give up the Shuttle cash cow it has been riding for almost half a century for a safer, better industry designed system. Worse still, access to space is controlled by physicists that low balled engineering slots years ago. As they say in LA, "you can't get there from here". WDA end "David Pugh" -cay wrote in message ... "Emilio" wrote in message ... Study was done in the past concerning space flight cost. The conclusion was that space flight cost will never come down close to jet flight cost. Typical airliner flight consists of flying to point A to B, refuel, pilot gets out and kick the tire, and fly back to point A. Typical space flight is totally different. Space craft leave for orbit, come back, technicians must go over and certify all systems for flight worthiness before the next flight. That includes checking every inch of external surface. The space system consequently has terrible turnover, not to mention capacity of delivery is a fraction of system weight. Only if it is something designed by NASA. It is possible to build craft that opperate in very demanding environments that don't require a standing army. The SR-71 and DC-X are the classic examples. You'll never make something that is as cheap to operate as a 737 but there is a three orders of magnitude difference between the cost of a flight and the cost of a launch. There should be some room for improvement. |
#7
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![]() "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "W. D. Allen Sr." wrote in message t... One more Shuttle disaster and Congress will put us out of the manned space flight business permanently. But NASA will never give up the Shuttle cash cow it has been riding for almost half a century for a safer, better industry designed system. WDA end The shuttle was designed by the aerospace industry, North American Rockwell was the prime contractor. Rockwell Rocketdyne Division designed and developed the main engines. Rockwell Space Transportation Systems selected to designed and developed the orbiter. Martin Marietta got the external tank contract and Morton Thiikol got the contract for solid rocket boosters. Jesus, I sometimes wonder how Willshaw remembers to breath. |
#8
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![]() I find this stuff very interesting. I'm curious to see if (within the next 30 years) space travel actually becomes a consumer industry rather than a government only industry. With backstreet boys being launched into space, towers into the atmosphere, corporations competing on new shuttle designs, etc...who knows what this will all bring. On 2 Jul 2003 03:59:44 -0700, (robert arndt) wrote: http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/01/sc...partner=GOOGLE Rob |
#9
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![]() "Bradford Liedel" wrote in message ... I find this stuff very interesting. I'm curious to see if (within the next 30 years) space travel actually becomes a consumer industry rather than a government only industry. With backstreet boys being launched into space, towers into the atmosphere, corporations competing on new shuttle designs, etc...who knows what this will all bring. The nearest thing to an initiative for this is the X-prize competiton http://www.xprize.org/ One of the teams involved, the UK based starchaser group claims to be building a reusable space vessel for suborbital launch next year http://www.starchaser.co.uk/ Another is using an aircraft based approach http://www.bristolspaceplanes.com/ Keith |
#10
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Right! And my fellow Rockwell employees did a great job for
their time - remember slide rules and T squares? But why continue with a forty year old vehicles that are now falling out of the sky and killing people, especially with NASA insisting on flying with ice cycles hanging off the shuttle, leaking booster gas seals, and fuel tanks shedding insulation? We could certainly do it much cheaper, safer, and better today, right? WDA end "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "W. D. Allen Sr." wrote in message t... One more Shuttle disaster and Congress will put us out of the manned space flight business permanently. But NASA will never give up the Shuttle cash cow it has been riding for almost half a century for a safer, better industry designed system. WDA end The shuttle was designed by the aerospace industry, North American Rockwell was the prime contractor. Rockwell Rocketdyne Division designed and developed the main engines. Rockwell Space Transportation Systems selected to designed and developed the orbiter. Martin Marietta got the external tank contract and Morton Thiikol got the contract for solid rocket boosters. Keith |
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