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#21
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Jay Honeck wrote:
As for the shuttle? It was a great idea that, again, was so *******ized by the bureaucrats and politicians that it lost its purpose. It should have been replaced a decade ago. And the AF bailed on it a long time ago in favor of regular boosters. Back when I was working for Martin, they were gearing up for the second (Vandenburg) launch base and some classified missions, but that all got shelved. |
#22
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Andrew Gideon wrote:
Bob Noel wrote: There are a few other uses for a space station, not just a launch point (I assume you mean space stations in general, not just the ISS). We've a huge investment in satellites. Real on-site repair could be a time and money saver if done well. Do you have a clue where those satellites are in orbit compared to where the space station is or where the shuttle can get to? It's not like you can go up and grab a geosynch satellite and take it to the ISS for repair and then plop it back in the right orbit easier. |
#23
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![]() "Ron Natalie" wrote in message m... Jay Honeck wrote: As for the shuttle? It was a great idea that, again, was so *******ized by the bureaucrats and politicians that it lost its purpose. It should have been replaced a decade ago. And the AF bailed on it a long time ago in favor of regular boosters. Back when I was working for Martin, they were gearing up for the second (Vandenburg) launch base and some classified missions, but that all got shelved. Sure they did. Everyone knows there is a secret military shuttle. Don't you watch West Wing? ![]() |
#24
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("Gig 601XL Builder" wrote)
Sure they did. Everyone knows there is a secret military shuttle. Don't you watch West Wing? ![]() I liked it much better when the coke/meth? addict was getting his half finished scripts in late every month. g So, who tipped the press? CJ ....too easy. Margaret .....naw. The Prez ....maybe. Toby .........too easy ...but fire him anyway :-) National Security chick? ...not so much. The evil Situation Room guy ...this is my guess. The Republican candidate? ...We'll see. Montblack Same Bat Time. Same Bat Channel. |
#25
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![]() "Montblack" wrote in message ... ("Gig 601XL Builder" wrote) Sure they did. Everyone knows there is a secret military shuttle. Don't you watch West Wing? ![]() I liked it much better when the coke/meth? addict was getting his half finished scripts in late every month. g So did I. So, who tipped the press? CJ ....too easy. That's who I thought at first. But not now. Margaret .....naw. Maybe, but not on purpose The Prez ....maybe. No... The Vice Prez, maybe. He is an idiot. Toby .........too easy ...but fire him anyway :-) No then he'll go to the Santos campaign. Which would be funny with Josh as his boss. National Security chick? ...not so much. No... Too military. The evil Situation Room guy ...this is my guess. The DOD guy. No. The Republican candidate? ...We'll see. No, I don't think they'd queer the race like that. |
#26
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cjcampbell wrote:
It is pretty easy to say the Shuttle or the ISS or Hubble or anything else was a huge mistake; that the money would have been better spent elsewhere. Of course, then you would have people saying that where the money went instead was a huge mistake. If Mr. Park or Mr. Griffin think those were mistakes, it behooves them to say what would have been better. I'm not either of those, but I consider myself a behoover. The shuttle was a boondoggle. NASA couldn't afford to do squat after the money for Apollo was pulled, so they searched and searched for _something_ that _somebody_ would pay for. In steps the military. "We'll pay for it if you design it so that it fits our mission profile. We want something that can place a spy satellite (or other stuff to be named later) exactly where we want it and then go back and get it later." Bingo. We'll build this huge monstrosity that can carry really big payloads into low Earth orbit. Unfortunately, it can't really do much else than that. Can't truly be entirely reusable since it's so darn big that we need to bolt on this huge explosive tank of gas that's thrown away every time. What should they have done? Exactly what the real scientists wanted to do. Continue the X-15 project to get to the point of developing an actual reusable manned space plane. If you need to get people into space, don't strap them down with enormous payloads. That just adds to the complexities needed and makes for a dangerous vehicle. If you need to get payload into space to rendevous with the people, you use unmanned boosters. Next step? Once you've got that, you're well on you way to being able to build a truly working space station. One either in geo-synchronous orbit or at L5. Of course, by this time we might have found that just skipping the space station part and going straight for a permanent presence on the Moon would have been better. There are lot's of ideas for making a Moon base pay for itself. I think though that once we get there, the real benefit will be something we haven't thought of yet. The bad part about the current Moon/Mars boondoggle is... well... Mars. Ain't gonna happen. Mars is far away. Real far away. With tons of money and resources we could go there. Once. Why bother? If, after spending some time on the Moon, we find a good reason to go, then go! Heck, you could have spent all the money "fighting poverty" (or ignorance, or injustice, or whatever), and it probably would have been even less effective in accomplishing those goals. This sounds like, "Just throwing money at the schools isn't the answer". I keep wondering where all these shining schools with super paid teachers and 10 student class sizes with state of the art computers and clean fancy lab equipment are that are still failing to teach kids... -- Don Poitras |
#27
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Recently, Kyle Boatright posted:
"Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... On 2 Oct 2005 05:04:08 -0700, "Jay Honeck" wrote in . com:: The fact is, the ONLY long-term reason for a space station is for use as a launch point for interplanetary (or, eventually, interstellar) travel. Please provide the name of one other single human endeavor that has brought so many nations together for a CONSTRUCTIVE purpose. The International Spaced Station is a start on the "long term" goal of peaceful coexistence among the nations of our would, if not a meaningful scientific achievement. You could argue that this is the UN's function. Only tangentially. The UN is primarily a forum to address grievances in a peaceful manner, not to work collaboratively on a complex technological problem that could benefit the human race. Also, the countries which are participating in the ISS generally are not the bomb throwing loonies who are the real concern in today's world. True, its participants are the bomb-dropping loonies who *should* be the real concern in today's world, largely because we're creating the need for the existance of "bomb trowing loonies" (and in more than one instance arming them) in the first place. But, what does that have to do with the value of the ISS? In hindsight (always 20/20, right?), I'd say that the shuttle and the ISS were both boondoggles. The shuttle was built in order to transport stuff to a space station that didn't exist until 20 years after the shuttle's launch. The US joined the ISS effort because NASA needed a space station to validate the shuttle. Circular logic and justifications like these have cost US taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars. The shuttle was, and largely still is, a platform to test the viability of reusable space vehicles (the notion of this kind of vehicle seems to be as deeply imbedded in our psyche as flying cars). Giving it missions such as supplying the ISS is to provide further knowledge about working in space. We are still quite primitive in that area, as the most recent in-flight shuttle repairs show. There is still much to learn, and at this point, there is no other space vehicle on the planet capable of providing the same quality of "classroom" in which to obtain that education. The ISS was, and largely still is, a platform to perform low-gravity experiments and to address the effects of long-term space living on the human body. A manned mission to Mars (much less anything further) would be an impossibility without the information and systems resulting from these experiments. And, the notion of long-term space travel is also deeply embedded in our psyche, so the value of the ISS should be self-evident; do it or give up the idea of long-term manned space travel. Neil |
#28
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In article ,
Ron Garret wrote: All these things could be done for a lot less money without the/a space station. how? The materials and imaging work could all be done with unmanned spacecraft. Of course it could. But for a lot less money? The value of additional physiological work is questionable. [snip] I guess that depends on your vision. Do you really think we should stay on this earth? Do you really lack the vision to see humans in space? -- Bob Noel no one likes an educated mule |
#29
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In article ,
Bob Noel wrote: In article , Ron Garret wrote: All these things could be done for a lot less money without the/a space station. how? The materials and imaging work could all be done with unmanned spacecraft. Of course it could. But for a lot less money? The way to think of this is that very few scientific experiments or engineering tests are done anymore using human manipulations, human observations, or directly human-operated equipment -- EVEN ON EARTH. Essentially all experimental equipment these days in most any field you want to name is computer operated or controlled (the experimenters are at keyboards); the samples are loaded or otherwise manipulated by mechanical elements (i.e., robotic manipulators); measurements are taken by sensors or cameras (which are immensely more capable, accurate, and reliable than any human observer); and the data is captured, recorded. and transmitted electronically (which means it can be immensely detailed, permanent, and subject to repeated and ever more detailed examination by multiple experimenters simultaneously) -- EVEN IN TERRESTRIAL LABORATORIES. Given this, in essentially any field you can name there's no need, and it makes no sense, to incur the immense extra difficulties of putting live human experimenters into space with the experimental apparatus used there. It's just a dumb and wasteful thing to do. |
#30
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In article ,
AES wrote: The materials and imaging work could all be done with unmanned spacecraft. Of course it could. But for a lot less money? The way to think of this is that very few scientific experiments or engineering tests are done anymore using human manipulations, human observations, or directly human-operated equipment -- EVEN ON EARTH. That is certainly a way to look at it. It's wrong, but hey.... The reality is that experiments and tests are setup manually. Many are performed or conducted with computers or machines. But they still have to setup, debugged, etc etc. -- Bob Noel no one likes an educated mule |
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