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. o O ( "Quote that 'Blazing Saddles' scene at Mike, and the BAUTer gets it! " ) |
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ranugad, allow me to politely disagree on some points, -
I agree with you on caves and the exploration of America, but not on a lot of the rest. 1. Mileage - The price per mile travelled would probably go way down if we calculated it the way you wrote. However I think it's unfair to do that calculation because a mile is not a lot in space - If you calculate $/ hours of service, losses /hours of service, %age of losses of entire fleet, total downtime due to technical problems, %age of occupants killed in service etc., the picture looks very different. 2. Concern has been raised about the fact that NASA has never so far put any real effort in the development of a new crew vehicle. Consider: These babies were calculated for a total service time of 20 years. That is, the development of a new vehicle would have had to begin in earnest at least by 1990 anyway; since the Challenger catastrophy happened not that much earlier (1986), it would have been wise to do then what NASA is doing 19 years later now: Announce a phase-out, then try ro return to flight with whatever you can get out of the project, but try to cut your losses. Even before 1986, it should have become abundantly clear that the Shuttle was not a viable concept as it missed its projected launch rate by, what, 80%? And that was from the beginning through 1986, never mind later. 3. So why didn't they do just that - I am quite certain it was not because the Shuttle is such a bright concept, and so brightly executed - it isn't. I see a moral reason here, and a cynical one: The moral is, NASA is by no means the organisation that put Apollo on the Moon any more (that would be a camparision with Columbus I'd accept); it has become a bureaucratic, slow, somewhat complacent structure (I am talking about the structure, not individual people; cf the beautiful success of the Mars Rovers). Oh, we can keep the bird flying for a few more years, can't we? Ah, and congress is always slashing funds; ah and the media just love those Shuttle takeoffs, and we can't afford to sit on the ground renting flights from those Russkies, etc. The cynical answer is: If you are a contractor to supply hardware for a hugely expensive, damage-prone, ageing (and thus getting ever more damage-prone) spacecraft, and every time one of the geezers trys to lift, you make huge buck - would you WANT to have this cash-cow slaughtered instead of milked? Well, you guess. 4. I think what we have here is a ball of lead clamped to NASA's feet: Cranky, old spacecraft that are falling apart even if they manage to get into and out of orbit a few more times, and falling apart ever more badly. It is not the fact that the technology is 30years old (look what the Russians kann do with their humble Soyuz craft from the 60s - these do not, at least, kill people), the problem is that some of the actual stuctures inside the ships are: Hell, these fuel sensors simply have a right to break break down after that long!. NASA is sitting there with a Hugely overpriced, hugely and unnecessarily complicated spacecraft. No, I am not sure if I should wish for a return to flight. Maybe they just don't get the bird off the ground any more. Maybe they just keep on discovering new glitches that keep them forever fixing the thing instead of lifting off. Tough for the ISS, but the US wanted to relinquish that project (ahead of contract) anyway. If only this bird flew without people in it: It could just crash during liftoff or reentry and take with it a program that should have died in 1990 at the latest. Unfortunately, as there are seven human souls aboard, we have to wish them that they either never make it off the pad or somehow creak home afterwards. Of course Columbus was a daring man, and his security analysis was probably rather reckless. But he wouldn't have sailed with old, creaky ships and the suppliers telling him, "Yeah, we have found something to patch over the holes. All you have to is send a few of your crewman diving under the hull to place the patch". Would you have sailed?
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Non sunt multiplicanda entia praeter necessitatem. |
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The other ratings I gave are more realistic, I think.
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Non sunt multiplicanda entia praeter necessitatem. |
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I agree. The real problem with the Spaceshuttle is probably not how far it goes, or where it goes. It is more about what it does. IMO there is no vision behind the program, no clear well defined goal. (Like beating the Russians to the Moon or something like that...). I'm afraid the same thing goes for the Moon, Mars and Beyond program. I have never heard Bush explain WHY we have to go back to the Moon.
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"Why do they push commentary as news? Do they think us all so naive? "
I have found it weighted the other way. Shuttle launch coverage has been cheerleading and naive ramblings with interviews of former astronauts, etc. what are they going to say? I never hear a CNN reporter asking an astronomer begging for funding getting a realistic response from the scientific community 'What a waste of billions and billions of dollars. Over 15 billion has been spent on the Shuttle between tha last successful mission in 2002 and today. And still NO LAUNCH!" 15 billion and they can't fly because of a fuel sensor. What the 'beep' have they been doing since the Columbia disaster? The friggin fuel gauge on my lawn mower has worker fine for 17 years. The paleontology community in the USA has almost zilch funding..as do many other sciences. I know some of the very best scientists in their field who have left the sciences. 15 billion on the Shuttle since the last successful launch and ZERO results since. |
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NASA wanted something smaller, but to get money from the military budgets, the had to make a bigger cargo bay (I read that it was sized to their biggest spy sattelites the Air Force planned to launch) and a cross-range capability that it could return to the launch site after one orbit (some kind of quick deploy- or reconaissance-mission). For NASA's purposes, small wings like we see at the X-15 or even a lifting body would have been enough. But the cross-range requirement of the Air Force made the large, heavy delta wing necessary.
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"Flying in space is risky business, but just staying on this planet is risky business too." - John Young, astronaut |
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At night the stars put on a show for free (Carole King) One Earth, One Sky - IYA 2009 All moderation in purple |
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NASA is a civilian agency, not directly associated with the military.
However, at the time funding for the shuttle program was being negotiated, NASA couldn't get congress to authorize a civilian-only program; the only way they could get a development budget was to design the shuttle to handle military missions too. Remember, STS was going to be a "do-everything" system that provided low-cost access to space. No other launch systems were to be used at all. As the old saying goes, if you try to be all things to all people, you often end up being nothing to nobody. |
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I find the standonly things to do a better job, because there only made for the one think. I think if nasa ever drops the shuttle they shoud create a cheap way to launch heavy payloads and a safe way to launch astronouts.
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GCS/S d(+) s+:+ a--- C++(+++)>$ W+++>$ L>+ M+>++ w++ P+>++ tv@ PS b+ DI+ G e-> h! r-- !z+ ~Jorge Schrauwen |
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Regardless of who influenced the early design of the Shuttle it was NASA who promised the it could deliver on performance...not the Air Force. The promise of a flight a week has become no successful missions since October/2002. NASA chiefs never said 'we can't do that' when it was originally given the green light. If Shuttle expectations were unrealistic then the nabobs at NASA had an obligation to have spoken up. Instead they fudged budgets and then held out their hands for more.
What will be the credibility of any budget proposed for the next space craft? Instead of taking an estimate and adding 10% for overcosts...NASA will have to make an estimate and then multiply it by 10 times and then only guarantee a 10nth the expected performance. The USA was attacked at Pearl Harbor and developed the technology to mount the invasion of D-Day in a shorter time span than has gone by since the last successful Shuttle mission. |
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Normally, I am against commentary passing as news, but sometimes I let it pass when the commentary is truer than the propadanda that is released as news. I don't have the whole article so I am relying on your description of it, but it does not seem to be wildly antagonistic. Most news needs analysis in order to interest a reader. Even intelligent readers can not be up to date on all things. If it is a story regarding someone's comments then it may seem slanted because it is reporting on an opinion instead of a fact, even if that opinion is reliable and justified.
As for the Shuttle, I agree. Many missions were successful but the overall plan was not. It would appear that the only thing the pro-shuttle engineers were good at was exaggeration. But it's not entirely their fault, the political climate forced them to accept compromises. Perhaps they figured that some spaceflight was better than no spaceflight and that it would eventually get better. Maybe now it will. Perhaps the whole shuttle debacle will serve as an example of how not to go to space.
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"Oh no no no I'm a rocket man Rocket man burning out his fuse up here alone." -- Sir Elton John J Pax |
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I thought NASA has done work on the next generation of shuttles. I remember catching specials about NASA funded prototypes. Unfortunately funding problems usually caused the end of them.
But I'll agree, NASA really should work on a new design. |