Okay, commercial break's over, back to Skipjack vs. Threadjack...
Actually, I'll probably be getting fairly busy in the next several days, so I'll try to put the brakes on after this... feel free to reply, but I may or may not get to it in a timely fashion...
I may also try to condense this post a bit; it's really long and actually kinda repetitive...
Skipjack wrote:NASA is indirectly and directly responsible for this mess.
1. They fail to build RLVs due to politics and polticialy motivated decisions.
2. To cover their shameful failures, they use the lame excuse of "RLV is impossible with current technology". Everyone believes it (since NASA says it after all) and that is the end of any seriously funded development on that matter.
2. They offer heavily subsidized launches on the shuttle and refuse to buy from 3rd parties (until now that the shuttle is retired).
This caused a climate of stagnation in Space launcher development.
I contest your interpretation.
As far as I know, NASA hasn't said RLVs are is impossible. The fact is, lots of private concerns have tried to develop a cheap RLV and failed. Some of them managed to blow a fair amount of cash before their schemes collapsed, but most of them just talked a good game and then disappeared. NASA isn't alone here. It's just that cheap RLVs aren't all that easy to develop, and neither the U.S. government nor private investors have the necessary patience to actually fund one to completion. We
barely got Shuttle, and that was in the afterglow of Apollo...
Skylon is an interesting concept, but not the only concept for an SSTO- RLV. In fact some might argue that there are simpler ways to achieve a simillar goal (e.g. VTOL concepts).
Still, it is true that any RLV will have comparably smaller payloads. To me this only means that you will need more flights, orbital debots and assembly, etc Thats all.
Or, you build different launchers for different purposes.
After all, you dont use a delivery truck to go to work every day, do you?
Either way, RLVs can do the job, or at least part of the job just fine.
Where did I say Skylon was the only concept available? Where did I say there was no place for an RLV in an exploration architecture? Stop misrepresenting me.
A couple points:
VTOL SSTO concepts almost have to be all-rocket. This kills the performance because the mass fraction has to be insane. The only known chemically-fueled airbreathing engine concept that changes this picture significantly (in a good way, that is) is SABRE. Skylon D1 puts up 50% more payload than DC-1 was projected to, at roughly half the GLOW - and it's
way more robust to unexpected mass growth.
Assembling pieces in orbit is a major pain and should be avoided whenever possible. Remember, spacecraft costs dwarf launch costs even on today's rockets, so the less complex the spacecraft, the cheaper the mission. Monolithic ground-assembled hardware also reduces mission risk in a variety of ways.
Absent a huge technological leap like Polywell or M-E drives, I don't see anything coming that could do the exploration job significantly better than Jupiter.
I dont agree. I do see the benefit of Polywell and M-E drives and that is one reason why I am on this board. I do however think that RLVs are possible without this technology.
I do too.
However, I don't think they constitute a replacement for a heavy lifter. Exploration spacecraft cost more than their launchers, by a sizeable factor. Breaking them up into little bits so you can spend 3% instead of 30% of their cost launching them, in the process inflating their cost and increasing mission risk substantially, is not the way to do exploration.
Now, a Sea Dragon style vehicle might be a good idea, if it could be made reliable enough, and if there was something to do with it that would justify the development cost. But right now there isn't, and if we don't start getting out of LEO and doing stuff, there never will be.
Read up on the X33 please. NASA scrapped it after massive cost overruns. The cost+ contract system employd by NASA is unsuitable for this kind of development nowadays. It worked during Apollo days, but not now. NASA needs to employ fixed cost contracts and competitions with milestones.
Also read up on the DC-X to see how political decisions got a good project cancelled after a minor setback. The DC-X was cheap compared to what the paper rocket Constellation has cost so far.
I know all about VentureStar and the DC-1, thank you very much.
Yes, NASA needs fixing. They've been operating under extreme political and budgetary pressure since before the first Apollo moon landing, trying to accomplish great things (getting jerked around by the ever-fickle U.S. government as regards
which great things precisely) with barely enough money to get by. The state of NASA now is a result of complex interplay of a number of factors; you can't just blame NASA.
Oh yes, and cost plus contracts encourage waste and should be done away with as soon as possible. Projects get huge numbers of engineers assigned to them just to drive up costs, and it actually slows down development because there's more coordination and dragging around dead weight going on than actual work...
Now they've finally got an idea they can execute quickly and cleanly without a huge plus-up, and you want to pull the plug?
I doubt that they will select DIRECT.
That's less than irrelevant to the question of whether they
should or not. As far as I can tell, you're arguing that they shouldn't.
It is technologically not a big step foreward from Apollo and IMHO a step backwards from the Shuttle. I am speaking technologically.
Also the development cost is way to high for what is achieved with this. Ares would still be very expensive too.
The fact is that chemical rocket technology is mature; it hasn't advanced all that much since Apollo, and it won't get substantially better than it is now no matter how long you wait. So what if the Orion's MPS is the same engine as Apollo's MPS (and the Shuttle's OMS too)? It's a good engine. Internally, Orion and Apollo are very dissimilar; Orion looks sort of like Apollo but inside it's a very advanced, modern spacecraft. I'm not sure what you could possibly be complaining about, except the shape. Altair even more so - the Apollo LEM wasn't even in the same league as Altair or any concept that could end up replacing it.
Sure, Shuttle can do things Orion can't. Well, Orion can do things Shuttle can't. It's designed for a different mission.
You're not being consistent. You acknowledge the problem of lost know-how. You say "walk before we run". Yet you complain that the Constellation spacecraft aren't a vast enough technological leap over what we used last time we did something we're trying to relearn how to do in the first place?
Jupiter would cost less than $4000 per kg to orbit. That's better than the projected numbers for the Falcon 9, and it's based on very well known quantities (STS costs).
If you need that many heavy payloads, which is rarely needed other than for "exploration".
If we're not going to do exploration, there's not much point developing Jupiter, now is there?
Six flights per year should get you below $5000/kg. That's two lunar missions and a couple of standalone J-130 flights. Surely we have funding for
that. DIRECT seems to think they can double that mission rate without busting the budget, maybe fit in a NEO mission now and then...
Please also forgive my skepticism towards the price predictions for DIRECT. I doubt it will be as cheap in the end. Also factor in the initial development cost.
That cost already includes amortized development cost. And it's got substantial margin built in (more than 30% IIRC). Apparently the Aerospace Corporation basically confirmed the DIRECT team's cost estimates when they analyzed it. Also, the costs for DIRECT are better founded than the costs for the Falcon 9; STS is a very well characterized system, and LC-39 is a known quantity in terms of operations, but Falcon 9 hasn't flown even once yet.
I cheer for SpaceX too. But we're having an argument here, and I can't afford to pull too many punches...
But they dont need NASA to pay them for exploration missions in order to have a profitable launcher. The most expensive part of making their Dragon capsule manned is the escape system. The cost for this is some 300 million USD. That is all they want NASA to pay for (other than the launches themselves). A ridiculously small price compared to anything NASA could come up with.
SpaceX has absorbed a lot more cash from the U.S. government than that... if you want a heavy lifter out of them, prepare to shell out many billions and wait a long time.
Or just wait a long time - something like that seems to be in their plans anyway. I'd rather get going with what we have now, and if SpaceX can someday get a lander down near NASA's Shackleton Crater base and have an astronaut step out and shake hands with the base commander, great. It's more likely to happen if they can make a lot of R&D capital launching liquid oxygen to LEO in support of NASA's effort.
Remember, NASA doesn't have to make a profit doing this. I think it's still worth doing.
So how is buying launch services from SpaceX fundamentally different from buying them from Boeing, Lockheed Martin, ATK, USA and the rest? The company profits from the money the government is paying them. That goes into salaries and bonuses and whatnot, and is eventually rolled back into the economy.
SpaceX is cheaper.
Not much, even assuming the exploration vehicles won't get any more expensive if they have to launch dry on a few Falcon 9 Heavies and hook together/tank up on orbit... I wouldn't really object to that too strongly if it could be pulled off; anything is better than nothing...
Space industry veterans tend to feel that SpaceX hasn't really felt the bite of all the overhead that goes with operating a major launch business yet, and that once they do, their costs will go up, not down. I'm a little more hopeful, even though in the past their cost estimates have most certainly gone nowhere but up - they have, after all, already launched a small commercial payload on a light LV, so hopefully they have something of a handle on it...
But they're also not as safe a bet.
If DIRECT is selected, NASA and its OldSpace contractors
will be able to make Jupiter fly, safely and routinely - and soon. SpaceX hasn't demonstrated anything yet as regards a launch vehicle the size of Falcon 9, never mind anything bigger, with the possible exception of the increasingly obvious fact that they can't hold to a schedule any better than NASA can.
I can't emphasize this enough: Jupiter is a short, easy step from what we have now, and can be flying soon enough to preserve NASA's workforce and infrastructure and take advantage of all the knowledge it has accumulated flying Shuttle for 30 years. Never mind that it's also a unique capability worldwide, both in terms of mass and volume to orbit, scalable and versatile in a way neither Ares rocket can ever be. It's low-hanging fruit, but if we don't grab it soon it will be too late.
SpaceX, on the other hand, is a gamble even for ISS support. Depending on them for exploration missions is insane.
If the answer to the first question is "stay in a holding pattern in LEO until we figure out how to make it cheap", then NASA might be better off getting out of the launcher business altogether.
Exactly what I am saying.
Otherwise anything we do is going to be temporary like Apollo. Nothing that has a lasting effect.
Even the ISS already has an expiration date, due to the expense of getting supplies into orbit. That is what I call a waste of money!
As I said, exploration spacecraft cost a lot more than their launchers. Cheaper launchers can help (otherwise there'd be no point to choosing Jupiter over Ares), but ultimately what we have is good enough to start exploring with. Even if the launchers were free, the spacecraft for a lunar mission would cost almost eight hundred million dollars, not counting amortized development costs (and assuming the Orion CM isn't reused, but the bulk of the cost is the Altair anyway). Ares V rivals that in cost per launch, but nothing else does. Launch cost is not the dominant factor in the expense of exploration beyond LEO.
Yes, if we go with the Program of Record (Ares), it will founder under the weight of its own high cost. Jupiter is as affordable and sustainable as anything we're likely to actually get in its lift class without a huge breakthrough, and the use of propellant depots in Phase III encourages private development of low-cost LEO launch capability, also driving down the costs of existing launchers by increasing their flight rate.
A note: Jupiter's potential volumetric payload capacity (which is just as important as mass for many applications) is vast - much better than either Ares V or Not-Shuttle-C, and in a different world from Falcon. This could be useful for lots of things, including many that you simply cannot do at all by connecting pieces launched on smaller RLVs.
If we
don't start exploring, where is the market for cheap RLVs going to come from? There isn't enough business right now to support one. Even Skylon, which benefits massively from prior government-funded technological development, would need to capture basically the entire global launch market just to make back the initial investment, and if the flight rate didn't increase, it would only be moderately cheaper per kg than a Falcon 9.
The ISS is going to be extended to at least 2020. That's basically a given, unless Obama does something spectacularly dumb. At that point you're starting to push the expected operational lifetimes of the original Russian modules, which form part of the station core and
cannot be swapped out or replaced.
...
You know, sometimes I think NASA's HSF side should be put through a trial by fire, just wipe all the nonsense and legacy hardware away and start over. Then I realize that this is probably impossible both politically and in human terms, and at best would probably end up repeating the post-Saturn gap mistake. It's better to muddle on with what we have and try to fix it along the way.
...holy epic rant, Batman... maybe I should take myself a bit less seriously...
jnaujok wrote:Consider, the actual change in energy of the Shuttle from ground to orbit is around 565 million newtons, yet the shuttle launch generates just shy of 5 Billion newtons to do that. Where does the other 4.5 billion newtons go? Mostly to heating air as the shuttle pushes it out of the way. In fact, half that energy is needed and gone in the first 90 seconds, just to get a lousy 10% of the way to orbit. What happens in that first 10%? Answer: We have to plow our way through 95% of the atmosphere.
Moon = no atmosphere, means a 80%+ savings in energy expended to reach orbit.
I'm sorry, but this is absolute nonsense.
In the first place, why are you using newtons as a unit of energy?
Low Earth orbit is about 7900 m/s. Launching from the equator, it's closer to 7500 m/s relative to the launch site because of the bonus from the rotation of the Earth. An ordinary launch vehicle will need over 9000 m/s to get to low Earth orbit. That includes combined drag and gravity losses of about 1500-2000 m/s total. So if the Earth had no atmosphere, AND was perfectly smooth so you could "orbit" on an equatorial maglev track, you'd only need maybe 20% less delta-V to do it. That helps the mass ratio disproportionately (5.4 versus about 11 for hydrolox SSTO, including the extra bonus from being able to use extremely efficient low-thrust engines at full vacuum efficiency), but the payload capacity is not a factor of eight better - more like a factor of two or three.
Doing away with the atmosphere by itself, but keeping the free-flight and altitude requirements, you still need high thrust, and thus lower Isp, though you can still get away with vacuum nozzles right off the pad. With vacuum nozzles on top of no drag, I'd guess the mass ratio for a hydrolox SSTO would end up around 8.
Low lunar orbit is less than 1900 m/s total, including gravity losses. That's a mass ratio of about 1.5 for a hydrolox SSTO, or 1.9 for a hypergolic one. That's where the big advantage comes from - lower gravity.