Yminale--What you bring up is exactly why I mentioned contracting out to the private sector as a step that should've been taken sooner rather than insisting on trying to keep it a government-only enterprise.
Sooner than that if his people can get the launch abort system working by the end of the year... that's pretty much the only missing piece that Dragon needs to carry crews.SpaceX, if you believe Elon Musk can get the Dragon ready for manned missions in 3 years.
I don't believe Elon Musk can get the Dragon ready for manned missions in 3 years. I believe he can get it ready in 2 years.
Or steal it if we leave it abandoned for too long.Of course there is the Chinese who have an open invitation to join the ISS.
Or steal it if we leave it abandoned for too long.Of course there is the Chinese who have an open invitation to join the ISS.![]()
Sooner than that if his people can get the launch abort system working by the end of the year...I don't believe Elon Musk can get the Dragon ready for manned missions in 3 years. I believe he can get it ready in 2 years.
Sooner than that if his people can get the launch abort system working by the end of the year...I don't believe Elon Musk can get the Dragon ready for manned missions in 3 years. I believe he can get it ready in 2 years.
The launch abort system according to reports is ahead of schedule. The issue is Falcon Heavy which needs to be man rated. That's going to take a minimum of 3 perfect launches with a working Dragon capsule. With current funding it's going to take Space X a minimum of 3 years.
Not NASA.Dragon would be the most reliable man-rated craft NASA has ever flown.
And what do you call this? A good thing?
A necessarily thing. We are on a team playing for Humanity.
Team players usually contribute and don't sit on the sidelines while someone else does all the work and BOTCHES IT UP ROYALLY!
It would be, if and when NASA buys crewed flights on it.Not NASA.Dragon would be the most reliable man-rated craft NASA has ever flown.
Dragon doesn't need to launch in a Falcon Heavy, just the Falcon 9 can get it into orbit.
From what I read the manned capsule requires the Falcon Heavy. The Falcon 9 is only rated for the resupply vehicle. Do you have a link stating otherwise.
Elon Musk, founder and CEO of Space Exploration Technologies Corp., said his company's Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon space capsule were designed to meet NASA's published human-rating standards.
From what I read the manned capsule requires the Falcon Heavy. The Falcon 9 is only rated for the resupply vehicle. Do you have a link stating otherwise.
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n1001/19safety/
Elon Musk, founder and CEO of Space Exploration Technologies Corp., said his company's Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon space capsule were designed to meet NASA's published human-rating standards.
From what I read the manned capsule requires the Falcon Heavy. The Falcon 9 is only rated for the resupply vehicle. Do you have a link stating otherwise.
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n1001/19safety/
Elon Musk, founder and CEO of Space Exploration Technologies Corp., said his company's Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon space capsule were designed to meet NASA's published human-rating standards.
That's not a confirmation that the Dragon can or will carry passengers in it's current form. There is no published data on the manned configuration designed for the Falcon 9. (I assume it's going to be 3 people in the pressurized bay). The current contract is only for 12 resupply missions.
http://www.spacex.com/dragon.phpTo ensure a rapid transition from cargo to crew capability, the cargo and crew configurations of Dragon are almost identical, with the exception of the crew escape system, the life support system and onboard controls that allow the crew to take over control from the flight computer when needed. This focus on commonality minimizes the design effort and simplifies the human rating process, allowing systems critical to Dragon crew safety and ISS safety to be fully tested on uncrewed demonstration flights.
You guys are seriously underestimating the capabilities of both Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy.
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