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SpaceX appreciation thread

The lift capability of Falcon Heavy is unnecessary for a manned Dragon. The already tested Falcon 9 is sufficient to get crews to the ISS.

Columbia had made multiple flights (4 if I recall correctly) before an astronaut rode a shuttle to orbit without an ejection seat. At that time the American program had never had to use a launch escape system or ejection seat in a manned launch attempt, trough the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs (including post moon landing Skylab and Apollo/Soyuz docking). I doubt the Soviets had admitted to their incident using a launch escape system by that time.

Not that the American programs were without drama:

One Mercury flight experienced a premature hatch opening, leading to it sinking in the ocean. Long past the time when the escape tower had been discarded.

One Gemini flight experienced a runaway attitude control thruster in orbit where the ejection seats would have been unusable.

The crew of Apollo 1 died in a launch pad fire. Escape system would have been unusable with the access arm against the spacecraft and fire was inside the command module anyway.

Apollo 11 LEM had an overloaded computer during landing (shutting down a radar unit had been left off the checklist) when the assent module could have served as an "escape system". But a subsequent broken vital circuit breaker knob added to the suspense of leaving the moon (they closed the broken breaker by poking it with a pen!).

Apollo 12 struck by lightning shortly after launch. Systems reset and guidance system recovers before an abort was necessary.

The Apollo 13 oxygen tank explosion on the way to the moon. Long after the escape tower had been discarded.
 
In principle I would agree simply based on the fact that we've accrued so much more knowledge in the last 40 years about the dangers and pitfalls in manned launch vehicle design. I just meant that I don't think we should expect to see real flights with real astronauts on SpaceX hardware until they've been extensively tested and reached NASA's standard of safety, which is extreme, and is probably not going to result in manned flights aboard SpaceX hardware within the next... 3 years. Let's assume the Falcon Heavy has a magnanimously successful maiden voyage later this year (it's later this year isn't it?). That would be excellent, but the pace would have to be picked up considerable for it to be considered likely that astronauts will ride on one to orbit by the end of 2013.

As has been said, Dragon is launching on F9, not FH. Which before the first manned dragon flight will have launched around 9 to 10 times, so a track record will have been established. F9 from the get go has been built to man rating requirements per NASA's own guidelines. Which actually aren't all that "extreme", though still a bit of a moving target. Virtually the only reason SpaceX won't launch manned Dragons now is lack of an LAS, of which they just got money from NASA (in addition to their own funding) to speed up development.
 
Does the company accept donations? because in the future if I see considerable advancements I would happly set some monthly money aside for them.
 
hich before the first manned dragon flight will have launched around 9 to 10 times
prolly more than that if more non dragon related launches are made and scheduled

Does the company accept donations? because in the future if I see considerable advancements I would happly set some monthly money aside for them.

u should prolly save that since your in college, you never know when an ugly expense might come up
 
In principle I would agree simply based on the fact that we've accrued so much more knowledge in the last 40 years about the dangers and pitfalls in manned launch vehicle design. I just meant that I don't think we should expect to see real flights with real astronauts on SpaceX hardware until they've been extensively tested and reached NASA's standard of safety, which is extreme, and is probably not going to result in manned flights aboard SpaceX hardware within the next... 3 years. Let's assume the Falcon Heavy has a magnanimously successful maiden voyage later this year (it's later this year isn't it?). That would be excellent, but the pace would have to be picked up considerable for it to be considered likely that astronauts will ride on one to orbit by the end of 2013.

As has been said, Dragon is launching on F9, not FH. Which before the first manned dragon flight will have launched around 9 to 10 times, so a track record will have been established. F9 from the get go has been built to man rating requirements per NASA's own guidelines. Which actually aren't all that "extreme", though still a bit of a moving target. Virtually the only reason SpaceX won't launch manned Dragons now is lack of an LAS, of which they just got money from NASA (in addition to their own funding) to speed up development.

How is it a moving target? They don't change.
 
It's all sour grapes..

Dragon/Falcon 9 most likely will be the defacto replacement for the Shuttle. A fully capable man rated spacecraft with a full launch abort capability hasn't been used by NASA since 1975...and NASA has 7 losses on the books to prove it...

The Shuttle should have been retired DECADES ago...replaced by a HLLV and a smaller manned spaceplane...(As Werner Von Braun envisioned in the 50s)

But, I'll accept a ballistic spacecraft over the overbloated shuttle program...
 
How is it a moving target? They don't change.

Actually, yeah, they do, insomuch as NASA doesn't currently have an official set of man rating guidelines for commercial companies. So the companies basically have to use disparate NASA documents referring to past and current launchers considered "man rated". NASA is working on publishing a set of ratings.
 
I guess one thing NASA is really not taking too kindly is his dollar figure claims of what he can do certain mission objectives with since it's making them look like the less cost effective option.
NASA is the less cost effective option. It's pretty much always been that way, it's just that nobody noticed because the only other option was the Russians.

I think I know what you're trying to say - which is that private industry has the potential to be more cost effective - but what you really said was that an alternative that doesn't yet exist (to NASA) is more cost effective. A private space industry doesn't exist yet, not one that actually flies cargo and personnel, therefore it isn't a more cost effective option to NASA.
That's not what I said, or am trying to say.

I said NASA has always been the less cost effective provider to space flight for the entirety of its existence. The Soviet space program was considerably cheaper, and its Russian successor is as well. Air Force boosters not used by NASA are also much more cost effective in deploying satellites and always have been. EAS's rockets--Ariane 5 et al--are also considerably cheaper than NASA's programs.

The only reason nobody noticed NASA's chronic cost overruns and inefficiency is because the only other show in town was the Russians and Americans have been conditioned to view the Russians with contempt since the start of the cold war. Europe provided the first non-Russian program, which was in many ways competitive with NASA, and the Air Force responded with the EELV program which put that to rest. Also, fortunately, ESA never really got into manned spaceflight and NASA's monopoly went unchallenged.

But then SpaceX put Dragon into orbit, and suddenly we're having this question of whether or not it REALLY takes ten billion dollars to develop and fly a manned spacecraft. It always costs that much--if not more so--for NASA, for a variety of reasons. It rarely costs the Russians that much, but we're not about to start caring about how the Russians do anything, so the wakeup call has come for the first time from the private sector.

There is that old joke that NASA spent tens of millions of dollars developing a pen that could write in zero gravity, in the vacuum of space, in extreme heat or extreme cold and was impervious to cosmic radiation; the Russians used pencils.

You still missed my point though, which is that since SpaceX is privately held, he doesn't have to show anybody shit, from bills to income records to research costs, so he could be dipping into his personal wealth to supplement operational costs
Which is irrelevant, because WHAT THEY CHARGE CUSTOMERS is still consdierably lower than what NASA charges. The only real question is that of sustainability, and even NASA isn't immune to those concerns.

Also keep in mind that the proof is in the pudding - we haven't actually seen SpaceX deliver on any of its magnanimously ambitious promises yet.
They delivered the Dragon easily enough, and the Falcon 9 is operational. Based on their track record starting with Falcon-1, they're not promises as much as they are plans. Plans tend to change as conditions change and new lessons are learned (hence SpaceX skipping the Falcon-5 altogether and going straight to the -9) but I've seen nothing that makes me doubt their ability to follow through.

This platform is promising but, you have to remember what a conservative industry this is. I mean space exploration gets less money than education for cryin out loud, they're like the Marine Corps when it comes to frugality, they're careful and painstaking and annoyingly over cautious.
You need to distinguish between the industry and NASA, these are two completely different things.

NASA has a humongous government bureaucracy hanging over its head like a sword of democles waiting to cut their throats the moment anything goes wrong. They know that the only thing keeping manned spaceflight alive is the enlightened self-interest of a handful of senators who benefit from having NASA projects in their home districts. Piss off the political establishment, and NASA will have all of its programs utterly canceled EXCEPT those that serve some political expedience; they will get nothing done, and their budget will wound up getting spent anyway.

SpaceX is a provider of launch services, they have no political needling to deal with except that which they bring on themselves by seeking funding/contracts from NASA. Obviously, NASA can set their safety requirements for cargo and astronauts, but these will neccesarily be operationally instead of politically based.

To use your Marine Corps comparison: the Marines are alot more effective when you let them decide how to fight their battles instead of having Congress mandate it for them. NASA doesn't have a choice, but SpaceX is independent and don't have to obey any mandates other than what is absolutely necessary for the mission.

You have no idea, everything's triple-redundant and factors of safety are 3-4x flight ratings. It's absurd and insane, and it means development of a new vehicle is going to be slow, and grueling, and we're not gonna toss astronauts into orbit in 2013 after 3 or 4 launches of the Falcon/Dragon. Not in a million years would NASA sign off on that.
First of all, they're talking about a 2014 launch date for the crewed dragon after not less than 12 cargo flights to the ISS.

Second of all NASA would--and has--signed off on that sort of thing before. The Mercury and Gemini capsules flew their first test flights manned, and the space shuttle's maiden flight took a two-man crew into orbit. If anything they're being OVERLY cautious because SpaceX is a relatively new company and they want them to build up more experience before they trust them with crew transport; 12 cargo flights is more than enough.

OTOH, NASA seems confident enough that they gave them 75 million dollars to develop the abort thrusters and crew furnishings for the Dragon's crewed configuration. Since the cargo and crew versions are virtually identical EXCEPT for those two additions, it's clear that NASA thinks they'll be able to deliver sooner rather than later.
 
The Mercury and Gemini capsules flew their first test flights manned

No they didn't...

Famously, Chimps were the first astronauts...but even then they weren't on the first flights... these were flown on "Little Joe" rockets to test systems such as the launch escape system and heat shields..
http://astronautix.com/project/mercury.htm

http://astronautix.com/lvs/litoe14p.htm


The "Gusmobile" Gemini was also flown unmanned before manned flights were attempted...
http://astronautix.com/lvs/titiiglv.htm

Apollo also was flown unmanned first...

The Shuttle was the first American spacecraft to be launched manned on it's first attempt...
 
Mercury is a special case since they were testing the booster and escape system at the same time as the capsule (several of which exploded on the pad).

Gemini flew two flight tests, one of which was a sub-orbital test for the heat shield and the other was a structural/systems qualification for the prototype. If we're including sub-operational tests in the roster, then technically the shuttle doesn't count either with the drop-test of the Enterprise.

Either way, all other factors considered, SpaceX has already reached "Gemini class" in terms of testing, with a booster integration and a fully recovered space craft. They have two (possibly one) more demonstration flights to the ISS before they'll be rated to carry cargo, and after twelve (or less) of those cargo flights the Dragon will be fully rated to carry crews. By that time, if it accomplishes all that it will have become one of the most reliable spacecraft ever built; the manned configuration could make its maiden flight with a full crew and no one would question it.
 
If we're including sub-operational tests in the roster, then technically the shuttle doesn't count either with the drop-test of the Enterprise.

Either way, all other factors considered, SpaceX has already reached "Gemini class" in terms of testing, with a booster integration and a fully recovered space craft. .

Actually all the Enterprise drop tests were flown manned..

http://astronautix.com/craft/entprise.htm

In the five free flights the astronaut crew separated the spacecraft from the 747 and maneuvered to a landing at Edwards Air Force Base. In the first four such flights the landing was on a dry lake bed; in the fifth, the landing was on Edwards' main concrete runway under conditions simulating a return from space. The last two free flights were made without the tail cone, the spacecraft's configuration during an actual landing from Earth orbit. These flights verified the orbiter's pilot-guided approach and landing capability; demonstrated the orbiter's subsonic terminal area energy management autoland approach capability; and verified the orbiter's subsonic airworthiness, integrated system operation and selected subsystems in preparation for the first manned orbital flight. The flights demonstrated the orbiter's ability to approach and land safely with a minimum gross weight and using several center-of-gravity configurations.

Now I do agree that SpaceX is FAR closer to an actual man-rated spacecraft than any of it's direct competition and is the likely winner in that sweepstakes...

Just amazing how durable the old Apollo spacecraft areodynamic design actually is eh?...
 
^Technically, SpaceX isn't using the "old Apollo design" beyond the fact that they both can be described as capsules.
 
^Technically, SpaceX isn't using the "old Apollo design" beyond the fact that they both can be described as capsules.

I think that's what he means - just a capsule sitting on top of a (presently) disposable rocket, rather than some sort of winged spaceplane/SSTO attempt.. I say presently because I think they eventually want them to be reusable - SpaceX specifically I mean, I know it's advantageous for the industry in general.
 
Well, dragon is reusable, though NASA has requested new capsules be used for it's missions. F9 is planned to be re-used, though right now they are concentrating on just making sure they are usable.
 
just a capsule sitting on top of a (presently) disposable rocket

Did I say presently disposable capsule? You emphasized Dragon is reusable as if I suggested it was presently disposable - I didn't - I said "capsule sitting on top of a presently disposable rocket" - because Falcon 9, IS NOT reusable yet. I didn't say anything about Dragon because I know Dragon is reusable. They want the rocket engines reusable as well, and they're not presently.
 
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