Suborbital Rocketeers Ask FAA For Fair Rocketry Rules 257
HobbySpacer writes "John Carmack, Dennis Tito, Eric Anderson of Space Adventures, Brian Chase
of the National Space Society and other notables in the world of rocketry and space activism issued a call today for the FAA to cut the regulatory tangle that threatens to hold a nascent fleet of suborbital space vehicles firmly on the ground. The FAA needs to make it clear that these rocket vehicles fall under the jurisdiction of its own Office of Commercial Space Transportation (AST) and not let intra-agency bureaucratic squabbles over control and power stall the development of this promising new industry."
It's no wonder... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It's no wonder... (Score:2, Troll)
Re:It's no wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)
Why is it that the FAA can't create designated no-fly zones for general public research purposes? Seems like they could easily spare some airspace in several locations across the country-- just a couple square miles worth here and there.. That would be more than adequate for a good bit of lower end rocketry research and testing. Just make sure any test craft are equipped with self-destruct mechanisms in case they go off course and endanger commercial aircraft.
Re:It's no wonder... (Score:5, Insightful)
You are suggesting that in the current climate, the US Gov. will encourage people to build rockets with warheads and fire them in the US?
Yeah. Right.
Re:It's no wonder... (Score:4, Insightful)
There's a difference between a gaggle of people out in the middle of Nowhere, South Dakota huddling up in shacks in the middle of the woods with their automatic weapons just in case the IRS comes and a gaggle of rocket geeks paving some land for a good rocket pad. I'm not sure how to tell the difference, aside from the fact that the idiots trying to secede from the union have the right to bear arms and the geeks with the rocket are insisting that their manned vehicle isn't an arm but they still have rights.
I'm interested in private space flight, but I think the legislative obstacles are severe on mainland US, whereas an abandoned oil rig in the middle of the south pacific or something would be ideal. Sure, getting there may be fun, but even if it goes haywire and doesn't explode, killing a sperm whale is different from levelling a town of 100.
Personally, I'd trust John Carmack (whom I've given probably $150 at this point, from Quake III, Quake I and Doom II) with the rocket more than the tax evading guys enforcing their own rights.
Re:It's no wonder... (Score:5, Informative)
-Mike
Re:It's no wonder... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It's no wonder... (Score:2)
I mean... what would happen if we removed the regulations surrounding, say... automobiles? Nobody needs a license to drive. No stop lights. No speed limits. Ok, that'd probably be a good thing in many cases, but still.
Re:It's no wonder... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the US way fo handling things: Fear.
They are simply affraid that someone, somwhere, MIGHT aquire a SAM missile capapble of reaching commercial airline cruising altitudes and that (communist/drug warlord/terrorist/muslim) MIGHT just blow a 747 full of innocent little children out of the sky.
Of course, the biggest ceiling of any commonly available (read: soviet runion) SAM system is 8000 meters. (roughly 24000 foot) Oh, and that is for a mounted system; I'm not sure if the US police would appreciate anyone driving around in a cold war missile-launcher. Shoulder-launcher SAM systems having an amazing range of 10k feet, for the most common SAM system for ground personell, the US Stinger.
Re:It's no wonder... (Score:2)
What a crazy thing to be afraid of! Someone needs to tell these people that there isn't a huge surplus of cold-war armaments on the world market! Right.
Uh, sorry, but this isn't just FUD or paranoia.
Feeding of Trolls (Score:3, Informative)
Unlikely. These "toys" go awry on occasion, for sure, but the existing regulations prevent launch arcs that fall over heavily populated areas already. Also, modern rockets are required (again, by existing regulations) to have a self-destruct mechanism on board, and there's only one documented case of said system failing in use.
> NASA got damn lucky where and when the shuttle came apart. What would'v
Wrong story. (Score:2, Funny)
Never forget the FAA's motto (Score:4, Funny)
The project is doomed. (Score:3, Funny)
Once they get done forming the committe to form the committe to investiage the possiblity of feasiblity the Chinese will all ready have colinized Mars.
Re:The project is doomed. (Score:3, Funny)
I was wondering what my old mate Colin was up to these days.
Re:The project is doomed. (Score:2)
Re:The project is doomed. (Score:2)
(kidding)
Re:The project is doomed. (Score:3, Funny)
and yet, NASA will not trust the Chinese - so they'd send an unmanned drone after them!
-
Re:The project is doomed. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The project is doomed. (Score:2)
Once they get done forming the committe to form the committe to investiage the possiblity of feasiblity the Chinese will all ready have colinized Mars.
They'll still be having the meeting to plan the pre-pre planning meeting to plan the pre-planning pre-planning meeting to form the committee to form the committee to investigate the possibility of feasibility of having a pre-pre planning meeting to...
Re:The project is doomed. (Score:2)
Pro is to Con as Progress is to ___________?
Re:The project is doomed. (Score:2)
Intra-agency or interagency? (Score:3, Informative)
I think the author meant interagency, in other words squabbles between different agencies, rather than intra-agency, which would refer to arguments where all participants were part of the Federal Aviation Administration.
Re:Intra-agency or interagency? (Score:3, Insightful)
Time to spin-off the FAA? (Score:5, Interesting)
Different parts of the Federal Aviation Administration regulate the 100-year old aviation industry and the emerging commercial space transportation industry. Unfortunately, the aviation guys want to regulate these new space entrepreneurs the same way they regulate huge corporations like United Airlines or Boeing. If the Wright Brothers had faced such a burden, they would never have gotten off the ground.
Wouldn't it make sense to spin off a portion of the FAA and make it (just an example) the Federal Space Administration? At least then you'd have a separate and wholly defined department to handle both public and government-level space flight regulation.
In it's current form, the Office of Commercial Space Transportation (AST) is stuck under the umbrella of the FAA. With the increasing popularity and usage of private/commerical space flight, the AST is continually limited in its scope from the head guys at the FAA. Spinning that department off into it's own regulatory agency frees it from the burden of having to look over their shoulders.
-Cyc
Re:Time to spin-off the FAA? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Time to spin-off the FAA? (Score:2)
Re:Time to spin-off the FAA? (Score:2)
keep in mind (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:keep in mind (Score:4, Insightful)
'a LOT' is kind of ambiguous. Do you mean 'a LOT' like the 150 people that day that die in auto accidents on American roads each day? Or do you mean the 1 or 2 people per day that die in airplane related accident (small and large planes)?
You are much more likely to be killed by an auto than you are to be killed by a commercial sub orbital rocket. So maybe we should regulate those cars more.
Perspective is everything.
Re:keep in mind (Score:3, Interesting)
Annoyingly, even after quoting this number, my wife still cringes at the idea of flying somewhere...
Re:keep in mind (Score:2)
Re:Turbulence != Fun (Score:2)
Where do you drive?
Public has benefitted from space (Score:3)
Competition leads to a lot of these benefits being passed on to customers. Also, even monopolies often have to pass on a lot of savings to their customers, depending on the shape of the demand curve and a monopolieis inability to charge different prices b
Re:keep in mind (Score:5, Interesting)
Conspicious by their absence (Score:4, Insightful)
There's a pretty good list of names there, but funnily enough, no mention of Lockheed, Boeing, NASA or the other Government funded big boys of the space industry. Surely they're not afraid that deregulation might allow a little competition?
And another thing, who on earth are the Objectivist Center and Reason Foundation??
Re:Conspicious by their absence (Score:2)
Re:Conspicious by their absence (Score:2)
I am surprised they joined in on this. Not because the project is in line with their ideas, but because they should (according to their beliefs) be promoting the removal of the state from regulatory functions such as th
Re:Conspicious by their absence (Score:3, Informative)
Followers of Ayn Rand (affectionately known in some circles as "Randroids"). You gotta read Atlas Shrugged, or at least The Fountainhead to get into Rand's philosophy known as Objectivism, which is not without its merits, but is predicated on an interesting mixture of shoddy logic (it loves tautologies) and vitriol toward fictional strawmen constructions of opponents (anyone who doesn't believe in absolutely unregulated
Re:Conspicious by their absence (Score:2)
The Objectivist Center [objectivistcenter.org]. Really should verify those links before typing 'em in...
Note that Burt Rutan is not a signatory. (Score:2)
I think I know why: the White Knight/SpaceShipOne combination will be flying in the same airspace around Edwards AFB that was used during the X-Plane research projects, an airspace that is closed off to the general public and has huge factor of safety margins in case something does go wrong. Why do you think NASA and the USAF were able to test the X-15 safely in the range, give
Reason Foundation does a lot of good policy work (Score:2)
In addition to publishing Reason magazine [reason.com], the Reason Foundation supports a lot of public policy studies through the Reason Public Policy Institute [rppi.org], which is basically a libertarian-leaning think-tank. It's not surprising they'd have a postltion on this issue; they have a position on every transportation-related issue one could imagine, and Poole is probably more politically savvy than most of the other signatories.
Here's
In other news (Score:5, Funny)
In other news, they're also searching for a suitable 'A' word so that the acronym doesn't look so stupid.
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Re:In other news (Score:2, Funny)
Re:In other news (Score:2)
The goal isn't to pacify or mollify, but to annoy and frustrate private spaceflight folks. I'm betting 50 gallons of peroxide on "Private Ionospheric Transport Agency"
liability concerns? (Score:3, Interesting)
consider: spaceflight is the transportation method w/ which humanity collectively has the least experience. if the US government licenses [x] business to ferry humans into space and some horrible mishap occurs, who's thinking that the families of the deceased* won't slap the mother of all class-action suits against, among others, the licensing body?
i mean, that kind of liability would have any bureaucrat shaking in his/her proverbial space boots, but added to that the incredibly high-profile nature of this type of work and the risk...
ed
*and survivors of course, although the likelihood of there being any is mighty small)
Re:liability concerns? (Score:5, Informative)
Two words: sovereign immunity. You can't sue the king except under certain limited circumstances where the king agrees to let you sue him.
Also, do you have any idea what a "class action" is? It's a lawsuit brought by members of a "class" that usually cannot be individually identified. In almost any case I can possibly imagine, any harm resulting from the destruction of a plane or of property on the ground would result in specifically identifiable and ascertainable victims. A mass tort would not be an appropriate remedy in such a situation.
In the event that there is a pollution release-type event that causes some minimal level of harm to a large number of people, a class action may be a realistic possibility.
In any case, I don't see why the government would be involved in any of this. Giving someone a license hardly subjects you to liability when a third party is harmed by the licensee. For instance, do you see victims in auto accident cases suing states when they are hit by careless drivers? Do you see victims suing state licensing authorities (successfully) when doctors commit malpractice?
If you're going to bitch about lawyers and some nebulous fear of lawsuits, at least understand what you are bitching about.
If there's one thing tech people do not understand, it is tort law.
GF.
Re:liability concerns? (Score:4, Funny)
Hah! They also don't seem to understand contract law, copyright and patent law, and the difference between microwaves and gamma radiation!
Re:liability concerns? (Score:3, Insightful)
And an great place for informed people to slap down the mistaken and uninformed with all due clarity and contempt.
"If there's one thing tech people do not understand, it is tort law."
Stereotypes are very useful for making yourself feel smarter than you are. But thanks for the nice explanation of sovereign immunity.
re: liability concerns? (Score:2, Insightful)
no private organization will want to invest significant money into an enterprise when there's no government regulation to ensure they aren't going to be pi$$ing their money away into a lawsuit-zone. your occasional eccentric tycoon, sure, but there's a limited number of those guys since they're generally busy being bond villains...
besides, when the wright brothers plane crashed, it injured the craft, pilot and very little else. w
Piss on the FAA! (Score:5, Insightful)
IIRC, it's easier to get into orbit from close to the equator. Does that apply to suborbital flight too?
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:3, Interesting)
--
Slashdot minimum post times. Celebrating slow readers and slow typists for years.
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:4, Informative)
Arianne operates out of some nowhere place in Central America because:
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:3, Informative)
Florida was chosen for the US space center because launch accidents will only drop debris in the ocean rather than on pop
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2, Informative)
Ummm....no, Arianne launches from FRENCH GUIANA (which is in south america) because they are a FRENCH COMPANY. French Guiana is essentially a colony France has held on to for the purpose of launching space vehicles. They used to have a nasty prison there too.
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:3, Informative)
Apparently the point was too subtle for the slashdot crowd. I'll make sure to write in crayola next time.
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2)
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2)
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:3, Informative)
Almost. There are two factors to consider:
From anywhere, launching due east is most efficient. This places the spacecraft in an orbit whose inclination is the same as the launch site's latitude.
The closer you are the equator, the more assistance you get from the Earth's rotation.
So for the vast majority of commercial launches
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2)
The FAA has threatened fines and possibly jail for anyone who violates that order. Whether that will hold up in court is a whole different story.
Seems to me that a private company incorporated in an equatorial third-world country would
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2)
ICBM? (Score:3, Interesting)
Because the US doesn't want it's citizens to fund, indirectly, some third world nation's ICBM program?
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2, Informative)
Equatorial launch from, say, Ecuador (high elevation which reduces weight and air resistance at launch. Rotation of the earth has to be a benefit, too, as compared to regions closer to the poles. Same deal with the shape of the earth (slight equatorial bulge).
While thes
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2)
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2)
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2)
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2)
(35786km(height of geo orbit) * 2) * 3.14
I stated that you must also use the diameter of the earth to properly figure the circumference:
(35786km(height of geo orbit) * 2 + 12756km) * 3.14
The figure 35786km is from the surface of the earth, but may actually be better stated as 39164km from it's Center. Not sure if that would change or not given the Earth was smaller, but the same mass.
Re:Piss on you. (Score:2)
Actually, in this I believe you are mistaken. In case you didn't realize, the first requirement for a geostationary satellite is that it's orbital velocity happens to match, exactly, the rotational velocity of the earth. Meaning the satellite orbits the earth once every 24 hours, and as a result, just happens to
Re:Piss on you. (Score:2)
Exactly correct. One of the things a GPS receiver does when first locking into the satellites is download detailed ephemeris info from each of them, so it knows where they are.
You can look at the sat display of almost any GPS unit and see them move.
Re:Piss on you. (Score:3)
Re:Piss on you. (Score:2)
First: Escape velocity only applies to an unpowerd projectile. If you have the power source you could putter into space at any speed greater than zero, although it would take a LOT of energy at slow speeds.
Second: You can have a satellite in geostationary orbit without it being around the equator. A good example would be the GPS satellites (not going to double check that, flame me if I'm wrong...).
Third: These launches for the X-
Re:Piss on the FAA! (Score:2, Informative)
Thus companies already have a great reason to relocate launch facilities further south. Making it difficult to obtain launch permission just adds another reason to ship more jobs out of the country.
Dear US government... (Score:3, Funny)
I also wonder if you could help fund my rocket programme like you have helped with my other projects in the past?
Regards
Osama b. Laden
Range Safety (Score:5, Insightful)
Range safety is an integral part of government and commercial launch vehicle operations in the United States. Range safety ensures that the launch vehicle, or its components, impact in a safe area if there is a problem with the launch vehicle. This involves redundant systems to monitor the velocity, position and health of the launch vehicle, impact prediction systems (where do the pieces land if it blows up), and thrust termination systems (the big red button). The operator of the launch vehicle has to provide a high degree of assurance that no failure mode will result in injury, death or property damage in areas outside the range. This is not a trivial task, and not something to be built from bubble gum and bailing wire.
Re:Range Safety (Score:2)
Suggested places for flight attempts (Score:2)
The first is the flight test range operated by Edwards Air Force Base east of Mojave, CA. If NASA and the USAF can fly the X-15 inside this range even though the X-15 can fly at over Mach 5 top speed and 350,000-plus feet altitude, it sure can accommodate the X-Prize contenders. Why do you think the White Knight/SpaceShipOne combinat
When Dealing with the FAA... (Score:4, Insightful)
Personnally (Score:3, Funny)
Shuttle's competition (Score:3, Interesting)
NASA wil kill this movement if we let it..
FSA? (Score:4, Insightful)
Wouldn't it make sense to spin off a portion of the FAA and make it (just an example) the Federal Space Administration?
I think that this is a great idea, but good luck getting anyone to fund it. What, exactly, would this agency do right now? We have no shuttle flights (nor do we have any planned for the near future), Mars continues to be a pipe dream, and the ISS is serviced by Russian craft. There's not much to regulate right now. I agree that we'll need one in the future, it's just that the future seems an awfully long way away right now.
I think that the only real chance we have for space exploration, at least until China starts kicking our asses in the race to Mars, is commercial. How about a lottery where a couple of people get a ticket to Mars? Zubrin proposes a $30 billion long term Mars program. At $1000 a ticket, that means we have to sell 30 million tickets (assuming absolutely 0 investment, 0 government aid, and 0 commercial sponsorship (The Pepsi Landing Module, anyone?)). I'm just a poor college student, but you can be damn sure I'd scrape up the cash. Many of the rich and famous would by several tickets, I'd bet. Maybe we couldn't sell 30 million tickets here. Our population is about 280 million, so that's about one person in 9 buying tickets. Pretty unlikely. Our chances get better, however, when we open the lottery up world-wide.
So, before I get modded off-topic, I guess what I'm trying to say is that the space exploration of the future needs to be a cooperative effort.
The government needs to deregulate. Anyone who tries to make space something other than the Wild West is a bit delusional. By stepping back and letting explorers take over their doing nothing that we didn't already do in Tennessee, or Montana, or California.
Commercial ventures need to come up with the money. With all of the MBAs pouring out of Harvard alone you figure that someone could come up with a viable business model. Keep the lottery idea in mind, it's a quick way to make the cash roll in.
Citizens need, at the very least, to vote for Pro-Space Exploration congressmen. How are you going to get Joe Sixpack to vote at all, let alone for such a seemingly trivial issue? Make it exciting again. We need imminent, impressive goals. Mars doesn't count. Even now a landing is 15 years away.
What can we do to:
A) Help the plight of commercial space programs bogged down in bureaucracy?
B) Increase funding to government space programs?
C) Let congress know that there are people interested in space exploration?
Why, I'm glad you asked. Write your congressman. [marssociety.org] The Mars Society has a well developed lobbying system, including mailing lists and meeting reports. Don't know whether your congressman stands on this issue? Get their report card. [vis.org]
It must be hard to control the skies... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It must be hard to control the skies... (Score:2)
Re:It must be hard to control the skies... (Score:3, Interesting)
News Flash: the information is already out there and available to the public.
A product called Flight Explorer [flightexplorer.com] allows you to "... retrieve aircraft information from our data center and to provide you with a real-time picture of all IFR aircraft over the US (including Alaska and Hawaii), Canada, the Caribbean and parts of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans."
A nice review (with lots of
Re:It must be hard to control the skies... (Score:2)
Re:It must be hard to control the skies... (Score:2)
Proliferation... (Score:5, Insightful)
Interesting though it may be, commercial space flight is a nuclear proliferation nightmare: what if anyone with (say) $50M to spend could put any payload he wanted, anywhere on the planet, reliably?
As Gen. Pete Worden (former head of U.S Command) used to say, "We're more concerned about people sending surprise packages...".
Re:Proliferation... (Score:2)
Though this is certainly a legal problem--there are restrictions in place on rocket technology for precisely this reason--it is nonsense from a realistic standpoint. I can put any payload anywhere I want to, anywhere on the planet, for a lot less than fifty million dollars. The delivery isn't as fast, but co
Re:Proliferation... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, you mean like FedEx? Yeah, that would be scary.
Damn. (Score:4, Interesting)
There is no regulation (Score:2)
There's no regulation threatening to ban model rocketry, there's a requirement for shipping companies who deliver the larger motors to have their employees undergo background checks and the like, because the larger motors are classed as dangerous/explosive objects.
If you can get the motors, there's nothing new stopping you from firing them off. It's the delivery of the big motors that's the issue.
Think about it (Score:2)
Whether intended or not this is going to destroy model rocketry.
KOTHF? (Score:2)
--grendel drago
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
BFG (Score:2)
"Hey gov, I'm the developer of BFG, BFG 10, and the rail gun, please now let me have my private rocket launcher."
fall under? (Score:4, Funny)
if they are suborbital, ;-)
don't they fall under the law of gravity?
(the ultimate authority in such matters...
Re:Hey, if these rocket scientists don't like it (Score:2)
This is a fundamental point, motivated individuals will find a way around regulation to accomplish their goals. The US government has historically been successful because those people avoiding burdensome laws and regulation have come to the US, mostly from Europe, but elsewhere. Also moving to another country is a big deal and investment, so one is not likely to return to their country of origin. In the short run burdensome regulation stifling innovation might protec
Re:Hey, if these rocket scientists don't like it (Score:2)
Re:New Base (Score:2)