X-Prize Cup/Olympics Planned 204
sckienle writes "Space.com has a quick article in their astronotes section about the X-Prize committee's idea of an X-Prize competition. Apparently they are thinking about having a 'X-Prize Cup' where 'teams would compete for cash prizes, attempting to set new records.' My favorite quote: 'The notion is to try and bring the money and excitement of NASCAR and Formula One racing into space.'"
8.... (Score:2)
Can't wait for the sponsors to jump on this one.
Re:"This flight sponsored by TANG!" (Score:2)
Re:8.... (Score:2)
Of course, accidents would have bigger impacts than stock cars...
They might try something like having giant display screens showing views from cameras mou
Current Space Program (Score:3, Insightful)
Who cares about the excitement, (Score:5, Funny)
I'd love to see a shuttle rocketting towards the stratosphere with "Viagra keeps our rocket up too" stenciled down the side of it!
Re:REALLY bad choice of words on their part (Score:3, Insightful)
You know, as cold hearted as that is, that might not be such a bad thing.
As things stand now, if an accident occurs during a space flight and people get killed it's a national tragedy and the entire space program shuts down for months or years. When Dale whosie got killed it was still a tragedy (although a lot more worked up than i though
Re:REALLY bad choice of words on their part (Score:2)
This has to be an extremely small set of people, if they like both NASCAR and F1. I suppose the fact that they're into NASCAR explains their fascination with crashes. Perhaps you should talk to some actual F1 fans who don't consider driving around in a big circle to be racing.....
Budwiser rules (Score:5, Funny)
I just hope that it draws the white trash chicks that are willing to show us their tits on the big screens.
No dice. (Score:5, Funny)
For a brief moment I read that as crash prizes...
Re:No dice. (Score:3, Funny)
Ah, you are refering off course to the "hottest reentry" prize, the only prize that will be awared post mortem.
Re:No dice. (Score:2)
I remember that. Good times.
I would pay for tickets. (Score:5, Interesting)
Other racing besides NASCAR, hello... (Score:3, Insightful)
My lack of interest for a lot of modern mechanical sports is the udder lack of distinction between any of the entries, two cars in nascar are more alike than your and my DNA.
Contrary to popular belief there are other motorsports besides NASCAR:
...just to name a few.
For example, on Speedvision(now "The Speed Channel"), you can catch events like the Maine Fore
Re:Other vehicles besides CARs, hello... (Score:2)
The New England Lawnmower Racing Association puts on some pretty good races, too, buy they're hard to find on television.
That said, you're right on the money with rally cars. If I had to buy a car, I would *so* want a WRX as my daily driver.
Re:Other vehicles besides CARs, hello... (Score:2)
I was thinking the same thing until I heard the Magliozzis pan the WRX on Car Talk one Saturday morning. Apparently it's absolutely gutless unless you wind it up enough for the turbo to kick in, which is not something you'd really want to do at every intersection. Afraid I'll have to pass and go with an Impreza Outback instead.
Re:Other vehicles besides CARs, hello... (Score:2)
> it up enough for the turbo to kick in
Argh, that's unfortunate. I wonder if the WRC has the same motor?
On the other hand, I wonder how hard it would be to modify the WRX with the "VTEC" (quotes important) technology in the new Honda VFR 800 motorbike. It keeps half the exhaust valves closed 8000 rpm, allowing much more bottom end grunt than it would have other.
Probably cheaper to buy a new motor, though.
Still, depending on the turbo characteris
Re:Other racing besides NASCAR, hello... (Score:2)
Speed Channel is about the only game in town to catch non-NASCAR racing. Of course, you have to find it in the middle of all their NASCAR programming......
But they do provide coverage of F1, FIA World Rally, SCCA Rally, and various other racing (Le Mans, etc.)
If you want to find even more motorsports options, you should check out Grassroots Motorsports [grmotorsports.com]. They cover a wide variety of racing, especially SCCA and other club-type events.
I'll strongly su
Re:I would pay for tickets. (Score:3, Interesting)
BTW, I LOVE the idea about balsa wood robot wars!
Re:I would pay for tickets. (Score:3, Informative)
Sort of goes back to the Intrusion Tolerance article from earlier today [slashdot.org].
Or perhaps have the scoring based on "Mass removed from the other robot" - so the more chunks you break off, the higher your score. It would drive the competition towards lighter components (the other team scores less if it breaks off) with more damaging capability.
The balsa is a gre
Re:I would pay for tickets. (Score:2)
Re:I would pay for tickets. (Score:2)
NASCAR Fans (Score:5, Insightful)
TNG fans already know... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:NASCAR Fans (Score:2)
Actually, that wouldn't nescecarily be bad. Don't forget that in NASCAR, the drivers are not trying to crash. Same would be for the X-Prize.
Creating a fanbase with wide diversity of interests, ranging from technological to simple speed-and-crash-exitement, would be a good thing. It would create a bigger sponsor based playing field that might end up in more of us
Re:NASCAR Fans (Score:2)
I can see it now... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I can see it now... (Score:2, Funny)
I would rather complain about the quality of the fan base dwindling, than complain about there being little-to-no fan base. Bring on the beer guts! Maybe Budweiser will see their target audience and throw some money at the program...
Formula One Budget (Score:3, Informative)
NASCAR? (Score:5, Funny)
Hmm. (Score:2)
Re:Hmm. (Score:2)
This is what scares me... (Score:2)
Blast offs (to use the most exciting term for a rocket ship taking off) is not something that will keep an audience riveted for a long period of time. Re-entries, in orbit manuevering and so on, is not very exciting. Maybe sports would be exciting, although the o
soo...they want to (Score:5, Funny)
yeah, that sounds about as exciting as watching a group of cars drive in circles all day.
Re:soo...they want to (Score:3, Insightful)
Get ready for Olympics scandal (Score:5, Funny)
Spaceports? Awesome! (Score:5, Interesting)
I know about OSIDA, the one in Oklahoma that Armadillo [armadilloaerospace.com] is planning on using. Anybody know where the others are?
--riney
Guiness Craze (Score:4, Insightful)
But what happens when someone's custom-made SaturnV crashes into your house?
Re:Guiness Craze (Score:2)
The excitement of Formula One? (Score:4, Funny)
The best part of Formula One is the girls who shake the champagne. Maybe we can just dispense with the loud noisy machines and just have girls opening large bottles of champagne. Playboy in Space? Gotta be cheaper and more fun.
Vrmmm vrmmm vrmmmm... Nope, just does not do it for me.
Re:The excitement of Formula One? (Score:2)
what formula one are you watching, it's the winning drivers that shake the champagne and there hasn't been a female driver in formula one since Giovanna Amati in 1993 and afaik, there's never been a female f1 driver on the podium, the closest was Lella Lombardi in 1974 who scored 1 point.
to be fair, the girls never really got a fair chance, they were all in kinda crap cars and never really got good chances.
dave
Re:The excitement of Formula One? (Score:2)
At last! Business in the front, party in the back! (Score:5, Funny)
(I fully expect to be karma-lynched for this)
Aviation in the 20's & 30's (Score:5, Insightful)
This reminds me of the air competitions in the 20's and 30's, normally funded by wealthy newspaper owners. Cash prize for the first to cross the Atlantic East to West, then in reverse. First to Hawaii, around the world, etc.
If not for some of those competitions, aviation would have progressed much slower than it did.
The flip side of this (Score:2)
Re:The flip side of this (Score:2)
I saw a documentary on that once. The basic gist was that because the Germans were limited in what they were allowed to build by treaty, those that were interested in aviation did a lot of experimentation.
I believe a lot of it also had to do with government investment. The P-51 Mustang, arguably the best prop in the war, came about only because the British ordered it to compliment their dwindling supply of British built aircraft. The US Army Air Corp had already turned it down.
Back to Germany. It was
NASCAR meets X-Prize? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:NASCAR meets X-Prize? (Score:2)
You may be laughing now.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Racing for money and fame is another matter, though, and usually happens far before racing hits the "Nascar" level. Remember (reading in history books) when they would show the might and speed of the newest railroad trains by racing them head-to-head with horses? The art of racing to impress and encourage investment will need to be mastered way before it matures into sport.
All about speed? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd much rather see the X-Prize lead to something good and cheap that takes 2 days to get to orbit than have some over-engineered phallic symbol dominating the space race for the next 50 years.
Re:All about speed? (Score:2)
Pushing the envelope, doing new things, has always involved danger.
Re:All about speed? (Score:2)
My point was that a "race" style system strongly disadvantages slower systems like "rockoons", (which use a balloon instead of a first stage rocket). Now, whether rockoons are actually a better/cheaper way to get to space is still an open question, but I'm a bit bothered that this whole class of launch systems would be discarded in favor of old-style rockets simply because we want to be like NASCAR.
Re:All about speed? (Score:2)
I too am excited about the balloon launches. I've seen a few "artist's depictions" of how that would work, and it actually seems possible. My favorite one is the floating manned launch facility.
Re:All about speed? (Score:2)
Re:All about speed? (Score:3, Interesting)
Rednecks in Space (Score:2, Funny)
...Excitement of NASCAR... (Score:3, Funny)
That seems like a contrary goal.
KOTHF. (Score:5, Interesting)
Some people complain that the X-Prize doesn't really get anywhere---that tossing yourself a hundred kilometers above sea level is a far cry from low earth orbit. This is true. Maybe the X-Prize will be the first in a series of cash prizes to spur even more invention. First single-stage to orbit, first real space station, first craft assembled in space... I don't know what the next milestones will be, but we'll get there faster if there's cash money incentive.
Oh, and would wetsuits work as space suits? There's no way the heat would really bleed off, and if you could lead-line them for heat shielding...
The quote from KOTHF is "Space suits for NASA cost a million bucks a shot and are about as comfortable as wearing pork barrels. I found this research report from the nineteen-sixties by a team that ought to have won the contract bid, except that their suits only cost a thousand dollars each and could be done by any seamstress. NASA probably figured that would have looked cheap, so for three decades astronauts have been lugging around thirty layers of cloth and a refrigerator when they could have been dressed in Spandex tights." [...] "The difference between down here and up there is only one measly atmosphere of pressure. Our skin is strong enough to withstand that gradient. It has quite a bit of tensile strength. The only problem is that it stretches too well. That means we swell up, which drops the pressure in our bloodstream, so our blood outgasses and vapor-locks our hearts. With just this second skin to keep our body volume constant, we don't expand. So we don't boil." (From ch. 11.)
Can anyone with a background in anything relating to that confirm or deny?
--grendel drago
Re: light spacesuits (Score:3, Interesting)
Wetsuits (probably reinforced with kevlar or something, why not) would probably be fine; actually, filling any small internal gaps with water would be a good trick to insure a perfect fit (any gaps in the suit and you get Giant Space Hickeys, and we don't want that!). You'ld need a fishbowl helmet, of course.
Heat might be tricky. Space is cold, but there's no air, so shedding heat is surprisingly hard. I'm not sure if overheating or freezing would be the m
Water as insulation. (Score:2)
Then again, a tank of water to be evaporated might be an effective method of dissipating the heat you generate. Doesn't seem very reliable or sustainable, though.
--grendel drago
Condensation. (Score:2)
As for lead traces---is it the presence of lead or the presence of a big chunky mass that makes it into a good radiation shield?
--grendel dr
Wetsuits. (Score:2)
Technically, space is very cold, but it's also very empty. There's really nothing out there to absorb the heat from the body, so your biggest problem (as someone else has already pointed out) is getting rid of both the body heat you generate and the heat you get from being in the sun. (Of course, if you're going to be in the sun, you're going to need either a personal magnetic field or some sort of arm
Space Activity Suits. (Score:2)
The device [216.239.37.104] (Google HTML cache of a whitepaper in DOC format) was in fact designed and tested, but NASA junked it. Bastards.
And yes, heat is boiled off by evaporating water, both in the NASA suit and the SAS. Seems wasteful, but apparently it works.
Thanks again---I'm amazed that this was actually invented.
--grendel drago
Voila, Technical Literature. (Score:2)
--grendel drago
Re:Voila, Technical Literature. (Score:2)
Perhaps in the future, but I don't think the concept is ready for prime time.
Re:KOTHF. (Score:2)
Radiation shielding. (Score:2)
--grendel drago
Re:Radiation Shielding (Score:2)
It's as bulky (and as heavy) as lead (more bulky, in fact, as there's less lead per unit volume). It's just a lot more flexible, which makes it far more practical to wear.
"Very complex problem". (Score:2)
What exactly is the problem with people being in a vacuum? Aside from ears popping and lungs deflating (this is why we have the fishbowl), the skin expands, depressurizing the blood and causing it to boil, and this is
Heat. (Score:2)
The thermal problem has nothing to do with cold---if it's four kelvin in a vacuum, how's the heat going to leave your body?---and everything to do with heat, both body heat (remember, it has nowhere to go) and solar. So the temperature gradient isn't really an issue---there's no way half of the body is going to be at -100---but heat dissipation is.
These are engineering problems, and while I can
Emissivity etc. (Score:2)
--grendel drago
Re:Emissivity etc. (Score:2)
No drafting (Score:4, Funny)
Fastest? Or largest load? (Score:2)
Now if you want to send a person and a payload up there too, that requires a different set of rules.
Basically, it'll probably end up being more like Battlebots than NASCAR: there will be several categories of competitions.
(Then again, maybe NASCAR is like that too. I just don't watch it. "*singing* Alienating most of America..." -Conan)
Ac
NASCAR technology (Score:2)
New Photoshop/Gimp Contest!!! (Score:2)
Shouldn't be too hard if this is possible [rpi.edu]
Dot-com-space. (Score:3, Insightful)
the hoopla around the x-prize is starting to look like the dot-com era. this space stuff is expensive. people are going to die. it is WAY off the curve for profitability, even if you factor in the x-prize money. yes, i'd love to go too (disclaimer #2: i am an MBA, but I am also the test pilot for a small aerobatic aircraft manufacturer), but please people.. this will take time.
XXX Prize (Score:3, Funny)
Top Ten Awards to be presented at the XXX Prize contest:
10. Best "tits on glass" from a rocket occupant
9. Best moon (of course)
8. Body most improved by zero gravity
7. Most unique position for rocket occupants
6. Most creative use of non-human test flight animal
5. Fewest minutes on-line to obtain a burnable VCD image of "Gayniggers from Outer Space" [imdb.com]
4. Most creative use of "G" forces
3. Best ejection (male and female)
2. Most creative use of the "Johnson Space Center"
and.....[drum roll]
1. The venerable...Most Rings Around Uranus
GF.
Bah, it's been done! (Score:2)
The winner was Tom Swift Jr. [nasa.gov] and it's even documented on the NASA web site!
Kids these days -- nobody reads ...
Schumi (Score:2)
Re:Schumi (Score:2)
Martyr? (Score:2)
I vote for the inventor of ping, who died recently (last few years some time)
From the department of redundancy department... (Score:3, Funny)
So
An Interesting Proposal (Score:2)
This proposal has a number of interesting ideas.
First, competition attracts more interest. Part of the reason for the decline in interest in space since Apollo is the lack of any real competition. NASA launches shuttles -- who really cares that much? While not "routine access to space" shuttle launches are fairly common. There's no drama -- unless something goes wrong. Competitions such as this will bring some drama back to the field.
These kinds of competitions can also bring the participants toget
Done before - with disastrous results (Score:3, Informative)
I don't know if Murphy's Law had been established in 1895, but its results were in clear evidence: despite assurances that it couldn't happen, one of the train's boilers exploded upon the collision. The result (as sung by Texas songwriter Brian Burns [brianburnsmusic.com]):
Frankly, I can't see any way to stage an "X-Prize Cup", with multiple competitors simultaneously trying for the biggest spectacle, without chancing a repeat of the Crash At Crush. That said, I'd buy a ticket... but I'd leave the kids at home.
But first they've got to get the paperwork done... (Score:2, Interesting)
They missed two... (Score:3, Insightful)
Right now, the teams are trying to break the 100 km barrier by going straight up and returning straight down. For example, in Rutan's design the airspeed never exceeds 155 knots. As a result, it will take 80 minutes to cover a horizontal distance of 35 miles [wired.com]. That is enough to win the prize and I'm fine with that. But, in years to come, there should be new targets that get us closer to orbital flight. Greatest distance prizes will do that.
The first one, greatest distance traveled between takeoff and landing, could possibly be won by some sort of hybrid between Rutan's globe-circling Voyager and his Spaceship One, but that's also something that I'd be fine with. It would, like the current X-Prize, stretch aviation technology to lits limits.
My second idea, greatest horizontal distance traveled above 100 km, would be a logical follow-up to the first one, since it could only be won by someone following a ballistic trajectory. This would might inspire new research into thermal shielding, or it may generate all new ways to return to earth. (For example, find a way to eliminate your horizontal velocity before re-entering the atmosphere.)
Either of these would be far better than the possibilites discussed in the article.
Re:Gotta love The Onion... (Score:2)
Re:I'll donate money! (Score:5, Funny)
2-1 on the guy with the wookie.
Re:I'll donate money! (Score:4, Funny)
Motley Crue anyone? (Score:2)
There's a problem with the girls here on Earth
They stopped acting dizzy wearing miniskirts
Seems like everything wild is in distaste
Gotta get my band off in outer, outerspace
It can't come too soon,
Someone always has to break the rules,
Like a rock n roll cartoon,
First Band on the Moon! [fortunecity.com]
- Motley Crue, "First Band on the Moon", 1999.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Hey, THOSE THINGS ARE REAL.
Re:Launch a NASCAR into space! (Score:2)
Re:I'll watch (Score:2)
To launch yourself, yes. To launch someone else (ie; some white trash)? No.
You don't see the engineers who designed and built the car driving round and round, do you?
Re:I'll watch (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you tailgate (less drag, more heat)? How long and with who? Which line through the banked corners is optimal right now (it'll change as the track gets dirty and your tires heat up/wear, not to mention different amounts of traffic at different levels)? How many times will you stop for gas? Change tires? Do you need to adjust the suspension?
Re:I'll watch (Score:2)
Re:Nascar versus Space... (Score:2)
Re:Encouraging aggressiveness? (Score:2)
Umm, are you talking about NASA or the X-Prize competition?
Re:Corporate Sponsors, movies (Score:2)
All rockets are rear wheel drive if you will. Don't know if they are 2 door. Might be tight getting the roll cage in. Definitly going to have stick rules on the spoilers, though they may have to lift the ban on movable spoilers.
Be real curious to see post race burnouts. Though it sucks to be someone who did a mid or pre race burnout
Re:Corporate Sponsors, movies (Score:2)
Re:Excitement? (Score:2)
In the U.S., NASCAR consistently outdraws most other sports, including their playoff/championship series. I mean, even the TRUCK races outdraw Slashdot darlings like Farscape (both were getting around a 1.5 or 1.6 last I looked).
I recently read an article [motorsportstv.com] going into some of the numbers. When a mid-season race can outdraw the NBA finals, I'd say somebody's watching, and it's not just rednecks. NASCAR kicks (for example) both the NBA's and NHL's asses in the $75,000+ demographic.