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Space United States

NASA Considering Early Retirement of Shuttle Program 428

Rei writes "While publicly assuring the public that it has no plans to do so, leaks have indicated that NASA has been quietly investigating plans to get rid of the Space Shuttle as soon as possible, and finish the International Space Station with disposable rockets, even as NASA works on achieving Return to Flight in 2005."
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NASA Considering Early Retirement of Shuttle Program

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  • Good! (Score:2, Interesting)

    by cmburns69 ( 169686 )
    .. But are the reusable rockets rated for manned space-flight?
    • Re:Good! (Score:3, Informative)

      by Big Mark ( 575945 )
      Ever heard of the Apollo program? Saturn-V?
      • Re:Good! (Score:5, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:39PM (#10665801)
        Which part of the Apollo program was reusable, exactly? The astronauts? That doesn't count.
        • Re:Good! (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Waffle Iron ( 339739 )
          If you think about it, probably the only parts of the entire Saturn V setup that actually made the full round trip from the earth to the lunar surface and back were some photographic film, space suits and the astronauts themselves. Kinda strange.
    • Re:Good! (Score:5, Informative)

      by julesh ( 229690 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:41PM (#10665840)
      But are the reusable rockets rated for manned space-flight?

      a) The story says disposable, not reusable
      b) Doesn't look like it -- the article mentions relying on Soyuz (and potentially Shenzhou) for manned flights in future.
    • by Thud457 ( 234763 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:52PM (#10665989) Homepage Journal
      • Manned - requires 99.999% success rate EXPENSIVE(think aircraft / ICBM building)
      • Unmanned - requires "only" 99.9% (99%?...) less expensive (think ship building. No, really, that's how the Soviets looked at it.)
      Obviously, need a two-tier system, not one do-everything, do nothing well system.

      As far a reusable/disposable, for the time being, whichever is more economical. Be sure to show your work calculating continuing program costs for reusable designs.

  • by Simon G Best ( 819178 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:35PM (#10665753)

    Aren't Saturn Vs just magnificent? They're magnificent! I reckon it's time for them to make a come-back. Please?

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:43PM (#10665864)
      Even as magnificent as they are, it would take a Saturn V 30 years to go to Neptune with a Holmann Transfer. Considering that the planets won't align for a Voyager-esque event for another 150 years, we need to work on something similar to NERVA. Its probably not feasable to make rockets too much larger than the giant Saturn V's (360 feet tall).

      Oops, I mentioned nu-cu-lur. Mod down -5: Evil.
    • The Saturn V was the John Holmes of rockets.
    • by OldAndSlow ( 528779 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @02:02PM (#10666115)
      I worked in a NASA shop 10 years ago. I was surprized to learn that we couldn't restart production of the Saturns. We don't have all the manufacturing specs, prints, etc. And we certainly don't have any of the jigs and special setups that they used to make those birds.

      The moral of the story is that when you shut down the manufacturing line for a complex product, you shut it down for good.

      • by LWATCDR ( 28044 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @02:30PM (#10666467) Homepage Journal
        You really would not want to build Saturn Vs today anyway. We can do much better with proven parts.
        The RD-170 motors "Pratt already builds a development of it as the RD-180 for the Atlas V" puts out more thrust than the F-1 did and is a more modern desgin. The RS-68 "used in the Delta V" puts out more thrust then the j-2. Throw in LiAl structure "used in the Shuttle ET" and modern electronics "used in your desktop pc" you could have a Better heavy lifter than the SatrunV with not that much development and no new engine programs.
        You would have to build a new launch pad but then you would have to do the same if you brought back the Saturn.
      • by cmowire ( 254489 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @02:36PM (#10666530) Homepage
        See, I don't think there's a point in restarting Saturn V production.

        The thing is, with the aerospace components we've got now, with the alloys and welding techniques, it would be about as smart to restart Saturn V production as it would be for Porsche to dig up the plans for the 914 and restart that production line. I mean, sure the 914 was a cool little machine at a good price, but when Porsche decided to make an "economical" sports car, they started over and made the Boxter instead.

        It stopped making sense to restart the production lines after 1980. By that point, all of the non-custom components were completely obselete, the electronics were dated, etc. By 1984, we had all of the Saturn V-related facilities completely repurposed for the shuttle, so even if we could build a Saturn V, we'd have nowhere to launch it.

        It's OK that we can't make a Saturn V anymore. It'll cost just as much to redesign the Saturn V around more modern parts than it will be to make a brand new design, with a few microcontrollers instead of heavy 60's vintage computers, more optimal aerodynamics and staging, etc, some ability to recover portions of it, etc.

        We can still make J-2 rockets (they re-used everything but the nozzle to make the X-33's rocket engines) and a F-1-performing rocket isn't that hard to get started, either. Remember, part of the reason why the SSME is so damn expensive and tempremental is because it's got staged combustion. The F-1 was much simpler.

        The problem is, people are far too attached to the *machine*, instead of the *idea*. I mean, sure, the Saturn V was the last machine that NASA has built that really lived up to its promises. The shuttle is a *beautiful* machine that has some nice properties, but has been strung along for the past 20 years and really never lived up to its promises. So, instead of asking why we can't build the Saturn V, we need to be asking why we can't get stuff up to space cheaply and safely.
  • by Gentoo Fan ( 643403 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:35PM (#10665755) Homepage
    Why rely on several decades old tech for long term dependancies? Some R&D never hurt anyone (except the budget, but that's a separate discussion).
  • Im not surpised (Score:5, Insightful)

    by deft ( 253558 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:36PM (#10665763) Homepage
    I'd be appaulled if they DIDN'T consider retiring the fleet as an option. To NOT do so would be pig headed. There could very well be a better way, regardless of how great the shuttle program has been, and how much it means to me as someone who grew up having the best "show and tell" pictures because my dad worked on the shuttle.

    There's alot of brilliant people over there that don't make it a habit of ignoring all the options, and all the possibilities. Thats what lets them acheive such great heights. I'd be sorry to see it go though.
    • Re:Im not surpised (Score:5, Insightful)

      by meringuoid ( 568297 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @02:02PM (#10666118)
      I've said it before, and I'm sure I'll say it again, especially since I keep getting +5 Insightful for this :-)

      1. Retire the Shuttle [slashdot.org] and use Soyuz, which works just fine.

      2. With the money saved, build ships [slashdot.org] to go somewhere new. Or even somewhere we went FORTY YEARS AGO.

      The Shuttle was a neat idea that didn't work out. There's no shame in admitting that. Russia ditched Buran because of the cost and continued to run a fine Earth-orbit operation for years based on Soyuz tech. Let's use American technology to take mankind further, rather than just duplicate what's already there.

      • Re:Im not surpised (Score:5, Insightful)

        by evilviper ( 135110 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @04:19PM (#10667614) Journal
        The Shuttle was a neat idea that didn't work out.

        I've got to disagree with you, COMPLETELY. The shuttle worked out very well, and has done so for a very long time.

        It's under a cloud now, and it's politically a bad-word, but it was an incredibly successful project. Wouldn't have anything like the hubble without it.

        Now, I will concede that the Shuttle is past it's prime, and a re-design is in order. Not because it doesn't or hasn't worked, but simply because we can do better. Also because a newer craft would require less per-trip investment, and pay for itself.
  • by elid ( 672471 ) <eli.ipod@g m a il.com> on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:36PM (#10665768)
    ...outsource it to India? :-)
    • by Tracer_Bullet82 ( 766262 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @02:03PM (#10666138)
      its insightful.

      India has the neccesary "intellectual" labour and which it doesn't, the US can easily transfer the skills; and technology .

      The cost definitely can be lower.With good discussions, I'm sure the Indian government can be easily persuaded to chip in.

      Make that with any discussions,which country does not want the glamour of "space pioneers".
  • Well... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hype7 ( 239530 ) <u3295110@noSPam.anu.edu.au> on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:36PM (#10665769) Journal
    if the retirement (what a lovely euphemism) is in lieu of a new program, great.

    If the scrapping is in lieu of nothing... that's not so great.

    I do think a vehicle capable of re-use is important to the goal to get us off the planet; if they need to use rockets to get the ISS done while a new vehicle is built, so be it.

    -- james
    • It does sound from the article like there won't be a replacement any time soon.

      BTW: "In lieu of" doesn't mean what you seem to think it means.
  • by phaetonic ( 621542 ) * on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:36PM (#10665773)
    could the recent privatization of space travel have something to do with this?
    • by goldspider ( 445116 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:40PM (#10665824) Homepage
      In a word: no.

      Not at least until the private sector comes up with a vehicle that is capable of what the shuttle accomplished.

      The X-Prize was a good start, but they are still a long way off.
      • by Yunzil ( 181064 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @02:20PM (#10666328) Homepage
        Not at least until the private sector comes up with a vehicle that is capable of what the shuttle accomplished.

        Which was... what? Not live up to the plans for it?

        The shuttle was a dog from day 1. Its payload wasn't big enough and there really weren't as many missions that required humans to be present as it was originally thought.
    • by XanC ( 644172 )
      My understanding is that NASA is going to be focusing on tasks in which there's no money (or incentive for private investment) at the moment. Basically, that means exploration. The rest (research, tourism) can be done privately.
      • Yes, you have a very good point. NASA and other space-agencies should be at the cutting edge of space-exploration and research. Personally I think this is why safety shouldn't be such a huge issue. The people who sign up for this know the risks. These days we have become too caught up in making everything perfectly safe, so that nothing ever gets done.

        No, I wouldn't strap myself ontop of several hundred tons of fuel which is on fire, but there are plently of people out there willing it. Remember the days
    • could the recent privatization of space travel have something to do with this?

      No.

      Since when has space flight been privatised? As great and important as Burt Rutan's team's achievment was, it was only sub-orbital, can't really be considered space travel. In 10 years time privitised space travel maybe be a reality, but we still need something in the mean-time.

      Note: I think the winning of the x-prize was truely an important event. More privitized sub-orbital flights are sure to follow. But its only the

    • While I applaud the effort of the XPrize contestants and winner I think were getting a little ahead of ourselves. It was historic yes but was it really that ground breaking? I don't think the folks at NASA are worrying about "who's going to be last out the door has to shut off the lights" just yet. I think government space agencies will continue to be the giants for a while to come and private enterprises will be standing on there shoulders. Think of all the money that our government has spent to get inform
  • no shuttles (Score:2, Interesting)

    by wh173b0y ( 825454 )
    would it be cheaper to use disposible rockets to finish the iss? or are they worried about the possiblity of long term failure of the aging shuttle fleet...
    • Re:no shuttles (Score:5, Informative)

      by AKAImBatman ( 238306 ) * <<moc.liamg> <ta> <namtabmiaka>> on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:43PM (#10665865) Homepage Journal
      Let me put it this way. The Space Shuttle costs $500 million dollars for each flight. A Delta II costs ~$50 million (with possible bulk discounts bringing the price down from there). The shuttle has a maximum cargo loadout of 28.8 metric tons. The Delta II has a maximum loadout of 10.9 metric tons.

      1 Shuttle Flight:

      $500m
      28.8 metric tons

      10 Delta II flights:

      $500m
      10 x 10.9 = 109 metric tons

      Any questions?
      • Plus there is a, what? 2%? chance that any given shuttle flight is going to end catastrophically. How reliable are the deltas?
        • The Delta II's have a similar launch success rating. Which is more than sufficient for cargo. Manned flight would require a greater degree of preparation and certification for the rocket.
      • Any questions?

        Yes, what are these metric tons of which you speak, are they related to these? [thefreedictionary.com]

        Also 500 Million a flight is worth it to get treasured moments like the inaguration of the Columbia where Ronald Regan almost brought a tear to my eye telling me about the all current evil terrorist Afghanis were wonderful brave freedom fighters battling for good against the nasty evil empire Russian terrorists who are now our friends.
      • I like buying in bulk [astronautix.com]! Normally, mass production drives down costs due to increasing efficiency.

        PLUS, IF ALL OUR MIL-IND COMPANIES ARE BUSY WORKING TO PUT US IN SPACE, WE"RE NOT FOMETING IDIOTIC, WASTEFUL FOREIGN WARS TO KEEP THEM BUSY. Think of it as UN resolution 35397, "The US Aerospace full employment act so they stop bombing the rest of us" act.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    What ever happened to the supersonic spaceplanes that they were working on that were to eventually replace the shuttle? I seem to remember reading about them years ago...
    • by AKAImBatman ( 238306 ) * <<moc.liamg> <ta> <namtabmiaka>> on Friday October 29, 2004 @02:54PM (#10666727) Homepage Journal
      The Supersonic Spaceplane was scrapped in favor of the ScramJet Spaceplane, which was scrapped in favor of the DC-X Delta Clipper, which was scrapped in favor of the X-33 VentureStar, which was scrapped in favor of a little ScramJet missile (the X-43). Thus we've come full circle.

      The real problem is that NASA has been trying to build craft out of untested technologies. The end result is that each program (with the exception of the DC-X) failed due to delays and cost overruns. For example, the VentureStar HAD to have hydrogen slush, composite tanks, linear aerospike engines, and new thermal protection systems all working perfectly the first time. There was no room to change out anything that didn't behave as expected.

      As a result, we've been kind of chasing our tails around a bit instead of building craft out of proven technology.
      • Just some minor pedantry: DC-X was the name of the 1/3 scale Delta Clipper demostrator. Had the program continued there would have been a DC-Y prototype, and hopefully finally a DC-1 launch vehicle. The Delta Clipper program was aimed to design an unmanned reusable lifter with quick turnaround (the DC-X set a world record turnaround of 26 hours), but it wouldn't have had the cargo capacity of the Space Shuttle (9 tons v 29 tons).

        References:

    • What ever happened to the supersonic spaceplanes that they were working on that were to eventually replace the shuttle? I seem to remember reading about them years ago...

      An equivalent question: "What happened to the rapid adoption of 90nm wafers that was going to bring us all 6GHz processors by late 2003?" Or "what happened to fusion power, which has been 20 years away since 1960?"

      The answer to all of them: it turned out to be a shitload harder than we expected.

      New operating regimes (higher speed,

  • Good and Sensible (Score:5, Insightful)

    by thpr ( 786837 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:39PM (#10665806)
    It's called "business sense" in my book. Occasionally analyze your largest components of spending to determine if they are necessary in their current incarnation. Look at alternatives, weigh risks, do cost/benefit and all that.

    NASA is irresponsible if they DON'T do this occasionally (just not constantly) and such an investigation doesn't mean anything with regards to the formal "plans". If you have any knowledge of a strategy team or executive in a large company, you'll know just how often weird things that are "out of plan" are considered and subsequently dismissed... I guess it gives the rumor mill something to do.

  • Burt Rutan... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DigitalRaptor ( 815681 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:39PM (#10665814)
    I'd much rather my tax dollars were spent with Burt Rutan and Scaled Composites...

    • Re:Burt Rutan... (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Rutan has been spectacularly lucky. After he blows the fuck out of a few people I think NASA will look pretty good in comparison.
    • Re:Burt Rutan... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by ZeroGee ( 796304 )
      Rutan's accomplishment, while impressive, is a glorified airplane. Doing orbital insertion and orbital return is a far more complex task. The media frequently links "private space enterprise" with the X-prize attempts, but while they are a start towards a burdgeoning industry, we are still miles away from having another realistic orbital option in place.
    • Re:Burt Rutan... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by WayneConrad ( 312222 ) * <.wconrad. .at. .yagni.com.> on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:59PM (#10666075) Homepage
      I'd much rather my tax dollars were spent with Burt Rutan and Scaled Composites...

      I'd rather my tax dollars weren't spent except where absolutely necessary (say, for defense). Everything else, leave to industry. A free market economy can make far better decisions about how to spend money than can politicans.

      "How should the government spend my money" is the wrong question. How little of my money can we get away with the government getting is the right question.

      • While I agree completely with you, we would be giving up far more than you may realize.

        The internet, for instance, couldn't have been done without the governments of the world, and the American government in particular.

        GPS, OnStar, satellite TV, any many other technological and medical advancements are the direct result of government spending. It could be argued that all or most of these would have come about eventually, but it may have been a very long wait.

        But the principle that government should only
      • Re:Burt Rutan... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by cje ( 33931 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @03:07PM (#10666851) Homepage
        I'd rather my tax dollars weren't spent except where absolutely necessary (say, for defense). Everything else, leave to industry.

        As far as the space program is concerned, the problem with this is that "industry" is typically only interested in things that can be done for financial gain. Now, there are certain things associated with space that are (or will be) profitable; space tourism is an obvious example. Additionally, the aerospace industry (i.e., Boeing) already sells its services to the government in the form of launch vehicles to put satellites into orbit, and competing for various technical contracts.

        The problem is that not everything that involves the space program is done for (or will result in) financial gain. For example, consider the recent Mars rover missions. By all accounts, these missions have increased our knowledge of the Red Planet by several times more than all of the previous missions combined. Are these missions profitable? Is anybody making money off of them (aside from the private sector contractors that won the bids to do a lot of the work that went into them?) Probably not.

        CEOs in the boardrooms of private industry would never say "I know! Let's build a spacecraft to explore the Saturn system and a probe to land on Titan!" They would never undertake such a mission because there would be no financial reason for them to do so. This is not a "slam" against corporations; it's just a basic statement of fact. The fundamental role of the corporation is to earn profits for its shareholders, and there is nothing financially profitable about building a complicated probe to explore the moons of Saturn.

        But does that mean that such a mission is not profitable in other, less tangible ways? Aside from the more zealous libertarian types who only want to see their tax dollars spent on tanks or the extreme fundamentalist types who view exploration of the heavens as blasphemy, most people would probably agree that expanding our knowledge of the universe that we live in is a Good Thing (TM). It's profitable from an intellectual and scientific (if not economic) standpoint. And it's hardwired into our very being; curiosity (and the desire to satisfy that curiosity) is one of the things that makes us human.

        So I'm all for expanding the role of private industry in space, but there will always be a role for publicly-funded missions as well. And that is how it should be. Space is an awfully big place; there's plenty of room for both the public and the private sectors.
      • by guet ( 525509 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @03:14PM (#10666940)
        What are you doing posting on a forum hosted on the internet - whose infrastructure is supported mostly by US Government funded institutions? Using HTML, created in an institution ( CERN ) funded by many governments. Dialling in on a telephone/ADSL line, the infrastructure for which was created by the Govt.?

        For that matter, why are you using a computer? Stick to your log cabin and complaining about the new railroad : )
  • At risk of getting facetious replies from all the Trekkies/Trekkers out there, does anyone know anything more about this "Constellation" class ship they mention in the article?
    • by slashd'oh ( 234025 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:52PM (#10665990) Homepage
      "Named after the patterns that stars form in the night sky, Constellation Systems is responsible for developing the Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) and related exploration architecture systems. Constellation Systems is the combination of large and small systems that will provide humans the capabilities necessary to travel and explore the solar system. Constellation Systems will be made up of Earth-to-orbit, in-space and surface transportation systems, surface and space-based infrastructures, power generation, communications systems, maintenance and science instrumentation, and robotic investigators and assistants." (source [nasa.gov])
  • by stratjakt ( 596332 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:41PM (#10665833) Journal
    They've been constantly considering the viability of the Shuttle program since it began in the 70s, and it's always been under the threat of having the plug pulled at any moment.

    I don't know why it's so "hip" to hate the shuttle program around here. If you look past the cost, the shuttles are pretty damned cool, and have a better safety record than any commercial passenger jet.

    It's just so sci-fi. The shuttles are honest-to-god spaceships, everything else is just strapping a tin can onto a big bottle rocket.

    They just needed to shoot lasers and have a socket to mount an R2 utility droid and they'd be teh coolest EVAR!!!1!1!!!

    I find your lack of faith disturbing.
    • The shuttles are also strapped onto "big bottle" rockets for a large portion of the flight -- without the Big Dumb Booser or the SRBs, it wouldn't get very far.

      The shuttle does have an advantage in that it can easily allow the ISS to install equipment straight out of the shuttle's bay, but other than that, the shuttle isn't very special.

      If you took an airplane completely apart and put it completely back together before every flight, then you would have a point of comparison. But for the amount of effort
    • Re:Not really news (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Skye16 ( 685048 )
      I hate it because it is a figurehead of a situation I dislike. Let me explain.

      The Shuttles we have now are pretty much ancient. They're not cutting-edge technology anymore, not by a long shot. On one hand, it's great to have a reuseable spacecraft that has a relatively large payload. On the other, it's so very expensive keeping our fleet that most of the money allocated to NASA gets spent on shuttle maintenance and not on a: exploration and b: Research and Development. Since Congress is not thrilled
    • Re:Not really news (Score:3, Informative)

      by octothorpe ( 34673 )
      The shuttles are cool but they've never gotten anywhere near to the cost/lb that the program was started for. I remember as far back as the mid-seventies that they were being critisized for being too expensive as compared to one-shot rockets. It's not really NASA fault, they kept having to scale back the designs due to budget cuts, the origional vision was to have a 100% reusable system built out of titanium alloy instead of the partially resuable alluminum design that they ended up with. The lighter wei
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Not necessarily a bad thing... the Soyuz does just fine sending things up and down.

    NASA can focus on more far-reaching projects and crafts.

    Still, I group up with the shuttle and will miss it.
  • by AltGrendel ( 175092 ) <`su.0tixe' `ta' `todhsals-ga'> on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:42PM (#10665854) Homepage
    All the more reason to develop the space elevator [liftport.com].
    • And in the 70 or so years until it starts being feasible to people who don't see the world through rose colored eyes?
  • by zorkmid ( 115464 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:48PM (#10665927)
    Really.

    They rocked the world back in the 60's and early 70's.

    They still rock the world with their unmanned space exploration.

    But for about the past 20 years it seems that their manned space flight plan consists of very expensive (and sometimes deadly) joy rides.

    I say we (US Tax payers) Give Burt Rutan 500 Million (the cost of a *one* shuttle mission) and stand back.
  • by H_Fisher ( 808597 ) <[h_v_fisher] [at] [yahoo.com]> on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:50PM (#10665955)
    I can understand why they'd want to retire the Shuttles - lots of risks, lots of money involved in not only flying them but keeping them updated, and (now) a lot more questions than before about the safety of them. I wish I had a dollar for everyone who's convinced that the space shuttle ought to never fly again, especially the wave of posts that appear on /. since the Columbia disaster that basically say "good riddance, the shuttles are a liability."

    But like it or not, I think scrubbing the shuttle program without a clear choice for a reusable replacement is a bad idea. Yes, disposable rockets might be more cost-effective in the short-term, but I don't trust NASA (as a bureaucratic US gov't agency) not to turn any project into a bottomless pit of money over time - even a rocket program built on a combination of proven technology (the type of rockets used for Mercury or Apollo missions) and modern tools would still carry the temptation to slowly inflate pricetags if the corproate architecture of NASA doesn't change - not to mention the everpresent risks of death due to, as they so coyly put it, a "mishap."

    Disclaimer: IANAAOA (I am not an astronaut or astrophysicist).

  • This is where private spaceflight (like SS1) would come in handy, once it matures enough. NASA could simply outsource the actual launch and mission control to these companies so they can concentrate on development. In any case, they should keep the ability for manned flight until they find a suitable replacement.
    • While SS1 is a great undertaking, it just achieved the capabilities of the X-15 of 1963. Orbital flight requires a ship that can withstand rentry stresses of Mach-20 heating. Suborbital flight only reaches Mach-5.
  • by RealAlaskan ( 576404 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:50PM (#10665957) Homepage Journal
    The shuttle was designed by a comittee, and its politics was always its strongest point. I'm not surprised that NASA thinks they can do better than that today, 30+ years later.

    What would really be a great thing would be for NASA to get out of engineering, and just let contracts for delivery of pounds or people to orbit. Let the vendors figure out the details.

  • by kippy ( 416183 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @01:55PM (#10666029)
    This is a Godsend. The Shuttle was a tarbaby from the get go. In my opinion, they should just halt plan to get the remaining 2 (or is it 3) back in space and work on plans to put them in museums.

    But what about all the skilled labor wasted? Well, there are multiple plans I've heard of to build a new class of rocketry largely based on the shuttle launch stack (or bundle). That whole workforce would still be valuable and employed and the shuttle derived vehicle could be capable of launching to Mars directly without pointless pit stops at the ISS, L5, moon or wherever: Mars Direct [wikipedia.org]
  • cool and not cool (Score:2, Interesting)

    by geg81 ( 816215 )
    This is cool. [nasa.gov] It costs about $3.26 billion total and yields amazing scientific results

    This is not. [nasa.gov] It costs about $2.4 billion / year and kills a few people occasionally.
    • That really isn't a fair comparison between the Cassini program and shuttle program.

      A much more accurate comparison would have been between the Apollo program [nasa.gov] and the Shuttle program [nasa.gov], both of which involved manned spaceflight.

      The Apollo program achieved an incredible goal, namely that of putting a crew of two on the moon, and was both an incredible engineering accomplishment as well as accomplishing some very useful science that is still being sorted through to this day.

      While you can cite some very good
  • Kaboom! (Score:2, Funny)

    by 1019 ( 262204 )
    "..and finish the International Space Station with disposable rockets ..."

    I thought this meant destroying the station with rockets, which I thought would be sort of moving backwards. After RTFM, it all became clear.
  • by joeytmann ( 664434 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @02:04PM (#10666145)
    Seeing that there are lots of replies about giving Burt Rutan 500 million or what ever and see what he can do...kinda silly. No disrespect to Mr.Rutan but he just did was NASA had done 50 years ago. Their sub-orbital flight went what 328KM? Sorry can't remember the exact figure. Some one care to look up the elevation of the orbit of ISS? I don't think even Burt Rutan can make that leap on $500 million....but I do have to admit it would be cool to watch him try. Anyways, I say let NASA do its thing. Atleast they are looking at all the options..

    Let the flaming begin.
  • by Nano2Sol ( 806181 ) * on Friday October 29, 2004 @02:32PM (#10666498) Homepage
    If the reader had read the MSNBC story they might have understood that NASA commsioned several studies on different scenarios for the Shuttle. Since NASA commissions studies all the time on options for all its programs, so this study shouldn't come as any surprise.

    To follow the space election political discussion including the fate of the shuttle from both sides, read this thread on NASA Watch [nasawatch.com].

  • by amightywind ( 691887 ) on Friday October 29, 2004 @03:09PM (#10666878) Journal

    If the Chinese are invited into the partnership, they also can transport personnel aboard their Shenzhou manned spacecraft, whose second orbital flight is expected next year.

    This is absurd speculation for a country that has recently hijacked an American surveillance plane from international airspace. The US has already balked at space collaboration with China. It is unlikely to make gratuitous gestures like this until they institute democracy and stop threatening to invade Taiwan.

    As for retiring the shuttle, it would be moronic to do this without identifying the new launchers and spacecraft to take its place. The point wasn't addressed in this rather superficial article. I don't think a repeat of the 6 year stand down from manned spaceflight that occurred between Apollo and the shuttle is acceptable.

"Being against torture ought to be sort of a multipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer, as amended by Jeff Daiell, a Libertarian

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