Endeavour Launch Now Slated For Monday 55
For anyone camping in Florida through the series of delays in the shuttle Endeavour's launch, it may be nearly time to get out the earplugs and champagne: though there's a fair chance of yet another weather delay, for now the shuttle's final launch is slated for tomorrow. If you're thinking of driving in to catch a glimpse, good news — a Monday launch may mean a smaller crowd.
Godspeed, Endeavour. (Score:5, Interesting)
Godspeed, Endeavour. It's a real shame to retire these workhorses. Are they expensive? Yes. Are they exactly what was envisioned in the 70's? No. But, so what? They're still incredible machines that do things mankind has NEVER been able to do before.
The ISS? Wouldn't be possible without the Shuttle.
Hubble? Impossible without Shuttle.
They're workhorses, and it's a damned shame that we, as Americans, have gotten ourselves into such a political quagmire that we can't figure out how to keep man in space. Depressing.
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We also don't have a permanent manned presence at the bottom of the ocean... So what? It's hostile.
We do have thousands of people continuously in deep ocean via subs. Despite deep ocean being "hostile."
Re:Godspeed, Endeavour. (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, so? Mostly they're all there just lying in wait for the order to kill millions of other people. They're not really doing anything of great utility to the human race beyond being a deterrent to one group of humans murdering a specific other group of humans.
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Yeah, so? Mostly they're all there just lying in wait for the order to kill millions of other people.
It's still something that we're doing in deep sea contrary to the assertions of the "space nutter" AC who I replied to.
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They're not really doing anything of great utility to the human race beyond being a deterrent to one group of humans murdering a specific other group of humans.
Which incidentally is something of very great utility. It reminds me of the "What have the Romans done for us?" joke, based on a Monty Python skit from the movie, "Life of Brian," that was going around a few months back. In the skit, a group of Jewish revolutionaries has gathered to discuss strategy against the Roman occupation (roughly as of the First Century AD). So the leader asks "What have the Romans done for us?" One after another, the followers come up with a large number of things that the Romans ha
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They're not doing anything self-sustaining or commercially viable
Yet they are doing something that returns greater value than the cost.
which is what Space Nutters fervently believe space can be. (It won't. Ever).
Come on. Get an account. You post way too much to hide in ignominy.
Float around in free-fall while your body disintegrates
We have figured out artificial gravity. Even if permanent zero gravity turns out to remain unhealthy for humans, we can always generate artificial accelerations of one gee, which we already know is healthy.
while hoping the next shipment of instant oatmeal from Earth (Oh excuse me: "lowly mud ball") doesn't explode on launch?
Too bad that you can't possibly make more than one payload of oatmeal. I wonder, given the obvious hardship as described above, why astronauts so often appear to be havi
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I wouldn't call the normal operating depth of a military submarine as being 'deep ocean'. I don't know of any that have a test depth deeper than 400 metres, according to Wikipedia.
Re:Godspeed, Endeavour. (Score:4, Interesting)
Melodramatic? Can't think of anything more Melodramatic than stating rational adults think the shuttle program was and is a waste, and anyone who says different are bipolar misfits who cut themselves. How's this for melodramatic.
Shuttle Program...
Cost per year: $5 Billion
Total program cost: ~$175 Billion
Percent of annual Revenue: 0.1% - 0.75% over 35 years
Compare that to....
Cost of TARP: $300 Billion
Bush Stimulus: $172 Billion
Obama Stimulus: $862 Billion
Which one of those created jobs. Disregard your politics, ask yourself if it is more likely that the Shuttle program created more engineers and mechanics and pipe fitters and electricians and truck drivers and chemical mixers, than say TARP and its bankers.
Now for some other calculus. The space station was built so Russian scientists would have something to do other than build Nuclear bombs. I grew up in that world, and saw it fist hand as a teenager whose parents worked at White Sands. After the wall fell, one of those Russian scientists lived with us, and instead of building bombs and rockets, he built rockets and space stations.
Somehow our calculus assumes the current NASA engineers are just going to flip burgers and mow lawns. The disassumes that some of them may move to China, or elsewhere, and build rockets and, possibly, bombs... since those nations have no desire to build space stations.
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Shuttle Program...
Cost per year: $5 Billion
Total program cost: ~$175 Billion
Percent of annual Revenue: 0.1% - 0.75% over 35 years
Compare that to....
Cost of TARP: $300 Billion
Bush Stimulus: $172 Billion
Obama Stimulus: $862 Billion
Note that once you consider the time value of money and inflation, the Shuttle is comparable in cost to what you claim for TARP. Compare that to...
Cost of SpaceX development: 800 million so far.
That cost includes development of two launch vehicles; development of three rocket engines plus progress towards the Merlin 2, a rocket similar to the F-1 which powered the Saturn V's massive first stage; development of a manned vehicle including first launch and recovery; and seven launch attempts, the last fo
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Fair enough. I was mostly stating that I can still be 'rational' while preferring my government boondoggles to involve space shuttles instead of bank bailouts. I also wanted to point out that as far as 'boondoggles' are concerned, which one created more jobs?
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I also wanted to point out that as far as 'boondoggles' are concerned, which one created more jobs?
Honestly, I don't know if any of them, including the Shuttle, have done anything other than lose jobs. The others have obvious job-losing properties, namely, they take a lot of money from the US's future and spend it in the present. That might result in some jobs "created or saved" in the near future, but it's a net loss once you consider the long term.
The Shuttle took a lot of the best and brightest and spent their efforts on a pretty unproductive venue. Those people could have built their own companies
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NASA bore the initial development costs that would have been prohibitive for a commercial organisation setting out to put people in space. That work is done, and now commercial entities should rightly take the lead. I would guess that with the right conditions we can potentially go further, faster now than NASA ever could. Sure, the shuttles were important, but they were outdated the day of their first launch. It is time to move on.
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Yes and no. The time for industry to pick up the ball was in the eighties - the US and USSR had shown you can put a man into space, how to do it, where the biggest problems are and how to mitigate them. By the 1970, people had walked on the moon. By the mid seventies, everything was in place. That's when the shuttles were designed.
As it turns out, there's literally nothing in space. There's no conceivable economic gain to be had this quarter from sending people into space - and that's all that matters to
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"The time for industry to pick up the ball was in the eighties..."
From a purely logical perspective, this might be true. But there was no way it was going to happen, for at least two reasons: (1) the R&D expenses were considered to be too high for anyone but a government to take on, and (2) the government would never have let them.
"As it turns out, there's literally nothing in space. There's no conceivable economic gain to be had this quarter from sending people into space - and that's all that matters to big business."
Which is exactly the problem with American corporations today. In the past, many corporations because successful because they bet in the long term. This obsession with short-term profit has been a real problem for America. Yes, there are tim
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Sorry, bullshit. Just because you don't like the long term strategy doesn't mean there isn't one.
The "business acumen" on this site is frankly astounding for its absence.
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The short-term-profit obsession in American corporate culture has been well-known for years. It hardly as though I just made it up off the cuff.
Sure, there are exceptions. There are exceptions to nearly everything. (And by the way: I wasn't referring to "strategy", I was referring to their profit goals... not necessarily the same thing.)
But I'm not saying it because "I don't like" their long term profit goals; I'm saying it because of the general lack of same. I would have to know abo
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However that is also the problem... They were over-engineered and used too much new tech with no clear objective or familiarity with the demands of the hardware. Basically they lept forward when they would have been better off taking measured steps.
Re:Godspeed, Endeavour. (Score:5, Interesting)
Godspeed, Endeavour. It's a real shame to retire these workhorses. Are they expensive? Yes. Are they exactly what was envisioned in the 70's? No. But, so what? They're still incredible machines that do things mankind has NEVER been able to do before.
"But so what?" Two words: "opportunity cost." Let's keep in mind that everything we could have done with the Shuttle, we did by the time of the Challenger accident. The US developed a reusable launch vehicle and it used it. Hubble and the ISS did not require the Shuttle.
Hubble due to its mirror, required a vehicle with the fairing size of the Shuttle, but repairing it was unnecessary. We could have used the funding for Hubble repairs to instead make and launch more space telescopes.
The ISS, after being shrunk slightly in width, could have been launched on the Titan IV or the Delta IV Heavy. We could have also launched a much smaller Mir-sized space station for a small fraction of the cost of the ISS (no international "coopoeration") and have gotten most of the functionality of the ISS.
Finally, with the money we would have saved by discontinuing the Shuttle way back when (say 1990), we could have manned missions beyond LEO, research into low gravity (not zero gravity) effects, ISRU research on the Moon or Mars, etc. You know, things that actually advance our knowledge of and presence in space and on other worlds.
They're workhorses, and it's a damned shame that we, as Americans, have gotten ourselves into such a political quagmire that we can't figure out how to keep man in space. Depressing.
You ought to check out SpaceX's activities then. The Falcon Heavy, for example, is a game changer. If they can hit their price targets, they'll be launching payload for about a factor of 20 to 50 less than what the Shuttle can do and they can launch more mass than a Shuttle could launch.
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and have gotten most of the functionality of the ISS.
I thought most of the functionality was cut to save money, but the program couldn't be killed for political pork reasons...
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who only got rich by luck, and certainly not in space either!
Yes, it was only "luck" that Amazon happened to be founded by Bezos instead of you. It's only by "luck" that you weren't the founder of Paypal. I get the feeling you have not the slightest clue how a business runs.
Do the math, do the physics and do the economics. Who is going to go in space? To do what? With what money? Why? HOW?
Note that we don't need to "do the math" to see that there are already profitable activities in space. And the physics was done many decades ago, it's long since been proven viable, with real rockets not just physics calculations.
And my first point already covers some of the economics. Sure, a
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A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
So what is your take on several birds in the hand versus one? As I see it, the opportunity cost here is the sacrifice of a space program for the Shuttle launch vehicle. Sure you can claim that we'd either have the Shuttle or nothing at all, but I don't buy it. The NASA budget has been very stable since the cutbacks of the 70s.
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It would have taken *much* more than being shrunk slightly in width... None of the US (and hence Shuttle launched) ISS modules had any capability to self support or maneuver. So figure roughly 25% of their launch mass would have to bee parasitic (that is, required to support their survival until docked with the station, and unneeded afterwards), as opposed to essentially zero as they actually exi
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It would have taken *much* more than being shrunk slightly in width... None of the US (and hence Shuttle launched) ISS modules had any capability to self support or maneuver. So figure roughly 25% of their launch mass would have to bee parasitic (that is, required to support their survival until docked with the station, and unneeded afterwards), as opposed to essentially zero as they actually exist.
And most such modules were under 20 tons, meaning the launch vehicles I mentioned would be adequate for the purpose.
In some mirror universe where "most of" actually means "practically none of". In the same mirror universe, my PC-Jr has "most of" the functionality of my Athlon. Here in this universe, you also have to consider the problem of parasitic mass mentioned above.
Worse yet, you've forgotten the cost to develop and operate whatever you're planning on using for transporting crew to and from and supplies to your fantasy space station.
We'll use the same vehicles for crew and downmass. And development of crew vehicles and reentry containers won't dent the budget, if you spend it well. You might recall the SpaceX example I use on occasion. They certainly seem to have figured out how to keep development costs under control.
When you add up the costs required to deliver three station crew, return three station crew, and either delivering a module or delivering aa supply transport via expendables - you pretty much have paid for a Shuttle mission which can do all of those
Only if you ignore both that it looks like these companies can provide these services for much less than
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As usual, you either miss the point entirely or are stupid enough to not even comprehend the point. Module weight isn't the issue - the issue is that moving from the Shuttle makes the modules smaller, heavier, more complex, more expensive, and far, far less capable.
Without the Shuttle, your argument falls flat on the claim of being more expensive. Remember, $450 million per launch plus $2 billion per year? The modules would, of course, be slightly smaller due to fairing size restriction. As to heavier and more complex, I think the small increases in each would be more than compensated by the reduction in launch vehicle costs.
Here in the real universe, SpaceX is a recent development and utterly irrelevant to an ISS analog built with expendables in the 80's and 90's. Once again, you ignorance leads you to false conclusions.
SpaceX is the process of developing a manned ISS cargo vehicle.
In some fantasy universe where businesses don't bill for overhead. Or, in other words, once again your ignorance leads you astray.
Earth, for example. Most businesses don't bill other businesses for overhead.
We never 'needed' pretty much anything we've done so far as manned space is concerned. But if you mean that to be read as "we could have done everything the Shuttle did much cheaper", as abundantly and repeatedly demonstrated... you're wrong.
You h
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As I see it, NASA is out of touch with wh
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I'm of a mixed opinion on this. It's a beautiful machine and it's been in use for 60% of the history of the space program. The configuration isn't really that safe, it was kept alive to fulfill ISS commitments, with a drawdown of the program started in 2004 because of the safety issues. The main differentiation for the design is to be able to take satellites home, and I only recall that being done once, with the LDEF. It was helpful to fix Hubble, so you have 5 missions out of 134 that really used the c
I would have liked some Shuttle Cs. (Score:1)
The space shuttle program generated lots of real world data on reusable space launch vehicles. I would have liked much more experimentation with the shuttle Cs in the 1990s. An unmanned cargo launcher that could be allowed to fail might have gone some distance in lowering the cost of putting things into orbit.
I am opposed sticking expensive people into orbit, and that very expensive ISS.
ISS without the Shuttle (Score:5, Insightful)
The shuttle allowed for the segments to be large, cheep, and uncomplicated. Plus the entire integrated truss system witch is quite literally the backbone of the station could not have happened without the shuttle. You would have to get your power from smaller solar arrays, which would greatly complicate the power system. Same problem with the radiators.
The shuttle did a great job with the ISS,
To bad the ISS hasn't done a great job for science or exploration. It has just been a large overpriced diplomacy tool, mostly used to keep the Russian aerospace industry alive after the collapse so they wouldn't wonder off and wind up in china or Iran.
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If you want to launch station segments by themselves like the Russians do the segments become more expensive, smaller, and less capable because each segment has to be its own spaceship complete with guidance, altitude and attitude control, and docking capability. The shuttle allowed for the segments to be large, cheep, and uncomplicated.
The actual cost numbers don't match your assertion: Mir cost about $4.3B to build, while the ISS cost around $100B. (ISS's pressurized volume is only about twice Mir's)
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Everything built in Russia is cheaper.
Also, can you provide a source on those numbers. The only mir cost I could find did not say it was adjusted for inflation or not
It's not just a Monday launch (Score:2)
a Monday launch may mean a smaller crowd.
It's also a Monday after a two week delay. I ran into a family from Australia at Jetty Park for the Atlas 5 launch last week. The Atlas was their consolation launch after missing the space shuttle. Unfortunately for them a stray cloud scrubbed that one as well and they were on their way home in the morning.
They must have been the launch jinx because the Atlas went the next day.
Hotels still have rooms and there doesn't seem to be the normal influx of people
Drove My @$$ Off - 3rd Time is the charm (Score:2)
OK, so I'm sitting in a cheapass hotel in Daytona (hotels any closer are insanely expensive) keeping my fingers crossed that this time, the third time that I've driven down to the armpit of the US to watch a shuttle launch, this time, its gonna go.
you weather mavens can go f^#K yourselves - IT WILL LAUNCH THIS TIME!!!!
OK - off to bed, got to get up at 3AM to get to the KSC visitors center before they close it in........
Wish me luck, please...................
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It will be sad to see last shuffle fly, BUT.... (Score:2)
Now, the problem is that CONgress continues trying to make NASA into a jobs bill. They had their CONstellation, and thankfully, it was killed. Now, we have SLS, as laid out by CONgress on HOW TO BUILD A ROCKET, TIMELINES, and MONEY. Yes, t