Mike!
Official Ponylandistanian National Treasure. Re
If your end goal s space tourism, you darn well better make the transport as cool looking as possible.
For space tourism, the view out the window matters much more than what the window frame looks like. But when the view out the window is purely imaginary, as it is today, the window frame is all we have to go on. Their end goal may be space tourism but their immediate goal is reassuring investors that they'll eventually get there, and devoting effort to making demonstrations sexy is an ironically counterproductive way of doing that.If your end goal s space tourism, you darn well better make the transport as cool looking as possible.
I'll put this here since this thread already covers the Dragon V2 vehicle. After the long, dry spell at NASA following the decommissioning of the Shuttles in 2011, this video to me is very impressive, quite reminiscent of early Apollo. Again, this is a new, human-carrying craft, the first in the US since the Shuttles.
Dragon V2 Pad Abort Test
Well, actually I guess NASA's Orion would be the first. However, it hasn't done anything since the flight test last December whereas Dragon's test program will continue until it routinely carries people. There is no plan that I am aware of for Orion to carry people for several years. The race now is whether Dragon or CST-100 will carry people first.
I had a funny feeling before I clicked those links that you were going to go Space: 1999 on us. Not that I blame youFuturistic spacecraft? Can we have one of these yet? This one's pretty spiffy too!
I had a funny feeling before I clicked those links that you were going to go Space: 1999 on us. Not that I blame you![]()
That's not entirely true. Just because it hasn't been launched since doesn't mean work on it has stopped.
Let's go over the history again.
The Shuttle program was pretty much an upgrade of the Dyna Soar program. Everyone wanted to build shuttles: Soviet Buran, Japanese HOPE, and ESA Hermes. But after losing two Shuttles, these have all been scrapped. The only program still in existence is Dream Chaser which is not funded past early next year.
I was looking at the Dragon V2 mockup and thinking that it looked good enough to use as a movie set. Certainly I don't recall another craft with an exposed geodetic frame or flat screen monitor. The carbon fiber seats aren't too bad either. I assume the look is functional rather than artistic.
This vehicle is getting ready for a static test. Hopefully the first actual test with crash dummies will be before year's end.
Well, the problem is that the X-37B is probably being used as a reconnaissance drone. It doesn't have a crew and it is only half the size of the tiny Dream Chaser. Boeing did a paper proposal of the X-37C version with crew and close to the size of Dream Chaser. However, this was apparently dropped in favor of Boeing's CST-100 craft.A history of shuttle programs without the X-37 is a history not worth having.
http://www.mars-one.comDon't know about Mars One
We can talk about this. First of all, the rocket will never be named Big Falcon Rocket so the BFR acronym is useless. And saying that it is about briefing notes is ridiculous. Raptor has been in development since 2009 and is currently in component testing at Stennis.but the SpaceX plan for Mars is using the Mars Colonial Transporter (MCT) launched by the BFR, both of which only exist as a few briefing notes at present, but will just use improvements on existing technology, nothing wildly new.
Even if it were doing reconnaissance*, why is this a problem?Well, the problem is that the X-37B is probably being used as a reconnaissance drone.
Why does the size or crew complement matter? It's a shuttle, and it's doing useful work. I think it's notable that it doesn't need to be big or to be crewed, in order to achieve the purpose of a shuttle craft.It doesn't have a crew and it is only half the size of the tiny Dream Chaser. Boeing did a paper proposal of the X-37C version with crew and close to the size of Dream Chaser. However, this was apparently dropped in favor of Boeing's CST-100 craft.
If Boeing was actually serious about a crewed shuttle type vehicle, they could presumably team up with Sierra Nevada and use their considerable X-37 experience to get Dream Chaser off the ground. That isn't happening so X-37 is currently dead-end and Dream Chaser isn't much further along.
That's a problem because specialty recon vehicles like U-2 and SR-71 never had to meet realistic standards of operational cost or reliability. General spacecraft do have to meet these standards.Even if it were doing reconnaissance*, why is this a problem?
Because we are talking about human-rated craft. This pretty much requires a human crew.Why does the size or crew complement matter? It's a shuttle, and it's doing useful work. I think it's notable that it doesn't need to be big or to be crewed, in order to achieve the purpose of a shuttle craft.
No, not really. The Air Force can always throw money at a problem. The fact that no country on the planet is currently pursuing a human-rated shuttle craft should tell you something though.I think you're making a mistake to leave it out of your assessment of the current state of the art in applied shuttle technology. The fact that the US Air Force is currently getting shuttle work done without needing a larger, crewed shuttle should tell you something about the current and future state of play in the field of shuttle operations.
Well, again, I've only been talking about human-rated vehicles. The Dawn Probe at Ceres is a nice vehicle but it too is unrelated to this discussion.Size is only important to the intended purpose of the space craft. Bigger is only better if bigger is what's actually needed to fulfill the purpose. The same is true for a crew. Why is it important to only consider shuttles that meet some sort of size or crew requirement? Are you making an arbitrary distinction, or a meaningful one?
The answer to that is probably, no. Again, the fact that NASA did not move Dream Chaser to the next round of funding as it did with Dragon V2 and CST-100 should tell you something.Why on earth should Boeing be serious about a crewed shuttle? Does Boeing need one? Are any of Boeing's customers asking for one? Is there a clear market opportunity for a large crewed shuttle, that Boeing would be wise to exploit?
Much like SS Great Eastern which successfully laid the transatlantic cable and then was scrapped because it wasn't useful for anything else.In what way is the X-37 a dead end? First, it's an operational spacecraft that does what it was designed to do. Second, it's doing useful work. Even if nothing else comes of it, it's already a successful end result in its own right.
This only matters if it becomes human-rated at some point.Third, it is giving the Air Force operational experience with shuttle craft. Fourth, it is giving the Air Force operational experience with autonomous spaceflight systems. Far from being "dead ends", these are both open paths to future developments and applications.
It has been claimed that a 75% scale Dream Chaser will be developed. I guess we'll see.What if Dream Chaser is the dead end?
It doesn't matter. If it isn't being used for recon then it is just an experimental vehicle and therefore even lower value.*I think the claim that the X-37 is "probably being used as a reconnaissance drone" is implausible, primarily due to its size, but this question has been debated elsewhere on the Forum, and doesn't need to be re-hashed here.