So...NASA has been working on the Ares I launcher for their Orion spaceship for about 3 years now.
Idea one was that they would use a shuttle solid rocket booster (SRB) as the 1st stage and a liquid fueled 2nd stage to put the Orion in orbit. Here it would mate up with an Earth Departure State (moon-drive) and the lunar lander for the trip to the moon.
Supposed advantage of using the SRB: reusable (like with the shuttle), cheaper (already developed) and existing service facilities are already in place. The same solid fuel engines, using the same fuel, would be used as strap-on boosters for Ares V, the heavy lifter that would launch the EDS and lunar lander.
Sounded like a plan.
However, Ares I and Orion have had a fitful development; Ares I has been premised on the idea of being able to lift 26 metric tons to low earth orbit (LEO). Ares I didn't have enough power and Orion was too heavy. Correcting for these little oopsies has been a trip. Orion has been reduced in size from 5.5 to 5.0 meters and rumors are it may be going down to 4.5.
Ares I has gone from 4 segments (fuel "pellets") to 5, essentially making it a new rocket in about 8 versions since day one. Of course this makes it heavier complicating the weight of Orion.
Meanwhile the 'troops' (line engineers) at NASA came up with an alternative called "Direct" that uses shuttle parts unmodified and can lift much more than Ares I. NASA management of course has circled the wagons and has been resisting any and all attempts to scrap Ares I for Direct.
Today NASA management jumped the shark: they ordered a secret trade study for Ares I;
1. SRB's NOT reusable, violating a primary goal for Ares I and Ares V.
This of course will increase the cost/launch enormously.[B]
2. total redesign of the exhaust nozzle.
More expensive again.
3. DIFFERENT FUELS for Ares I and Ares V are now a possibility.
Costly (>development time/$) and unproven.
JEEEZZZZ.........
Now for the interesting part.
SpaceX just posted the specs for their upcoming Falcon 9 Heavy booster (see my post in Science & Military). Seems its LEO capability is 28 metric tons, 2 more metric tons more than Orion needs.
Cost: $90 million vs. at least $1 billion for an Ares I launch.
Would NASA scrap the troubled Ares I and help SpaceX speed development of Falcon 9 Heavy?
Not on a bet. They have their heads stuck up the rear end of ATK, the company that makes the SRB's
Idea one was that they would use a shuttle solid rocket booster (SRB) as the 1st stage and a liquid fueled 2nd stage to put the Orion in orbit. Here it would mate up with an Earth Departure State (moon-drive) and the lunar lander for the trip to the moon.
Supposed advantage of using the SRB: reusable (like with the shuttle), cheaper (already developed) and existing service facilities are already in place. The same solid fuel engines, using the same fuel, would be used as strap-on boosters for Ares V, the heavy lifter that would launch the EDS and lunar lander.
Sounded like a plan.
However, Ares I and Orion have had a fitful development; Ares I has been premised on the idea of being able to lift 26 metric tons to low earth orbit (LEO). Ares I didn't have enough power and Orion was too heavy. Correcting for these little oopsies has been a trip. Orion has been reduced in size from 5.5 to 5.0 meters and rumors are it may be going down to 4.5.
Ares I has gone from 4 segments (fuel "pellets") to 5, essentially making it a new rocket in about 8 versions since day one. Of course this makes it heavier complicating the weight of Orion.
Meanwhile the 'troops' (line engineers) at NASA came up with an alternative called "Direct" that uses shuttle parts unmodified and can lift much more than Ares I. NASA management of course has circled the wagons and has been resisting any and all attempts to scrap Ares I for Direct.
Today NASA management jumped the shark: they ordered a secret trade study for Ares I;
1. SRB's NOT reusable, violating a primary goal for Ares I and Ares V.
This of course will increase the cost/launch enormously.[B]
2. total redesign of the exhaust nozzle.
More expensive again.
3. DIFFERENT FUELS for Ares I and Ares V are now a possibility.
Costly (>development time/$) and unproven.
JEEEZZZZ.........
Now for the interesting part.
SpaceX just posted the specs for their upcoming Falcon 9 Heavy booster (see my post in Science & Military). Seems its LEO capability is 28 metric tons, 2 more metric tons more than Orion needs.
Cost: $90 million vs. at least $1 billion for an Ares I launch.
Would NASA scrap the troubled Ares I and help SpaceX speed development of Falcon 9 Heavy?
Not on a bet. They have their heads stuck up the rear end of ATK, the company that makes the SRB's
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