A low cost, all European, manned launcher.

...
I argued in the thread Boeing's CST-100 that Boeing was likely spending only a few hundred million dollars on their CST-100 crew capsule. By the same token Sierra Nevada does not have several billion dollars at their disposal to privately develop their Dream Chaser spacecraft. So it quite likely also is only costing in the few hundred million dollar range to privately develop.
...

The Hermes was of similar shape to the Dream Chaser but about double the size. Then if they scaled its linear dimension down by half, it would be about the size of the Dream Chaser. So quite likely it would also be able to be developed as privately financed for a cost in the few hundred million dollars range as is the Dream Chaser.

Bob Clark
 
So quite likely it would also be able to be developed as privately financed for a cost in the few hundred million dollars range as is the Dream Chaser.

Add the R&D funding for the HL-20 to the Dream Chaser costs. When Hermes had been canceled, most technology that the Dream Chaser people use for free had not even been researched.

I can build a computer that would beat a 1980s Cray supercomputer today for a few hundred Euros. I wouldn't be able to do that even in 1990.

And Dreamchaser is still vaporware, BTW. Even The Kistler-K1 had more own flight hardware finished.
 
Add the R&D funding for the HL-20 to the Dream Chaser costs. When Hermes had been canceled, most technology that the Dream Chaser people use for free had not even been researched.
I can build a computer that would beat a 1980s Cray supercomputer today for a few hundred Euros. I wouldn't be able to do that even in 1990.
And Dreamchaser is still vaporware, BTW. Even The Kistler-K1 had more own flight hardware finished.

Vaporware is not hardware. The composite body shell is completed and tests are ongoing on the hybrid engine.

Bob Clark

---------- Post added at 05:38 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:34 PM ----------


I found this passage interesting:

[FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif]In the meantime, ESA's Dordain is expected to seek proposals from industry next month for building a next-generation launcher that would bend the 19-nation agency's industrial participation rules and facilitate more competition among companies in an effort to lower development costs. [/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif] [/FONT][FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif]“I have a meeting with the launcher industry at the beginning of April and after that we shall issue the invitation to tender for getting proposals from industry on a next-generation launch vehicle based on requirements coming from a European customer base,” Dordain said. [/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif] [/FONT][FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif]ESA's current approach to procurement relies on member states to ante up funding every three years or so for specific development programs, leaving ESA to build the project while guaranteeing a 90-percent return on investment for participating countries in the form of industrial work share. [/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif] [/FONT][FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif]Last year an outside audit of Ariane 5 manufacturers found that unless European governments agreed to bend ESA's geographic return rules, the agency would be hard pressed to find savings with a new rocket development. [/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif] [/FONT][FONT=arial, helvetica, sans-serif]Dordain believes the shift in acquisition approach would indeed lower the cost to develop a new launcher, a figure that France and Germany say is expected to fall somewhere between €3-5 billion.[/FONT]

So it looks like the ESA is subject to the same inefficiencies as is NASA. Then likewise transitioning to a more commercial approach should cut costs as is the case with NASA.


Bob Clark
 
Further on the ESA going to a more commercial approach for launch vehicles:

ESA to Launch Industry: Prove It
Posted by Amy Svitak 12:24 PM on May 04, 2012
ESA Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain says the 19-nation agency will select two industry proposals by the end of June to kick off year-long design studies under ESA's New European Launch Services (NELS) program.
"I am looking for ideas," Dordain said on the sidelines of the International Space Station Symposium in Berlin May 2-4. "The approach is to remove any constraint from industry."
Dordain says European launch vehicle providers are free to propose competitive acquisition strategies that flout ESA's geographical return rules, which guarantee a 90 percent return on investment in the form of workshare to member states that help finance specific projects.
"Companies are always complaining that the lack of competitiveness is coming from the constraints imposed by ESA and its member states," he says. "I tell them, I am offering you one window of opportunity. You just answer as you want, with zero constraints of geographical return, zero constraints of anything."

http://www.aviationweek.com/Blogs.a...f385Post:93aa704d-8b0c-4435-bba4-c6639139f13c


Bob Clark
 
Saw this quote of Arthur C. Clarke on sci.space.policy:

Every revolutionary idea seems to evoke three stages of reaction. They may be summed up by the phrases:

1- It's completely impossible.
2- It's possible, but it's not worth doing.
3- I said it was a good idea all along.

I feel SSTO's are at level 2 in Clarke's quote. Soon they will be at level 3.

Bob Clark
 
there is just the question, how revolutionary SSTOs actually are compared to TSTOs. ;)
 
Depends, a reusable system like the Skylon would be revolutionary I think (maybe with more payload even more), but if you're able to launch something with just one rocket stage it's probably worse than a TSTO.
 
A letter to the ESA:

===============================================
Hello. I was interested to read your report, "(title deleted)" from July 2011. On page 65 it states:

"The HHSC appears as the most promising launch concept:
– The current design clearly shows the advantages of a single High Thrust Engine approach
yielding less costly propulsion systems."

Other reports I read also suggest producing a staged combustion engine at about twice the thrust of the Vulcain. This would be a large engine at about the thrust of the space shuttle main engines(SSME) using also the complex and expensive staged combustion cycle of the SSME. The SSME of course was quite an expensive development process for the U.S. How convenient for EADS Astrium and the other Ariane 5 contractors that the recommended format for the NGL is the most expensive one!

The idea that this would be a less expensive proposal than using just two or three Vulcains on the Ariane 5 core stage is highly dubious. In your report and in other reports I've seen this claim is simply stated without given any comparison to the multi-engine Vulcain case. This in itself is highly questionable. I have to wonder why the multi-Vulcain approach among all those various other ones that are considered is not even evaluated.

Your report stated the single engine concept has proven to be less costly. Really? With ArianeSpace requiring a 100 million Euro subsidy every year, without which it would go bankrupt?? Every other space agency in the world, the U.S., Russia, China, India, has found it cost effective to use multi-engine stages. It is highly dubious that the ESA has discovered a great cost saving approach in always using a single engine that no other space agency grasps, yet at the same time ArianeSpace has to be propped up by megamillions every year because this approach has not proven to be cost effective.

I've seen in other reports an attempt to compare this EADS Astrium suggestion (I call it that because it appears that what's most beneficial to EADS Astrium is what's most beneficial to the ESA) to the Delta-IV model. That argument does not hold water either. The Delta-IV could have been launched using two SSME's. However, the SSME is a quite expensive engine meant to be reusable with high thrust using the most expensive cycle in staged combustion. The U.S. developed the RS-68 for the Delta-IV to get an expendable engine with fewer parts and using the simpler and cheaper gas generator cycle, the same cycle the Vulcain uses. It is also important to note in regards to cost it is only 1 and 1/2 times the thrust of the SSME, not twice the thrust, which also saved on cost.

But with the suggestion to develop a staged combustion engine at twice the thrust of the Vulcain, the ESA is reversing this logic. Because this engine will be using the most expensive combustion cycle while having twice the thrust of the Vulcain it very likely will cost more than two Vulcains, *plus* you have added on that very large development cost for this large engine.

Another argument made for the large, high performance engine is that it gives options in the size of the payloads launched. For instance, the cores could be combined a la the Delta Heavy. However, the multi-engine Ariane also has this capability. In fact, as a single stage it could launch small payloads also, giving ArianeSpace another market for launches. I have also done a preliminary calculation that two such cores with the usual Ariane 5 upper stage could launch ca. 16 mT. And with cross-feed fueling, which can increase payload about 25%, you could get the 20 mT capability of the current Ariane 5.

An additional big problem with the large, expensive single engine approach is that it is expected to come into use in the 2020 to 2025 time frame. The multi-Vulcain approach on the other hand probably could be implemented within 2 to 3 years. I would have no objection to the larger, higher performance engine being used at that later time for a *larger* stage as long as for *now* the multi-Vulcain approach is used.

It might be objected the ESA could not afford both. But SpaceX has shown that as largely privately financed launchers can be developed for markedly reduced costs than for government developed ones. It was able to develop the nine engine, not just two or three, Falcon 9 for ca. $300 million, and this included the costs of developing a whole new engine and a whole new stage. It is larger in all of number of engines, payload capacity, gross mass, dry mass, number of stages, etc. than the multi-Vulcain Ariane core stage would be. Plus there is also the key fact the engine and stage already exist for the multi-Vulcain so you don't have that development cost.

Quite frankly if EADS Astrium couldn't figure out how to add on one to two engines onto the Ariane 5 core *privately financed* for less than the $300 million SpaceX spent to develop the *entire* Falcon 9, then they are doing something wrong and should ask SpaceX to do it for them. But there is no doubt in my mind that the European engineers are at least as smart as the SpaceX engineers if not smarter and can do it in a low cost fashion if they have to.

Yes, if they have to. EADS Astrium and the ESA are in a partnership. The ESA needs EADS Astrium for their launchers and spacecraft, but EADS Astrium needs the ESA for its aerospace division. Then one way the ESA could encourage EADS Astrium to privately finance the conversion of the Ariane core to multi-engines is to agree to pay for the development of the larger, higher performance engine for that later time frame.

Considering the size of the Ariane core stage compared to the entire Falcon 9 rocket, I suspect this conversion could be done, privately paid for, for under $100 million, really no problem at all for EADS Astrium to finance it themselves. But there is a very important way EADS Astrium could attract financing from outside investors. Reports recently are that Europe has given up on plans of an indigenous manned spaceflight capability because of cost. But SpaceX has shown and NASA has confirmed with its commercial crew program that manned launchers and spacecraft can be developed for costs in the few hundred million dollars range as privately financed, perhaps with governmental seed money.

Then a quite important advantage of the multi-Vulcain Ariane approach is that both the single stage and two stage versions can be used for manned launchers. So this would provide Europe with a manned spaceflight capability at a short time frame and at low cost. This is clearly something that could attract outside investors.

To summarize, the ESA should make a public accounting of the comparison of the multi-Vulcain approach compared to the new large, expensive engine approach for a new launcher. Evidence from other space agencies suggests the multi-engine approach can be cost effective. The ESA should encourage EADS Astrium to privately finance the conversion. Lastly, and most importantly, the multi-engine approach can provide Europe with a manned spaceflight capability in a short time frame.



Robert Clark


c.f.,

A low cost, all European, manned launcher.
« on: March 09, 2012, 07:14:49 pm »
http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,14692.msg146544.html#msg146544

Re: A low cost, all European, manned launcher.
« Reply #21 on: March 22, 2012, 04:27:58 pm »
http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,14692.msg147801.html#msg147801


===============================================
 
Last edited:
Strategic error: Having all your references on a dubious forum.
 
Perhaps I should have used this one instead.

Bob Clark ;)

if you want to be convincing, try it with "Get a cheap homepage, install a cheap CMS, fill it with enough content to hide that it is cheap".
 
A letter to the ESA:

===============================================
...
To summarize, the ESA should make a public accounting of the comparison of the multi-Vulcain approach compared to the new large, expensive engine approach for a new launcher. Evidence from other space agencies suggests the multi-engine approach can be cost effective. The ESA should encourage EADS Astrium to privately finance the conversion. Lastly, and most importantly, the multi-engine approach can provide Europe with a manned spaceflight capability in a short time frame.

Robert Clark


c.f.,

A low cost, all European, manned launcher.
« on: March 09, 2012, 07:14:49 pm »
http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,14692.msg146544.html#msg146544

Re: A low cost, all European, manned launcher.
« Reply #21 on: March 22, 2012, 04:27:58 pm »
http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,14692.msg147801.html#msg147801

===============================================

I looked up references on the Japanese H-II rocket since I remembered it was hydrogen-fueled to see if it could be SSTO. I was surprised to see that JAXA in upgrading the H-IIA to the H-IIB, that they converted the single engine on the first stage to two-engines. Contrary to the ESA, they did this to save on costs rather than developing a whole new, larger engine:

Rocketing to the future.
http://www.gov-online.go.jp/pdf/hlj_ar/vol_0027e/05-07.pdf

Mitsubishi Heavy To Invest In Next-Generation Rocket.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo, Japan (AFX) Jun 14, 2006
http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Mitsubishi_Heavy_To_Invest_In_Next_Generation_Rocket.html

 The development cost for the conversion was 27 billion yen. But 5 billion yen of this was paid for by Mitsubishi Industries as prime contractor, as described in the second article. Note also that this 5 billion yen cost involved increasing the width of the tanks, which wouldn't be needed in the Ariane 5 case.  It is known that  increasing the width of the tanks involves a significant cost increase. Then we might estimate the cost as 22 billion yen, or $194 million by the exchange rate used in the second article without this tank width change. This is about what the ESA gave ArianeSpace last year as a subsidy.
 Note also JAXA was using the opposite of the financing ratio suggested by the SpaceX success and NASA's commercial crew program success, with most of the cost being paid for by the government and only a fraction being paid for by private financing. 
 Following the SpaceX model of the majority of the cost being privately financed, we might expect the cost to be cut by a factor of 5 to 10, so to $20 to $40 million.
 


    Bob Clark
 
Last edited:
It's difficult to compare Orion to Dragon. It's sort of like an apples/oranges situation. For one, Orion is about double the pressurized volume that Dragon is, and Orion will be a Cadillac vs Dragon being more of a Ford Focus. Also, Dragon, to my knowledge, isn't rated for deep space yet, where Orion is being designed specifically for those types of missions. Right now, Dragon is looking to delivery cargo and crew to LEO with long duration missions being possible down the road, with more development. I certainly think that at the end of the day, Dragon will be a deep space capable craft at a development cost far less than Orion. However, Orion will probably be a much more sophisticated craft due to the extra development time and funds vs the bare bones approach SpaceX takes.
 
A letter to JAXA , the Japanese Space Agency:

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello. I saw your IAF reports on the H-II and proposed H-III launchers. I
thought you might be interested in the letter to the ESA copied below. The key
question is one of cost. I looked up references on the H-II rocket since I
remembered it was hydrogen-fueled to see if it could be SSTO. I was surprised
to see that JAXA in upgrading the H-IIA to the H-IIB, that they converted the
single engine on the first stage to two-engines. Contrary to the ESA, they did
this to save on costs rather than developing a whole new, larger engine:

Rocketing to the future.
http://www.gov-online.go.jp/pdf/hlj_ar/vol_0027e/05-07.pdf

Mitsubishi Heavy To Invest In Next-Generation Rocket.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo, Japan (AFX) Jun 14, 2006
http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Mitsubishi_Heavy_To_Invest_In_Next_Generation_Rocket.html

The development cost for the conversion was 27 billion yen. But 5 billion yen
of this was paid for by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries as prime contractor as
described in the second article. Note also that this 5 billion yen cost
involved increasing the width of the tanks, which wouldn't be needed in the
Ariane 5 case. It is known that increasing the width of the tanks involves a
significant cost increase. Then we might estimate the cost as 22 billion yen,
or $194 million by the exchange rate used in the second article without this
tank width change. This is about what the ESA gave ArianeSpace last year as a
subsidy.
Note also JAXA was using the opposite of the financing ratio suggested by the
SpaceX success and NASA's commercial crew program success, with most of the
cost being paid for by the government and only a fraction being paid for by
private financing.
Following the SpaceX model of the majority of the cost being privately
financed, we might expect the cost to be cut by a factor of 5 to 10, so to
only $20 to $40 million for the conversion in the Ariane 5 case.

I was interested to see in one of your IAF reports you discussed the
possibility of manned launchers. I see also that you intend to make the H-III
be all liquid fueled. Solid-rocket boosters are problematical for manned
launchers because they can not be shut down. Perhaps you intend to use the
H-III for the purpose in that future time frame when it comes into use.
However, the H-IIB core stage can be a SSTO manned launcher in the current
time frame with small modifications. First the H-II core is not as well weight
optimized as the Ariane 5 core. You can improve that by using common bulkhead
design as used by the Ariane. Note this is a well understood lightweighting
method at this point, having been used back in the 1960's on the Apollo
cryogenic upper stages. Also, SpaceX has used it very effectively to give the
Falcon 9 first stage a 20 to 1 mass ratio.
You could also use aluminum-lithium alloy for the H-IIB core. This would cut
an additional 25% off the dry mass of the structure aside from the engines.
This would then give your stage an advantage over the Ariane 5 core since it
also does not currently use aluminum-lithium.
These structural changes are relatively low cost when you already have the
tooling in place for a certain diameter tank. You still though would have to
decrease the propellant load to lift off with only the two engines on the
stage without the side boosters. You can just fill the tanks partially to say
158 mT load, as used for example on the original version of the Ariane 5 core.
It would not cost too much to also cut down the length of the tanks
specifically for the 158 mT load. Lengthening or shortening tank size is not
too expensive as long as you use the same tooling for the same tank diameter.
However, you might also choose to add a third engine onto the core instead of
reducing the propellant load. This probably can be done for comparably low
cost or even less than adding the second one since you don't have the extra
expense of re-tooling for wider tank size.
In short JAXA, can in a short time frame join the group of manned space
flight agencies and at relatively low cost. Also at being the first to
demonstrate a SSTO vehicle JAXA will have accomplished a technical feat in
importance perhaps to rival Robert Goddards first flights with liquid-fueled
rockets.
The ESA already has the lightweight stages and moderately high efficiency
engines to do it. All they need to do is make the politically controlled
decision to add on a second engine to the Ariane 5 core stage. JAXA has the
advantage though in having already added on the second engine, and having more
efficient engines.

The only question now is who will be first to make the quantum leap to SSTO
launchers.


Bob Clark


==========================================================================
Hello. I was interested to read your report, "(title deleted)"
from July 2011. On page 65 it states:

"The HHSC appears as the most promising launch concept:
– The current design clearly shows the advantages of a single High Thrust
Engine approach yielding less costly propulsion systems."

Other reports I read also suggest producing a staged combustion engine at
about twice the thrust of the Vulcain. This would be a large engine at about
the thrust of the space shuttle main engines(SSME) using also the complex and
expensive staged combustion cycle of the SSME. The SSME of course was quite an
expensive development process for the U.S. How convenient for EADS Astrium and
the other Ariane 5 contractors that the recommended format for the NGL is the
most expensive one!
The idea that this would be a less expensive proposal than using just two or
three Vulcains on the Ariane 5 core stage is highly dubious. In your report
and in other reports I've seen this claim is simply stated without given any
comparison to the multi-engine Vulcain case. This in itself is highly
questionable. I have to wonder why the multi-Vulcain approach among all those
various other ones that are considered is not even evaluated.
Your report stated the single engine concept has proven to be less costly.
Really? With ArianeSpace requiring a 100 million Euro subsidy every year,
without which it would go bankrupt?? Every other space agency in the world,
the U.S., Russia, China, India, has found it cost effective to use
multi-engine stages. It is highly dubious that the ESA has discovered a great
cost saving approach in always using a single engine that no other space
agency grasps, yet at the same time ArianeSpace has to be propped up by
megamillions every year because this approach has not proven to be cost
effective.
I've seen in other reports an attempt to compare this EADS Astrium suggestion
(I call it that because it appears that what's most beneficial to EADS Astrium
is what's most beneficial to the ESA) to the Delta-IV model. That argument
does not hold water either. The Delta-IV could have been launched using two
SSME's. However, the SSME is a quite expensive engine meant to be reusable
with high thrust using the most expensive cycle in staged combustion. The U.S.
developed the RS-68 for the Delta-IV to get an expendable engine with fewer
parts and using the simpler and cheaper gas generator cycle, the same cycle
the Vulcain uses. It is also important to note in regards to cost it is only 1
and 1/2 times the thrust of the SSME, not twice the thrust, which also saved
on cost.
But with the suggestion to develop a staged combustion engine at twice the
thrust of the Vulcain, the ESA is reversing this logic. Because this engine
will be using the most expensive combustion cycle while having twice the
thrust of the Vulcain it very likely will cost more than two Vulcains, *plus*
you have added on that very large development cost for this large engine.
Another argument made for the large, high performance engine is that it gives
options in the size of the payloads launched. For instance, the cores could be
combined a la the Delta Heavy. However, the multi-engine Ariane also has this
capability. In fact, as a single stage it could launch small payloads also,
giving ArianeSpace another market for launches. I have also done a preliminary
calculation that two such cores with the usual Ariane 5 upper stage could
launch ca. 16 mT. And with cross-feed fueling, which can increase payload
about 25%, you could get the 20 mT capability of the current Ariane 5.
An additional big problem with the large, expensive single engine approach is
that it is expected to come into use in the 2020 to 2025 time frame. The
multi-Vulcain approach on the other hand probably could be implemented within
2 to 3 years. I would have no objection to the larger, higher performance
engine being used at that later time for a *larger* stage as long as for *now*
the multi-Vulcain approach is used.
It might be objected the ESA could not afford both. But SpaceX has shown that
as largely privately financed launchers can be developed for markedly reduced
costs than for government developed ones. It was able to develop the nine
engine, not just two or three, Falcon 9 for ca. $300 million, and this
included the costs of developing a whole new engine and a whole new stage. It
is larger in all of number of engines, payload capacity, gross mass, dry mass,
number of stages, etc. than the multi-Vulcain Ariane core stage would be. Plus
there is also the key fact the engine and stage already exist for the
multi-Vulcain so you don't have that development cost.
Quite frankly if EADS Astrium couldn't figure out how to add on one to two
engines onto the Ariane 5 core *privately financed* for less than the $300
million SpaceX spent to develop the *entire* Falcon 9, then they are doing
something wrong and should ask SpaceX to do it for them. But there is no doubt
in my mind that the European engineers are at least as smart as the SpaceX
engineers if not smarter and can do it in a low cost fashion if they have to.
Yes, if they have to. EADS Astrium and the ESA are in a partnership. The ESA
needs EADS Astrium for their launchers and spacecraft, but EADS Astrium needs
the ESA for its aerospace division. Then one way the ESA could encourage EADS
Astrium to privately finance the conversion of the Ariane core to
multi-engines is to agree to pay for the development of the larger, higher
performance engine for that later time frame.
Considering the size of the Ariane core stage compared to the entire Falcon 9
rocket, I suspect this conversion could be done, privately paid for, for under
$100 million, really no problem at all for EADS Astrium to finance it
themselves. But there is a very important way EADS Astrium could attract
financing from outside investors. Reports recently are that Europe has given
up on plans of an indigenous manned spaceflight capability because of cost.
But SpaceX has shown and NASA has confirmed with its commercial crew program
that manned launchers and spacecraft can be developed for costs in the few
hundred million dollars range as privately financed, perhaps with governmental
seed money.
Then a quite important advantage of the multi-Vulcain Ariane approach is that
both the single stage and two stage versions can be used for manned launchers.
So this would provide Europe with a manned spaceflight capability at a short
time frame and at low cost. This is clearly something that could attract
outside investors.

To summarize, the ESA should make a public accounting of the comparison of
the multi-Vulcain approach compared to the new large, expensive engine
approach for a new launcher. Evidence from other space agencies suggests the
multi-engine approach can be cost effective. The ESA should encourage EADS
Astrium to privately finance the conversion. Lastly, and most importantly, the
multi-engine approach can provide Europe with a manned spaceflight capability
in a short time frame.



Robert Clark


c.f.,

A low cost, all European, manned launcher.
« on: March 09, 2012, 07:14:49 pm »
http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,14692.msg146544.html#msg146544

Re: A low cost, all European, manned launcher.
« Reply #21 on: March 22, 2012, 04:27:58 pm »
http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,14692.msg147801.html#msg147801
=====================================================================================
 
Last edited:
Originally Posted by Urwumpe
The dry mass. Exactly that. Not the launch mass. And about 4 tons is the mass of the Dragon boiler plate, that was launched first, not the full spacecraft (with payload/crew and consumables) as launched to the ISS. That is somewhere between 10 tons and 13 tons (maximum payload of the Falcon 9), even without launch escape system. With launch escape system, 13 tons would even be almost the lower estimate.

I don't agree. The dry mass is given as 4 tons. Crew and consumables are considerably less than 4 additional tons!

Bob Clark

---------- Post added at 03:20 AM ---------- Previous post was at 02:52 AM ----------

Originally Posted by T.Neo
Actually, if the ESA wanted a manned spaceflight system, they'd human-rate their existing launcher (originally designed to be human-rated) and build a spacecraft utilising their already-existing ATV technology.
Not only far more technologically feasible, but actually physically possible (which is always a bonus ).

The problem is the estimated cost of man-rating the Ariane 5 was at several billion dollars. There is also the fact people have a distrust of solids as part of a manned launch system, which contributed to the Ares I not being well supported in the industry and probably to the negative decision on funding ATK's Liberty rocket proposal.


Bob Clark
 
I don't agree. The dry mass is given as 4 tons. Crew and consumables are considerably less than 4 additional tons!

Your opinion doesn't matter there. Again, four tons is not the dry mass of the Dragon spacecraft, but the published dry mass by SpaceX of the Dragon boilerplate payload, that was launched by a Falcon 9. I checked twice if SpaceX published any other mass property contrary to their business habits.

The Dragon capsule is advertised by SpaceX to be able to launch 6 tons of payload into LEO and return 3 tons of payload from LEO. both values are not considerably less than 4 tons and both values don't include propellant mass. (Yes, that means that using the performance of the Falcon 9 as limit, that the Dragon capsule weights about 8 tons without cargo)
 
Last edited:
Your opinion doesn't matter there. Again, four tons is not the dry mass of the Dragon spacecraft, but the published dry mass by SpaceX of the Dragon boilerplate payload, that was launched by a Falcon 9. I checked twice if SpaceX published any other mass property contrary to their business habits.
The Dragon capsule is advertised by SpaceX to be able to launch 6 tons of payload into LEO and return 3 tons of payload from LEO. both values are not considerably less than 4 tons and both values don't include propellant mass. (Yes, that means that using the performance of the Falcon 9 as limit, that the Dragon capsule weights about 8 tons without cargo)


???

Because the Dragon can carry 6 tons of payload does not mean it has to carry 6 tons of payload. If it can carry 6 tons of payload and the Falcon 9 can carry 10 tons, that implies the craft that actually flew has a mass without payload of 4 tons. Elon has said a person in the Dragon capsules that actually flew to space would have had a comfortable ride.


Bob Clark
 
The problem is the estimated cost of man-rating the Ariane 5 was at several billion dollars. There is also the fact people have a distrust of solids as part of a manned launch system, which contributed to the Ares I not being well supported in the industry and probably to the negative decision on funding ATK's Liberty rocket proposal.

Firstly, could you provide a source for that statement?

Secondly, how do you expect your development, with structural redesigns (accomodation for an extra engine, support of the LOX tank), pad alterations, etc, to be cheaper than a mere human-rating effort? If most of the cost of the human-rating certification is tied up in some sort of bureaucratic process, keep in mind that to get a human-rating certification, your vehicle will be required to go through that process as well.

Thirdly, do you realise the physical problems with your concept? Urwumpe described them quite well, and I will repost his statement here for reference;
Even if you assume that the structural mass does not increase for adding a second engine (which would), you would get less thrust force than weight force at sea level thrust (but only 11 kN). Even if you would launch without the 13 tons of Payload by the Dragon, a naked stage with magic mass-less fairing, the acceleration at launch would be 0.61 m/s² - after 100 seconds of flight, the rocket would finally pass 4 km altitude.

Without arguing over the mass of Dragon- or including Dragon in the launch stack at all, we see that this launcher has terribly poor performance. Regardless of whether Dragon masses 13 tons, or 9 tons, or 6 tons, it is unlikely to make orbit.

Also, the safety issues of solid motors are exaggerated (they actually have several reliability advantages). The main criticisms of Ares I came from it being meant for a task already performed by existing launchers, and the Griffin administration sticking with it even as its issues became increasingly clear and it put further restrictions on the Orion capsule.
 
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