- Joined
- Feb 6, 2008
- Messages
- 38,965
- Reaction score
- 3,937
- Points
- 203
- Location
- Wolfsburg
- Preferred Pronouns
- Sire
Well, they think that the rocket isn't really intended to fly - it's there just to siphon money from the commercial development programme and thus make it harder for others to compete.
I don't know how true is that, I am just re-phrasing what I read there.
They then acting pretty stupid and maybe too much used to NASA work ethics. EADS is not known for not building stuff, they are known for redesigning and delaying roll out. :lol: (And of course, such a presentation already costs a fair share of money, that has to be earned again)
I am pretty sure, that such a launcher would be evil for the smaller companies, because it is two large companies joining forces and reusing the infrastructure that should be redesigned for their needs. Of course it steals "their money, that they could potentially have".
But seeing it in the light of a bit more realpolitik, such a blend of STS and Ariane technology could be the better gap filler. It must not be a program for all eternity, but it offers a good transition. It buys the USA time to restructure the spaceflight program, has US hardware still flying from KSC, so it is no longer about "burning KSC down and building it back up again", and it keeps a large part of ATK in business, which is politically not the worst.
And there is of course another problem: The ATK+EADS idea is perfectly following the rules. It is not illegal, you would have to make Orbital Sciences, LMM and Boeing quit the programs as well and leave only SpaceX if you would change the rules that could ban EADS. It is a bit hard to make spaceflight without having a major share of the parts come from abroad.
Last edited: