Nice, modular concept, essentially nothing more than 3 medium Delta IV's strapped together. Should make a good alternative to the Titan IV.CNN wrote:Boeing test-launches mammoth new rocket
Delta 4 Heavy designed to lift large military satellites into orbit
Tuesday, December 21, 2004 Posted: 7:12 PM EST (0012 GMT)
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- A massive new Boeing rocket lumbered from its seaside pad Tuesday on a mission to prove the vehicle is capable of lofting super-sized military satellites into orbit.
Flames and smoke engulfed the lower portion of the 232-foot-tall, triple-bodied rocket as it labored to clear the launch tower before gaining momentum and shooting skyward.
The successful launch was a critical milestone for the Delta 4 Heavy, which features three of the company's common core boosters joined side-by-side. Fired simultaneously, each of the three hydrogen-powered Rocketdyne-built RS-68 main engines generates 17 million horsepower, about the equivalent of 11 Hoover Dams.
After the three main boosters fell away, a Pratt & Whitney-built RL10 liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen-powered second stage kicked in to boost the payloads into orbit.
Identical boosters had flown individually on three earlier Delta 4 Medium launches. Tuesday's launch marked the first time the boosters have been flown in the triple-body configuration.
"This launch system is the most complex system to come to the pad since the space shuttle," said Dan Collins, vice president of Boeing's expendable launch systems.
The Air Force paid Boeing $140 million for the demonstration flight. Rather than risk an expensive military satellite aboard the new rocket, a dummy payload designed to replicate future military satellites rode atop the rocket and collected information that will be used to evaluate the mission. The rocket also carried two tiny experimental satellites designed by university students.
Air Force Col. Mark Owen said the launch was a milestone in the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle program, funded by the Air Force to create a new generation of rockets to lift heavy military payloads into orbit.
"America has a lot riding on this," he said.
Boeing sucessfully test launches Delta 4 Heavy rocket
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Boeing sucessfully test launches Delta 4 Heavy rocket
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Ach! that was a mildly amusing typo I made in the thread title .
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"Making fun of born-again Christians is like hunting dairy cows with a high powered rifle and scope." --P.J. O'Rourke
"A man who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself." --J.S. Mill
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"Making fun of born-again Christians is like hunting dairy cows with a high powered rifle and scope." --P.J. O'Rourke
"A man who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself." --J.S. Mill
Does it bother anyone else thinking of a Delta as a heavy?
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Yeah, but its good application of available technology. It seems like a Russian thing, rather than our usual expensive shit model for attacking problems.
Might Delta Heavy be a booster for the CEV for orbital missions?
Might Delta Heavy be a booster for the CEV for orbital missions?
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I don't mean it bothers me to use a Delta as a heavy. I just find it funny that Deltas were once tiny and they are now giant.
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I miss the Saturn V.Uraniun235 wrote:Nothing less than a Saturn V is 'heavy' in my mind'.Howedar wrote:Does it bother anyone else thinking of a Delta as a heavy?
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I miss Energia.
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I saw this launch. It was interesting in that it moved very slowly, there was no contrail until it got a good bit up into the sky, and (compared to most other rocket launches I've seen), it took a long time for the first rumblings of the thing to reach me.
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Amen.Illuminatus Primus wrote:I miss Energia.
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Everyone misses the Saturn V.Patrick Degan wrote:I miss the Saturn V.
Did you know that the Shuttle was going to be part of a two tier system
in the 1980s? The STS would handle the mundane cargo tasks of ferrying
up food and other stuff to orbiting stations, while the Block II run of
Saturn Vs (with tail fins deleted) would have handled heavy lift.
Unfortunately the Block II run of Saturn V was cancelled, leaving
NASA holding the bag with the shuttle alone.
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Nova.
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Strictly speaking, Nova was the name for any number of follow-own designs to the S-V, including the 8x F-1A design.Illuminatus Primus wrote:Nova.
They were also forced to go to the USAF to get funding assistance, which meant that the STS was greatly enlarged to let it lift large satellites and fly a polar track. Those cost overruns also forced them to go to the tile design rather than something like Dyna-Soar's all-metal design.MKSheppard wrote: Everyone misses the Saturn V.
Did you know that the Shuttle was going to be part of a two tier system
in the 1980s? The STS would handle the mundane cargo tasks of ferrying
up food and other stuff to orbiting stations, while the Block II run of
Saturn Vs (with tail fins deleted) would have handled heavy lift.
Unfortunately the Block II run of Saturn V was cancelled, leaving
NASA holding the bag with the shuttle alone.
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Vaguely. I remember that at the time, the Space Shuttle was all they talked of. I also remember all the promises they made for the STS: 100 flights a year, two-week turnaround time for each vehicle, super-cheap satelite launch costs. I've still got the NASA press-kits for the Shuttle which were issued back then. My father used to bring home all sorts of neat NASA PI material from work for me. By the time he and his team at Michoud had any involvement with the Space Shuttle programme, the Saturn V was dead and buried. So was Apollo, and Skylab, and any talk of a manned Mars mission.MKSheppard wrote:Everyone misses the Saturn V.Patrick Degan wrote:I miss the Saturn V.
Did you know that the Shuttle was going to be part of a two tier system
in the 1980s? The STS would handle the mundane cargo tasks of ferrying
up food and other stuff to orbiting stations, while the Block II run of
Saturn Vs (with tail fins deleted) would have handled heavy lift.
Unfortunately the Block II run of Saturn V was cancelled, leaving
NASA holding the bag with the shuttle alone.
A real pity.
When ballots have fairly and constitutionally decided, there can be no successful appeal back to bullets.
—Abraham Lincoln
People pray so that God won't crush them like bugs.
—Dr. Gregory House
Oil an emergency?! It's about time, Brigadier, that the leaders of this planet of yours realised that to remain dependent upon a mineral slime simply doesn't make sense.
—The Doctor "Terror Of The Zygons" (1975)
—Abraham Lincoln
People pray so that God won't crush them like bugs.
—Dr. Gregory House
Oil an emergency?! It's about time, Brigadier, that the leaders of this planet of yours realised that to remain dependent upon a mineral slime simply doesn't make sense.
—The Doctor "Terror Of The Zygons" (1975)
My dad did control software for the SSME. IIRC, the original plan was four ten shuttles with a two-week turnaround time offering continuous flights (as Degan noted). Spiralling cost overruns and the amount of time it took to overhaul the shuttle due to its tiles killed its promise of cheap space travel, though
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I will now rage impotently at how the Saturn V is cheaper, lb to dollar to orbit, than the STS.
And a little more impotent rage for the fact we're still doing little chemical rockets.
And a little more impotent rage for the fact we're still doing little chemical rockets.
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Cheep? They where so optimistic it was expected that the shuttle program could actually turn a profit for NASA which would fund other programs, while still being cheaper then the alterative of expendable booster rockets.phongn wrote:My dad did control software for the SSME. IIRC, the original plan was four ten shuttles with a two-week turnaround time offering continuous flights (as Degan noted). Spiralling cost overruns and the amount of time it took to overhaul the shuttle due to its tiles killed its promise of cheap space travel, though
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No, what's infuriating is this:Patrick Degan wrote:A real pity.
Space Station Freedom wrote:The first launch would now take place in March 1994, the Station would be permanently manned from April 1995 onwards and be completed in March 1997 after 17 flights.
The problem with space exploration is that the US is fickle, we always cancelThe expanded 'Dual Keel' Space Station 'Freedom' made a final comeback in 1989 when President Bush proposed a Moon base by 2001-2005 and missions to Mars by 2018. NASA estimated the 'Dual Keel' lunar spacecraft support facility, additional power generators, crew modules for 14-16 astronauts etc. would cost at least $1 billion.
something that might work, sending back the engineers to the drawing boards
for another 10 years, upon when the newly redesigned idea Mk 2 is
near completition, it gets defunded or cancelled, sending them back
to the drawing boards again...
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"The present air situation in the Pacific is entirely the result of fighting a fifth rate air power." - U.S. Navy Memo - 24 July 1944
"The present air situation in the Pacific is entirely the result of fighting a fifth rate air power." - U.S. Navy Memo - 24 July 1944