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Fri, 26 Apr 91 02:12:50 -0400 (EDT)
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Date: Fri, 26 Apr 91 02:12:44 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: SPACE Digest V13 #465
SPACE Digest Volume 13 : Issue 465
Today's Topics:
Re: Saturn V and the ALS
Re: slight problems with HLV's in general, Saturn or not...
Re: Saturn V blueprints
Charting a decade of the Shuttle
Re: Uploading to alpha Centauri
Re: Saturn V blueprints
Re: Saturn V blueprints
Re: Atlas Centaur bites the big one, 4/18
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Subject: Re: slight problems with HLV's in general, Saturn or not...
In article <29852@rouge.usl.edu> dlbres10@pc.usl.edu (Phil Fraering) writes:
>
>Is a heavy-lift launch vehicle really needed? The vast majority of
>commercial payloads are rather small compared to the payloads of the
>large vehicles being developed, and I suspect that it would be easy to
>break up the larger payloads into smaller payloads assembled on-site
>if the smaller vehicle proved cheaper.
1. We already have medium and light launchers (not that they couldn't
be made cheaper and more cost effective). And mayhap current commercial
payloads are sized to fit these existing launchers 'cause if they aren't
the only game in town, waiting for the shuttle is a pain. (And now no
commercial launches from the shuttle now, right?)
2. Very large payloads are, in part, nonexistent because of the nonexistent
launchers to toss them overhead.
3. Some big projects could reasonably be done with *big* launchers, while
breaking them up into parcels of smaller packages (to be assembled later?)
may turn out to be less than delightful.
--
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The only drawback with morning is that it comes
at such an inconvenient time of day.
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Date: 25 Apr 91 15:11:06 GMT
From: snorkelwacker.mit.edu!think.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!utzoo!kcarroll@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (Kieran A. Carroll)
Subject: Re: Saturn V blueprints
aws@iti.org (Allen W. Sherzer) writes:
> >Summary: Fixed price for Procurement = good.
> > Fixed price for Development = foolish.
>
> The Pentagon wouldn't agree. Nither would Lockheed which just
> developed the winning ATF design on cost and on schedule. Their
> Skunk Works has developed the worlds most complex aircraft in
> short order on schedule and budget. It takes good management but
> > it is routinely done.
I saw a show on PBS a few nights ago (may have been the McNeil/Lehrer
Newshour) talking about the ALS development and fly-off competition.
It was indeed done under fixed price contracts, of about $600M
as I recall. However, apparently >both< prime contractors spent
more like $1B each on the project. I don't know about the schedule,
but they blew the budget significantly...according to Norman Augustine,
only 25% of the 81 major programs that he studied (in Chapter 37 of
the revised version of "Augustine's Laws", 'Hope Springs Infernal')
exceeded their proposed budget by more than this fraction (67%).
This doesn't necessaarily reflect on the management of the programs,
by the way. It >may< have been a calculated business risk.
Both companies would likely have been willing to take this risk,
given the size of the production contract that they stood to win
if their design was chosen by the USAF. So, the loser has to swallow
a $400M marketing cost...
--
Kieran A. Carroll @ U of Toronto Aerospace Institute