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- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!eos!aio!arabia!hack
- From: hack@arabia.uucp (Edmund Hack)
- Subject: Re: DC vs. Shuttle capabilities
- Message-ID: <1993Jan6.202205.9211@aio.jsc.nasa.gov>
- Sender: Edmund Hack
- Organization: Lockheed ESC, Houston
- References: <C0B93G.Ksx.1@cs.cmu.edu>
- Distribution: sci
- Date: Wed, 6 Jan 1993 20:22:05 GMT
- Lines: 138
-
- Geez Phil, you make it sound like I _oppose_ the DC-X program, when I am
- actively supporting it. My basic opinion is that there are some risks
- involved that need proper assessment and management. The taxpayers
- should be informed as to the risks (and the rewards) and not just
- presented with rosy promises.
-
- In article <C0B93G.Ksx.1@cs.cmu.edu>
- pgf@srl03.cacs.usl.edu ("Phil G. Fraering") writes:
- >\2. There is limited experience with composite airframes in routine
- >/operational use.
-
- >Actually, you forgot the F-22/F-23 program as well. And the F-20.
-
- Please note the qualifiers aboove - "limited" and "routine". None of
- those are operational. I did forget the F-117, which has a significant
- composite %, but it is unclear if any load bearing members are
- composite.
-
- >I would also note that the kitplane market bit seems to indicate
- >that composites are *better* understood than you think, and aren't
- >being used more widely because of stodgy industry. It sounds like
- >they're more innovative than Boeing/MacDac et al. Perhaps they are.
-
- Actually, the kiplane market uses (mainly) the epoxy/fiberglass types of
- composites for wings, etc. The major objections to composites (as I
- have been told) is the increased cost compared to Al and Steel. There
- are also problems with assembly and repair of composite structures that
- increase costs. The major programs that use composite structural
- members that I am familiar with are the fleet ballistic missiles such as
- Trident. The aircraft industry is well aware of the potential of
- composites and will use them if they are cost effective.
-
- >After all, who flew around the world unrefuelled first?
- >
- >THANKFULLY _someone_ had the presence of mind to get Scaled Composites
- >involved on DC-X...
- >
-
- >\3. The throttled RL-10 with nozzle extender is a new and essentially
- >/untried engine. Engine development is more art than science and has a
- >\history of being subject to delays.
- >
- >I don't think so. There were no changes in any of the "wet" parts of
- >the engine, just the uncooled part of the nozzle.
-
- From what AvLeak reported, the throttling mechanism is not a trivial
- change to the engine and has had (thanks to an old Air Force contract)
- only a limited test series. The AF tests are what made the engines possible
- for this program. (That and some innovative financial deals - i.e. DC-X
- is leasing, not buying the engines.)
-
- >The stupid part
- >of the nozzle, as it were. If we can't do that, we should stay on
- >the ground.
-
- I would hardly call a deploying nozzle extender trivial either. It
- should be as simple as landing gear deployment, but it is a set of
- moving parts that need to work, will need inspection, repair, etc.
- >
- >\4. The servicing goals and rapid turnaround requirements of the vehicle
- >/are doable on paper, but have been held out as very risky by an
- >\independent study.
- >
- >An independent study which apparently had an axe to grind of its own,
- >if you're talking about the TAC study.
-
- Yes, this was the TAC study, which seemed to be unbiased. I read a two
- page executive summary that was done of it, so maybe the complete report
- was not unbiased. The conclusion of the report was that the SSX program
- could probably be done with some risk.
- >
- >\5. The weight margins on the vehicle are very tight, a historical source
- >/of problems in spacecraft and aircraft design.
- >
- >Hmmph. Maybe you should repeat this a couple more times for the people
- >who started this, you'll help them make everyone else think it's true.
-
- This has been a problem even for the "success oriented" Apollo program.
- Great work had to be done to get the LM down to reasonable weight. (I
- may be wrong, but I recall that Apollo had two LM contractors and one
- was eliminated due to design and weight problems. Henry or others
- probably remember.) Other aircraft have had this problem - my employer,
- Lockheed, had to take a $700 million writeoff on the P-3 Orion replacement
- program when it was cancelled, in part, due to weight growth. In a systems
- engineering class I attended, a "model" systems engineering organization
- for spacecraft and aircraft design (DOD model procurement) showed a
- position for a person to keep track of weight and balances.
-
- >
- >\Even given all that, the DC-X, DC-Y, DC-1 progression is a valid and
- >/prudent way to develop this class of vehicle. There is one other source
- >\of risk that is hard to quantify at this point: MacDac is an ailing
- >/company, in substantial risk of major cutbacks. Given that the company
- >\is throwing a lot of IR&D money into the project, it could founder on
- >/the rocks of a major financial crisis in the company. I also give
- >\MacDac high marks for the management approach, which I have heard the
- >/project manager give a talk on. It is modeled on the Lockheed "Skunk
- >\Works" approach.
- >
- >I think people were saying the same thing about Apple at about the time
- >they were developing the Mac. Everyone was talking about how they were
- >going to lose out to IBM. But who's in financial trouble now?
-
- The PC division of IBM is doing quite well - the trade press indicates
- that they have 2 major problems - the parent organization is in
- financial straits and they can't build enough product to meet demand.
- Apple was not particularly unstable financially when the Mac was in R&D
- (although the Apple III and the Lisa would have killed anyone else in
- the business). MacDac has had to be bailed out by DOD at least once in
- the last two years and the C-17 project is in mega trouble, SSF may be
- in trouble again this year, etc.
- >
- >Also, "we better not give them the project, they're a troubled
- >company" is the sort of self-fufilling prophecy that's kept many
- >many many good alternatives from being tried.
-
- Be that as it may, it is still a risk. I didn't say that they shouldn't
- get the work, just that the financial condition of the company could
- threaten the project, espcially since they are using IR&D funds.
- >
- >\Hopefully, the incoming administration will see the value of the
- >/vehicle, there will be a safe and successful flight test this summer and
- >\it will proceed with the DC-Y. I consider the DC development program a
- >/prudent use of the government's risk capital. However, we need to keep
- >\an eye on alternatives in case the DC program stubs its toe.
- >
- >You say that as if DC isn't one of the alternatives instead of one of
- >the 200-million-a-year-on-design CAD queens.
-
- I meant that there ought to be some fallback from DC-X, as it seems to
- be the only existing booster development program for medium payloads.
- DC-Y, et.al. are certainly viable vehicles if the program goes well.
-
- --
- Edmund Hack - Lockheed Engineering & Sciences Co. - Houston, TX
- hack@aio.jsc.nasa.gov - I speak only for myself, unless blah, blah..
- "You know, I think we're all Bozos on this bus."
- "Detail Dress Circuits" "Belt: Above A, Below B" "Close B ClothesMode"
-