GCNRevenger wrote:
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Remember the whole space race existed to form alliances
Um, what? Nooo, I don't think so. It was to fight a war of idealogy against our (US and Canada) enemy, the Soviets.
And what exact facility was destroyed or other damage caused? The only thing the race did was convince countries to ally with America rather than the Soviets. It was about alliances.
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why... exclude them from participation in space projects? It doesn't make sense.
Sure it does, because we keep winding up paying for our "partner" Russia to do their part, and international amalgumation of different hardware in a single system has thus far been arguably a disaster.
How long has Russia been waiting for America to launch it's modules? Russia keeps flying American astronauts and supplying them with a Progress. It goes both ways, you aren't in any position to point fingers.
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Nothing like getting it directly from the horse's mouth
Especially when that "horse" would just love a big pile of money to put the "finishing touches" on the Russian orbiter.
I suggested Russia pay for Ptichka and fly the SPP that they designed and already built and paid for. The only "help" would be Canada providing a CanadArm.
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Nonsense, the Russians are well known for forcing deadlines on vehicles that are by no means ready in order to counter American capabilities. Case in point early Soviet nuclear submarines, which were often launched half-finished, just to beat the USN.
And Apollo 8 was designed as an unmanned flyby of the Moon, Apollo 9 was to be the manned flyby. But Russia just completed an unmanned flyby with a Soyuz launched by N1. America had to do something to gain a space first, Apollo 8 was launched when it wasn't ready. NASA was just lucky nothing catastrophic went wrong. You could argue the Soviets were lucky the N1 didn't blow up, considering it's flight record; but NASA was equally lucky with Apollo 8. Those in glass houses...
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They might have gotten the shuttle to the pad, but I very much doubt it would worked, especially after all those years. I don't think NASA could fly a Shuttle after the long storage and degredation the Russian counterpart did at all, much less quickly. Bruan may have been maintained as a paper deterrent to Shuttle, if the Soviet military believed this to be the case or not.
Buran (orbiter 1.01) was designed to be flown unmanned, on autopilot only. It flew once and worked perfectly. I talked to a salesman from Orbital Science who claimed there was hot gas infiltration under the Buran's heat shield tiles, but he couldn't provide any source to confirm that. I checked Molniya's website, they have a lot of technical documents on the Buran orbiter. There was
less hot gas infiltration under Buran's tiles than under the American Shuttle's. After that I doubt any criticism of Buran.
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I suppose the fact that Shuttle is the most complex machine ever made by man, ever, is reason enough to forgive you for your ignorance.
I've heard that claim too, but don't believe it either. An aircraft carrier with all it's systems is more complex than the Shuttle. For one thing, add all the aircraft on the carrier.
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I'm tired of spending the largest portion of my take-home pay on car loan payments... (etc etc)
Would you please stop whining about your life and stay on topic? I do believe that was what initiated the "little spat" last time.
It is on topic. You accused me of being an environmentalist, but it's really about economics. And this demonstrates the principle for space technology.
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Spoken like a true senseless dreamer in desperate need to be kept as far away from space decisions as possible.
Perhaps you would like to ask a congressman for multiple billions of dollars and tell him/her that it'll be thrown away with nothing to show for it.
I thought consumer goods made a good example since it's something most people can relate to, but you obviously don't get it. Let me use another example, the mining industry. They can spend billions of dollars on trucks so big a grown man standing beside one only comes up to the wheel axle. The money they spend on trucks could not be justified for just one load of ore; they run several trips per day for many years. They just keep going and going and going. The only way their cost can be justified is if they do keep going. They may require replacement tires, or a wash-down, but when their not in use they're stored in a garage where they don't get dirty and tires aren't worn or eaten by rodents. The mining industry can't afford to let sitting equipment decay, it must remain in top shape at all times and ready to go as soon as crew arrive for the next shift. If a mine is shut down the trucks are stored and guards posted to ensure no one vandalizes them or rodents eat the tires. When a mine is reactivated, the equipment may get an inspection, tire pressure topped up and oil changed, but that's all. They can't afford to replace everything. And yes, mines do shut down and come back. Metal prices fluctuate so it isn't economical to continue to operate the mine, but when prices come back the profit margin is so thin they can't afford to replace everything. When crews arrive they can't afford a long period of fiddling with equipment, they have to start processing ore immediately.