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Passenger-Carrying Spaceship Makes Desert Debut
Space.com ^ | 04/18/03 | http://www.scaled.com/projects/tierone/photos/images/WK%20and%20SS1%20mated%20front%20left.jpg

Posted on 04/18/2003 1:45:40 PM PDT by Andy from Beaverton

 


Passenger-Carrying Spaceship Makes Desert Debut
By Leonard David
Senior Space Writer
posted: 02:00 pm ET
18 April 2003

 

The wraps are coming off what is billed as the "First Private Manned Space Program" and a new, never-seen spaceship.

Aggressive work on a passenger-carrying sub-orbital craft has been active and hidden from public view for two years.

Labeled as the SpaceShipOne Project, the unveiling comes courtesy of Scaled Composites, Inc. -- highly regarded as a leader in innovative aircraft development -- and based in the Mojave, California desert, about 80 miles north of Los Angeles.

Noted design wizard, Burt Rutan, is lead maverick of the space project and is the firm's president and chief executive officer. He makes no bones about what's behind the hush-hush project.


   Images

Labeled as the SpaceShipOne Project, Scaled Composites, Inc. has worked aggressively on a passenger-carrying sub-orbital craft for two years. CREDIT: Scaled Composites

Scaled Composites' SpaceShipOne (foreground, top picture) and its drop-ship the White Knight (background, top picture). The bottom image shows SpaceShipOne and the White Knight together. CREDIT: Scaled Composites

Burt Rutan's Scaled Composites group based its private manned space project on an earlier aircraft design: Proteus CREDIT: Scaled Composites

SpaceShipOne officials are reviewing use of hybrid rocket propulsion system provided by SpaceDev of Poway, California. Hybrid propulsion uses Nitrous Oxide -- also dubbed Laughing Gas -- and HTPB (tire rubber). CREDIT: SpaceDev
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   Related Links

Scaled Composites Website


The X PRIZE Official Website

"Scaled Composites…is tired of waiting for others to provide affordable human space access," Rutan said.

High-altitude launch

Over the last few years, considerable effort has been secretly underway at the company's desert site. Experts at Scaled Composites are confident they've designed a system that supports suborbital flight - drawing from earlier aircraft design work, particularly the high-altitude Proteus vehicle.

From behind closed hangar doors their stealthy product was rolled out today.

"The event is not about dreams, predictions or mockups," Rutan explained in a pre-debut statement. "We will show actual flight hardware: an aircraft for high-altitude airborne launch, a flight-ready manned spaceship, a new, ground-tested rocket propulsion system and much more. This is not just the development of another research aircraft, but a complete manned space program with all its support elements," he said.

Rutan makes it clear that the unveiling is not a marketing event.

"We are not seeking funding and are not selling anything. We are in the middle of an important research program…to see if manned space access can be done by other than the expensive government programs," Rutan explained.

Rutan said that after today, plans call for his group to go "back into hiding," to complete the flight tests and conduct the space flights.

Point and shoot

While details of the project are being revealed today, in past years some aspects of the direction Rutan and his fellow rocketeers were headed were openly discussed.

Using a derivative of Proteus, space-launch operations are made possible. By changing out aircraft sections and configuring the vehicle to carry large external payloads, both suborbital and orbital booster operations could be carried out.

As example, in October of 2000, the Proteus set several world records for performance in its weight class, one being flight up to 62,786 feet toting a 2,200-pound (1,000-kilogram) payload.

Vehicles launched from Proteus could take advantage of a "point and shoot" capability. This requires the carrier aircraft to be positioned to a select attitude -- including vertical for suborbital sounding rockets and astronaut flights -- before booster separation and ignition.

According to earlier thinking, this approach would allow lofting a three-person single-stage fully reusable spaceship up to 112 miles (180 kilometers), giving those onboard some five minutes of microgravity. In addition, two-stage expendable boosters could be lobbed skyward from the aircraft, placing micro-satellite payloads of up to 80 pounds (36 kilograms) into low Earth orbit.

Initially, operating cost goals for the Proteus system, including booster, were pegged at less than less than $50,000 per seat for astronauts and $500,000 per launch for micro-satellites.

Hybrid rocket propulsion

Scaled Composites has been working with SpaceDev of Poway, California to evaluate use of a hybrid rocket propulsion system for the SpaceShipOne program.

Jim Benson, founding chairman and chief executive of SpaceDev, told SPACE.com that hybrid rocket propulsion is a safe and low-cost capability. Work on an advanced hybrid rocket motor has resulted in successful test firings, he said.

Benson said the company's motor design is thought to be the largest of its type in the world. It uses clean and inexpensive propellants, namely Nitrous Oxide (Laughing Gas) and HTPB (tire rubber).

For sub-orbital manned vehicles, Benson said, hybrid is ideal, not only for reaching the desired altitude, but due to propulsion system safety features. They far outweigh the higher performance of dangerous liquid or solid rocket motors, he said, which, unlike hybrids, can explode.

Hybrid rockets are non-explosive, and their responsiveness, affordability and simplicity of operation make them ideal for high-reliability manned or unmanned, orbital or sub-orbital applications, Benson said.

Eyes on the prize

One clear ambition of Rutan is to snag the X Prize purse of $10 million. The competition is patterned from the more than 100 aviation prizes offered in the early 20th Century. Those purses kick-started today's $300 billion-dollar commercial air transport industry.

The most significant of these prizes was the Orteig Prize, won by Charles Lindbergh for his 1927 flight from New York to Paris.

To win the X Prize, private teams must finance, build and fly a three-person spacecraft 62 miles (100 km) to the edge of space, return safely, and then demonstrate the reusability of their vehicle by flying it again within two-weeks.

The goal of the St. Louis, Missouri-based X Prize Foundation is to make space travel frequent and affordable for the general public.

Based on an earlier statement, Rutan has clearly been keeping his eyes on the prize.

"It would not be an understatement to say that the X Prize has already had an effect on me. I have never been as creative as I have been in the past few months," Rutan explains on the X Prize web site.

"The X Prize competition, more than anything else on this Earth, has the ability to help make private spaceflight and space tourism a reality. By creating the X Prize, the St. Louis leaders have taken an important page from aviation history and created an opportunity for a modern day Orteig to step forward and open the door to a whole new industry," Rutan said.





TOPICS: Front Page News; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: reusablerocket; reusablespacecraft; space; spaceflight; spacepassengers; spaceshuttle
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1 posted on 04/18/2003 1:45:40 PM PDT by Andy from Beaverton
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To: Andy from Beaverton
If anyone can do it, it'll be Burt Rutan. The man is an aerospace genius.

/john

2 posted on 04/18/2003 1:51:35 PM PDT by JRandomFreeper (I'm just a cook.)
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To: Andy from Beaverton
Somehow I can just see Tracey Ullman's attorney character (based on the attorney who defended the Menendez bros) in that skit where the world was ending, and she had a shuttle seat to escape the meteor. She ended up getting kicked out in space, and ended up in the MIR with the Russkies. It was a hoot.
3 posted on 04/18/2003 1:53:54 PM PDT by widowithfoursons
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To: Andy from Beaverton
WAYYYY COOL.
Rutan has a proven track record for pulling innovative designs that work better and cost less than conventional ones.
Thanks a BUNCH for posting this!
4 posted on 04/18/2003 1:54:20 PM PDT by demosthenes the elder (If *I* can afford $5/month to support FR: SO CAN YOU)
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To: Andy from Beaverton
Please God, please let this work, so we don't have to rely on NASA to get the rest of us to Space.
5 posted on 04/18/2003 1:54:35 PM PDT by SengirV
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To: Andy from Beaverton; AdamSelene235; blam

Rutan may single-handedly beat the Chinese into manned Earth orbit...

6 posted on 04/18/2003 2:03:34 PM PDT by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Brett66; RightWhale
Ping
7 posted on 04/18/2003 2:04:57 PM PDT by techcor (Admin Moderator wannabe)
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To: JRandomFreeper
" The man is an aerospace genius. "

Not only that, but he has calousses on his hands from getting project after project COMPLETED. He is a master of manufacturing with composites, just look at that beautiful bird !

IMHO what he pulled off with the Voyager is a bigger feat than this, and the around-the-world nonstop flight was a succes with the first aircraft on the first attempt !

He'll have this 10 million in his account before the other guys even get off the drawing board !

8 posted on 04/18/2003 2:14:32 PM PDT by SENTINEL (USMC GWI)
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To: Andy from Beaverton
Rutan is THE MAN when it comes to innovative flight. He will pull this off.
9 posted on 04/18/2003 2:33:44 PM PDT by Paradox
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To: Andy from Beaverton
Rutan rules!
10 posted on 04/18/2003 2:34:59 PM PDT by isthisnickcool (Now, let's go to the screen writer.....)
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To: Andy from Beaverton
Wasn't Scaled Composites the company that did the bodywork for the Rotary Rocket company?
11 posted on 04/18/2003 2:39:08 PM PDT by mvpel (Michael Pelletier)
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To: techcor
Thanks for the ping. I'm stunned, they kept this in hiding all of this time while they were making major progress. Incredible, it looks like they are not only on the verge of providing routine sub-orbital access to space, but they are going to be able to provide a limited light payload to LEO capability. Amazing, NASA and it's endless talking about shuttles and space stations is about to be left in the dust. It's about time! I'm more optimistic than ever now that the X-Prize will indeed be won by the 2005 end date and we'll soon be entering a true space age.
12 posted on 04/18/2003 2:46:15 PM PDT by Brett66
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To: techcor
Good to see SpaceDev associated with this. Asteroid mining is on its way.
13 posted on 04/18/2003 2:46:36 PM PDT by RightWhale (Theorems link concepts; proofs establish links)
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To: All
Not only that, it's a d*mn cool looking ship. It looks like something off the drawing boards of Wernher von Braun.
14 posted on 04/18/2003 2:49:04 PM PDT by Brett66
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To: Andy from Beaverton; XBob; John Jamieson; snopercod; bonesmccoy; Thud; Budge; wirestripper; ...
NASA competition.

[If you want off or on my Columbia ping list, let me know. FReegards.]

15 posted on 04/18/2003 2:50:49 PM PDT by brityank (The more I learn about the Constitution, the more I realise this Government is UNconstitutional.)
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To: Brett66
Incredible, it looks like they are not only on the verge of providing routine sub-orbital access to space, but they are going to be able to provide a limited light payload to LEO capability.

Either that, or a very spectacular way to die! But I really really really really really really really really hope they make it work! We need a replacement for the Shuttle, if NASA keeps flying them to 2020 as they say we're bound to lose another in an accident, and that will kill the program.

While Rutan's bird is only designed to do short sub-orbital flights, it's gotta be the first stepping stone to routine access to space.

16 posted on 04/18/2003 2:53:46 PM PDT by alnitak
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To: Phsstpok
Wonder if Niven knows about this, it's right up his alley.
17 posted on 04/18/2003 2:59:29 PM PDT by Sam Cree (liberals are the axis of evil)
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To: *Space; anymouse; RadioAstronomer; NonZeroSum; jimkress; discostu; The_Victor; Centurion2000; ...
Ping.
18 posted on 04/18/2003 3:00:40 PM PDT by Brett66
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To: atomic conspiracy
Thought you might find this interesting.
19 posted on 04/18/2003 3:01:21 PM PDT by Brett66
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To: Andy from Beaverton; Bear_in_RoseBear; JenB
Really cool, I hope and pray it works.
20 posted on 04/18/2003 3:01:37 PM PDT by Sam Cree (liberals are the axis of evil)
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