Boeing Releases Details On New Crew Capsule
FleaPlus writes "Boeing has released a number of new details on its CST-100 manned space capsule, being developed in collaboration with commercial space station builder Bigelow Aerospace. Competing with SpaceX's Dragon capsule, the vehicle is designed to be compatible with existing Atlas V, Delta IV, and Falcon 9 rockets, and is planned to carry seven people in a capsule 'a little smaller than Orion, but a little bigger than Apollo.' Funding was jump-started this year with $18M of fixed-price Commercial Crew Development money from NASA, which requires completion of several fabrication and demonstration milestones this year (heat shield, escape system, landing tests, etc.) in order to get the full payment."
I suppose I should be embracing this as "competition is always good" (cost, etc) but it does seem kind of odd.
...Airbus just announced their competitor to Boeing's CST-100 spacecraft. "It's a little larger than Orion, and much bigger than Apollo," Osteltder said of the DTU-1000 spacecraft. "It carries eight, but it's not really that small – it's larger and more spacious than the Orion."
Apollo was barely big enough for 3. Something only a "little" bigger is supposed to hold 7?
Do they sit on each other's laps?
Falcoooon punch!
"Bigelow Aerospace"?
I realize I represent the lowest common denominator here, but this reminds me of bad Rob Schneider movies.
That is a spacecraft sir, we do not refer to it as a capsule.
. . . So there is more room inside than the outside size.
Probably.
Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
I find it interesting that the vehicle is being designed for short duration missions. Is Boeing prematurely bowing out of the upcoming lifeboat competition?
http://quantumg.blogspot.com/2010/06/lifeboat-politics.html
How we know is more important than what we know.
Is it a (new crew) capsule or a new (crew capsule)?
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
Seen lots of articles on new (orbital = real) space vehicles during the last 30 years - haven't seen anything fly except the shuttle. Fork sticking time, you may now STFU. American manned space program? You're beyond dead to me now. 1977 dead. Worse - because in 1977, the shuttle was still on schedule to fly. There's nothing concrete going on now apart from Boeing giving NASA some deliverables so their contract isn't a total bust and the lawyers aren't pulled out.
Fuck you NASA, and Boeing.
Wasn't Virgin's Richard Branson involved in some space tourism efforts in recent years and he had that multi-billion dollar shuttlecraft his customers could use to fly up and back?