A Few Photos From Secretive Blue Origin: Is That a Crew Capsule?
RocketAcademy writes "Among the emerging commercial space transportation companies, Blue Origin is the most secretive and mysterious. A VIP tour by NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver afforded a rare glimpse inside Blue Origin's headquarters, including a look at what appears to be a Blue Origin crew capsule."
Not Gay Fags, no. Worse. I mean FAT, AUTISTIC, GEEKS!
Fapping to Little Ponies while compiling your Linux kernel for the 32nd time to hope your obscure wifi driver works. Slashdot, the worst of the internet since 1997. Wikipedia, putting [citation needed] on the blinding obvious. Admit you are all worse than reddit, fark and even 4chan if you are Slashdot user or Wikipedia editor.
Dr. Maswogner
Seriously - maybe they bought used components or are just ripping off the design to stay relevant?
we do not refer to it as a "capsule"
I fail to see the entertainment value in going up in an uncontrollable firecracker to go float around a cramped tin can for a few minutes.
With 1970s tech you can outfly a Saturn V to 100,000 feet and have the fun of being in a fighter jet. It's called a F-15 Streak Eagle. If there were so much demand for these types of trips, there would be a lot more private jet fighters since a few decades.
This private space nonsense is just this generation's millionaires' fantasies.
F-15 Streak Eagle: " In setting the last of the eight records, it reached an altitude of 98,425 feet just 3 minutes, 27.8 seconds from brake release at takeoff and "coasted" to nearly 103,000 feet before descending."
These of course match the grey's prototypes from Hangar 18.
...someone should have mentioned WTF "Blue Origin" is. Apparently its so secretive, I have no idea as to what it is. Not interested enough to find out either...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Origin_New_Shepard
The purple thing is a capsule for BO's reusable suborbital rocket "New Shepard". BO got some money from the 2009 era stimulus package for some minor development work related to it. It is the "composite pressure vessel" mentioned in the wiki link. The capsule sits atop the vertical take off/vertical landing reusable suborbital rocket, and separates in the event of an accident.
The biconic capsule in the third picture was part of Blue Origin's entry for later commercial crew development work for NASA. It would carry seven crew to the ISS, and launch atop an Atlas 5 rocket, or later Blue Origin's own future reusable orbital rocket. They were awarded about 20 million in the first round of funding which that wind tunnel test was part of, among other participants like SpaceX's Dragon, Boeing's CST-100, and SpaceDev's Dreamchaser who received larger amounts of funding. Further money for such development work was slashed by congress and so BO's entry was winnowed out.
Oh well. I didn't think the US was actually serious about manned spaceflight anymore.
There's only one obvious reason for a spacecraft company to be secretive. They're involved in a top secret military project.
Then again, maybe Blue Origin is trying to be the Apple Inc of the space transport biz. Except that Blue Origin's chief financial backer is a web billionaire named Jeff Bezos. So maybe Blue Origin is trying to be secretive like Amazon?
Maybe BO has figured out a way to bring down space fares to a new low, a Kindle Fire among the iPads of the launch industry? That, or JB is trying to cover up the lack of progress.
Next stop - Planet Ten.
What did this 'arcticle' show or say that hasn't been really, really old news for a really, really long time?
Looks like rust along the bottom edge of the blue metal side...
But Astronauts must click through an ad to get to the guidance and control system.
Let's be serious, folks. Sierra Nevada did a captive carry test, in which they took their model and dragged it around on a helicopter for a while. Blue Origin might not have gotten that far. Meanwhile SpaceX fully qualified their cargo solution, has a contract to carry real cargo, and is working on the manned version. So far, exactly one of the companies mentioned has a spacecraft.
Bruce Perens.