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Sierra Nevada's Dream Chaser Could Land At Ellington Space Port Near Houston

MarkWhittington writes Despite having been rejected in NASA's commercial crew program, Sierra Nevada has been very busy trying to develop its lift body spacecraft, the Dream Chaser. Having rolled out a smaller, cargo version of the spacecraft for the second round for contracts for commercial cargo to the International Space Station, the company has amended the unfunded Space Act Agreement with NASA to add a closeout review milestone that would help transition the Dream Chaser from the preliminary design review to the critical design review step. Finally, Sierra Nevada announced a new agreement on Tuesday with the Houston Airport System to use Ellington Spaceport as a landing site for the cargo version of the Dream Chaser.

4 of 24 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Wow, I knew they were big by zifferent · · Score: 2

    I'm with you all, and believe me I was confused. I mean why would a brewery want to launch beer into space, and really if any brewery would do it Sierra Nevada would be my last guess. It's more of a Sam Galagione, Dogfish Head type of experiment.

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    cat sig > /dev/null
  2. Re:America Needs Dream Chaser by wiredlogic · · Score: 2

    What else can you do with it?

    I bet it'll fly the Kessel run in 12 parsecs. Dragon? No way in hell.

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    I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
  3. Peter Pan. I'm captain of the Dream Chaser. by RevWaldo · · Score: 3, Funny

    ~ Peter Pan. I'm captain of the Dream Chaser. Grumpy Bear here tells me you're lookin' for passage to the Narnia system.
    ~ Yes indeed, if it's a fast ship.
    ~ "Fast ship"? You've never heard of the Dream Chaser?
    ~ Should I have?
    ~ It's the ship that made the Emerald City Run in less than twelve cowznofskis. I've outrun Middle Kingdom dragons. Not the local luckdragons mind you, I'm talking about the big Morgoth-bred firedrakes now. She's fast enough for you, Santa Claus.

    .

  4. Re:Why land in the middle of a city? by VoiceOfSanity · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ok, speaking as someone who a) works for a major aerospace company, b) is involved with the ISS program and c) lives here in Clear Lake, there are some major benefits to landing at Ellington Field. First off, you're right down the road from the Johnson Space Center, which means anything you're bringing back down from the ISS you'll be able to deliver right to NASA or the primary contractor (which is Boeing, which sits right next to Ellington Field). So you save time and transportation costs by delivering it right there.

    Second, Ellington Field's approach line is over a lot of open land. If NASA, the Air Force and the Navy uses the base for jet flights (not to mention being a drone launching site), then landing an arriving lifting body from space won't be as much of a problem. The plans for Ellington Field's space facilities was to also have launches, but you take what you can get and this is really the first company willing to commit to them.

    Third, you've got the ability to route to alternate landing fields (Hobby Field, Sugar Land Regional) if there is an issue on approach.

    Frankly, this does look like it'll be an interesting event if they manage to win the resupply contract.