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Here is a more affordable way to get into orbit. (pic orgy)
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Vladivostok.ru
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Transformational Space Corp. (t/Space) and Burt Rutan's Scaled Composites successfully drop-tested dummy boosters over the Mojave desert.
06/14/2005
RESTON, VA (June 14, 2005) -- Three weeks of flight tests over the Mojave desert have demonstrated a breakthrough in how to safely launch future passenger-carrying rockets using a carrier aircraft.
Transformational Space Corp. (t/Space) and Burt Rutan's Scaled Composites drop-tested dummy boosters from an aircraft using a technique that caused them to rotate towards vertical without requiring wings. This allows an aft-crossing trajectory in which the rocket crosses behind the aircraft, greatly enhancing safety. Previous air-launched rockets such as the X-15, Pegasus and SpaceShipOne crossed in front of the carrier aircraft using wings to turn themselves from horizontal flight to the vertical position needed to achieve orbit. In addition to greatly enhancing safety, eliminating the weight of wings increase the payload the rocket can take to orbit.
The innovation developed by t/Space is a special mechanism that holds on to the nose of the booster for about a half-second after the center of the rocket is released. This slight tug on the nose starts the booster rotating as it drops. A small parachute on the rocket's nozzle ensures the rotation happens slowly.
The dummy booster dropped today was the third and final in the t/Space program, with previous drops on May 24 and June 7. All test articles dropped were inert -- two steel tanks welded together with a Fiberglas nose and nozzle. They were 23% of the size of the actual rockets to be developed for sending a four-person capsule into orbit. Since they had no engines, each eventually crashed onto the dry Cuddeback Lake, about 35 miles northeast of Mojave, CA. The wreckage was collected and removed.
t/Space is one of eight companies funded by NASA's Exploration Systems Mission Directorate to develop concepts for the agency's Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) that will take over non-cargo duties from the Space Shuttle. NASA agreed to let t/Space use some of its $3 million second-phase study money to build and test hardware in addition to conducting analytical studies. The successful drop test program shows that small companies using rapid prototyping can deliver new hardware very rapidly.
"We went from brainstorm to booster drop in just 135 days," said David Gump, president of t/Space. "Program manager Marti Sarigul-Klijn proved that his computer simulations were dead-on correct each time the aircraft dropped the dummy booster."
Bob Morgan managed the Scaled Composites side of the test program that demonstrated the new air launch method, called Trapeze-Lanyard Air Drop (t/LAD) launch. This approach greatly improves simplicity, safety, cost, and reliability of launching personnel into low Earth orbit.
Photos of the flight tests are available at www.transformspace.com/media and a full technical description of the drop test program will be posted at the Web site on June 16.
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_,.
a solitary firefly flies at nite
into the darkness an endless flight
a million flashes of delight.
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Posting Junkie
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Washington, DC
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Finally, Evel Knievel can try that Mars jump he has always been talking about...
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Addicted to MacNN
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Outfield - #24
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Sounds and looks very safe.
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Apr 2000
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Originally Posted by ManOfSteal
Sounds and looks very safe.
Not to mention that dropping boosters is by far the toughest part of the whole process.....
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Addicted to MacNN
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: detroit,mi,usa
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burt rutan is amazing.
watching the spaceshipone stuff brought tears to my eyes.
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Moderator 
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Wasilla, Alaska
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Everything he makes looks like it shouldn't fly. 
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Mac Enthusiast
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Antediluvia
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"In darkness there is strength, therefore strength is darkness."
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Mac Enthusiast
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Western MA
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Can't wait till the warp engines come online!! 
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Nov 2004
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Obviously, with a week long pea soup based diet, a big cosmonaut can make it out of the stratosphere...
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Smallish town in Ohio
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Proteus?
Do I smell copyright-infringment?
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Posting Junkie
Join Date: Sep 2001
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I prefer this:

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Baninated
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: The Moon
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Originally Posted by mitchell_pgh
Finally, Evel Knievel can try that Mars jump he has always been talking about...

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Addicted to MacNN
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: NYC*Crooklyn
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Originally Posted by MindFad
I prefer this:
i'll light the match 
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