by Sixstrings » Wed 29 Oct 2014, 02:46:17
Orbital science's stock already down 12%.
According to daily mail's article on this, the rocket was carrying a private company's asteroid-mining prototype satellite.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2810128/Ready-liftoff-Nighttime-rocket-launch-International-Space-Station-visible-East-Coast.htmlAnyhow.. I really don't have a good feeling about this company, I never did to be honest, and now they have this explosion.
And now NASA is committed to giving them the one or two billion dollars or whatever.
What can the government do, if it gets stuck with a lemon contractor like this? Can they get out of this contract? I really think orbital is just going to be a big waste of taxpayer money and they're going to have more accidents and it's not wise to be using them.
They just don't seem anywhere close to a spacex or Boeing-Lockheed.
It's wasted taxpayer money. They don't even make their own rockets. Why are they getting billions of dollars.
EDIT:
The engines Orbital uses are actually FORTY YEAR OLD *refurbished* *Soviet* engines.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he company behind a resupply mission to the International Space Station that ended in a spectacular explosion over a Virginia launchpad has defended the use of ageing Soviet rockets amid growing questions over Nasa’s reliance on private contractors to fill gaps in the US space program.
Hundreds of millions of dollars worth of equipment, ranging from “classified cryptographic” gear to school science experiments, was destroyed in a giant fireball on Tuesday evening after technicians detonated a self-destruct mechanism six seconds after launch because of a “catastrophic” equipment failure.
...
“The history of this engine has been well documented. Basically this was an engine that was designed to carry cosmonauts to the moon,” he said. “A number of them were bought by Aerojet to be refurbished and Americanised. It’s an extensively tested engine, very robust and rugged.
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/oct/28/antares-rocket-explodes-nasa-launch-pad-orbital-scienceIt's utterly outrageous.
They aren't even new Russian engines, they're used Soviet engines almost a half century old. Where are our tax dollars going to, CEO bonuses in that company? They can't even buy new engines from Russia, wtf?
SpaceX makes ITS OWN engines and they are American not Russian, and they are brand new and not 40 years old, and they have proven to automatically shut down during failure and then the other engines in the cluster can still get it to orbit.
This half century year old used Russian engine just blew apart.
It's just so outrageous, that these Russian engines are even being used, and that our tax dollars are paying for it.
Title of this thread should be changed -- this is NOT a "US" rocket, it is a private company not ready for the big leagues and it's a 40 year old RUSSIAN engine and Ukrainian body. It's not an American rocket.
SpaceX merlin engines are American, brand new and made here and not from Russia.
Everything about Spacex is American. Oribital seems to outsource everything, that's a hodgepodge Russian / Soviet rocket they've got.
(p.s. ok last thing I'm going to say.. I *think* these engines are the famous Russian N1 rocket engines I've read about before. They were in fact revolutionary for the time, but didn't all the N1's blow up on the pad? So why are we using those old engines? It just goes to show, Musk did the right thing and he's a physicist and he made his own darn engines. Whereas Orbital thought they found a shortcut and some nice Soviet engines in a Russian warehouse.
Those engines are 40 years old, that's too old to be using, no wonder this thing blew up, good grief.
And one final thing -- orbital is charging the US taxpayer $237 million per flight and that's what this blown up one cost.
Whereas spacex costs the taxpayer only half as much, $133 million, and Falcon 9's hold more payload and can return cargo as well. And again -- SpaceX engines are made in USA and they are brand new and they are not 40 year old engines from the failed Soviet N1 lunar rocket from the early 1970s.
It's outrageous, this company charges taxpayers twice as much for doing less and then they're cheapskates using these refurbished half century old engines from the Soviets. And it all blows up. No surprise.)