Imaginos1892 wrote:The first thing we need is a reliable, efficient, practical surface-to-orbit vehicle, and NASA is absolutely the wrong outfit to build it. They have been stuck on the vertical-boost rocket and dead-stick re-entry paradigm for so long they are incapable of considering any other approach. Worse, after a fifty-year government monopoly space program, that's all we've got and what all the experts are trained in. They are all busy trying to force that unsuitable system to do what we need.
They are "too big to fail" so anything more risky than slight improvements to what they are familiar with is verboten. Since everything they build is hideously expensive we can only afford one and it has to perform multiple incompatible functions. It has to be a surface-to-orbit shuttle, an orbital-transfer vehicle, a work platform, and a temporary space station with life support for a crew of 8-12 for up to two weeks. Insanity!
All our existing launch vehicles are either completely consumed in delivering one payload to orbit, or are partially consumed and have to undergo a six-month, billion-dollar overhaul after every flight. Madness!
What we really need is a space-going 747. A spaceplane that can take off from an ordinary airport with a crew of two to four, deliver a cargo to low orbit, land at an airport, refuel, reload and do it again and again. Such a project is too big a risk to get funding, and our existing "space experts" are too specialized in rockets to design it.
I´m sorry, but do you have any idea what you´re saying?
Please, why don´t you start by taking a look at what kind of airplanes ever built is even remotely close to reaching orbit?
Then maybe you should take a CLOSE look at just what kind of velocity is needed to stay in orbit.
How many aircraft are you aware of that are capable of reaching 28000km/h?
Or 160km of altitude. Of course, those are just MINIMUMs, satellites tend to be closer to 300km altitude.
The most extreme of aircraft, built or
proposed can manage altitudes of around 25km and speeds of around 7000km/h.
The reason noone is even trying to build your "space-going 747" is because we do not have the ability to build such a thing.
Doesn´t matter if we try or not because we completely lack the kind of engines and materials knowledge needed.
Even with the most optimistic predictions about future research, we wont be able to build something like that 50 years from now either.
There´s simply no way you can build your fancy little spaceplane, because it would never be able to be built strong enough to reach high enough speed before breaking up, it could never carry enough fuel to do it, it could not reach the altitude required even for minimal orbit, because surprise, there´s not enough atmosphere there to provide lift or oxygen for engines...
Noone is trying to build your proposed spaceplane because for the foreseeable future, it´s an idea that doesn´t WORK.