Boeing, SpaceX have razor-thin margins to fly crew missions in 2018

Enlarge /

Commercial Crew Astronaut Eric Boe examines hardware during a tour of the SpaceX facility in Hawthorne, California.

NASA

Almost since the beginning of the commercial crew program in 2010, the old and new titans of the aerospace industry have been locked in a race to the launch pad. Boeing, with five decades of aerospace contracts, represented the old guard. SpaceX, founded in 2002, offered a new, leaner way of doing things.

Through the years, as other participants in the commercial crew program fell away, Boeing and SpaceX remained on course to deliver US astronauts into space. It has not been easy for either company or for their sponsor, NASA. The space agency has only ever led the development of four spacecraft that carried humans into orbit, and three of those programs came in the 1960s, with the fourth and final vehicle in the 1970s—the space shuttle.

As both companies sought to climb this steep learning curve, they have missed deadlines. An original deadline of 2015 melted away after some key members of Congress diverted funds for the commercial crew program to other NASA programs, notably the Space Launch System rocket. But in recent years, Congress has fully funded the efforts by Boeing and SpaceX, and they were told that would yield flights in 2017.

Last year came and went, however, and now one of the biggest questions facing the US aerospace community this year is whether the commercial crew program finally takes flight. On Thursday NASA provided a modicum of new information, releasing target dates for test flights, both crewed and uncrewed.

New schedules?

Under the new schedule, Boeing is slated to fly an uncrewed test flight of Starliner in August and a second flight with astronauts in November. SpaceX, too, is scheduled to fly a demonstration flight of its Dragon in August, followed by a crew mission in December. The dates for Boeing in the updated schedule are the same as they’ve been for about a year. SpaceX has slipped several months to the right.

On Thursday key figures from both Boeing and SpaceX spoke at a meeting in Houston, The Academy of Medicine, Engineering & Science of Texas. The deputy manager for Boeing’s commercial crew program, Chris Ferguson, said the company is still on track for flights this year. SpaceX President and Chief Operating Officer Gwynne Shotwell said the same.

from Ars Technica http://ift.tt/2D65l5r
via IFTTT

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.