![]() |
#61
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "George William Herbert" wrote in message ... Dave O'Neill wrote: You're right. We bought it off the shelf. Things like drill presses and lathes and arc welders are Technology We Already Have. Arc welders are an interesting one right there, last time I checked we didn't have any that work well in a vacuum. Oh, they work perfectly fine in a vacuum; just not for welding two solid pieces of metal together. That's kind of what I was thinking of, but thanks for the image. :-) Dave |
#62
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Michael Gallagher wrote:
On Fri, 02 Jan 2004 03:05:02 -0600, "Paul F. Dietz" wrote, in part: ..... with any luck at all, we might have another 60,000 years to go. I did not write that. Paul |
#64
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 06 Jan 2004 13:41:41 -0800, in a place far, far away, Mary
Shafer made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: On 4 Jan 2004 19:49:08 -0800, (Vincent Cate) wrote: Would you say we had the technology for powered flight before anyone had done powered flight? I don't think most people would. Yes. We must have, or we couldn't have done it. Think about it. We know we had the technology to build and fly the airframe, because people had been had been flying unpowered models for years. We know we had the technology to make the air screw (propeller), because that was mostly carving wood with a spoke shave and a draw knife. The hardest thing about the propeller was not the tools to cut it, but knowing what shape it should be. The Wrights invented that technology. |
#65
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Mary Shafer wrote: On 4 Jan 2004 19:49:08 -0800, (Vincent Cate) wrote: Would you say we had the technology for powered flight before anyone had done powered flight? I don't think most people would. Yes. We must have, or we couldn't have done it. This is like building things "beyond the state of the art" which is a definition of a path to failure. At least before some kind of a program aimed at extending the "state of the art". Going the other way, it is a bit akin to building things with "off the shelf" hardware and software. Yes, this is done all of the time with mature products, but less frequently with new products. "All it takes is a little tweaking" and sometimes that gets very time consuming and costly. Just noting that I agree with your terminology, although this doesn't mean you necessarily should agree with mine. Mike Walsh |
#66
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Paul F. Dietz" wrote in message ... Joann Evans wrote: This sounds like putting out a fire in my house by blowing it up. It would work, but I still have no house in the end... If your house is going to blow up anyway, this is like blowing it up when you've removed your furniture and are staying with your brother. Paul 3 words... Bung in Hole... cork the bloody thing up and we'd have a sweeeet bottle of champagne ![]() |
#67
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Michael Walsh
This is like building things "beyond the state of the art" which is a definition of a path to failure. Sometimes failure, sometimes a paycheck, and sometimes fame and fortune. I grew up in silicon valley. Advancing the state of the art is what a lot of people there do to put food on the table. -- Vince |
#68
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
jeff findley wrote:
If we can make 1 gigabit memory chips today it does not mean we have the technology to make 10 gigabit chips today. Having an engine powerful enough and light enough is like this. It is just incrementally different not fundamentally different. Hard to say. Perhaps you can make them today, but they'd simply cost too much to be immediately profitable. Established companies often Umm... 1gb is not what "we" know how to make, 1gb is what is presently commercialy available for DDR and DDR2. It is also possible to go from such to larger chips by for example doing MCMs and / or stacking. in fact, hitachi was selling memory modules based on chips using stacked 256mb parts ending up in a 2GB module (for which you'd otherwise need 1Gb dram parts) back in '99. focus on incremental, or even no, improvements in technology because they can more readily predict the development costs of the new products and predict the profits for next quarter. Just because the desired ROI (return on investment) isn't there doesn't necessarily mean the technology isn't there. Well, one could make 10gb dram parts and make a dimm out of such. It would probably be ~ 10GB per DIMM and cost $15K or similar. So unless you just bought a Ultra Enterprise 15K and discovered that you wanted to get 4-5 times as much RAM inside it as you could otherwise you wouldn't be interested in it... You have to admit that sometimes new products are developed using existing technology, which reduces the design effort to engineering, not technology development. The state of the art in rockets does not give us $100/lb to orbit yet. It will have to be advanced some still. This too can be an incremental process. The people at SpaceX and other places are working to design and build hardware that advances the state of the art. It may not be "totally new technology" or "fundamentally new technology" but it is new technology. After the Falcon-5 exists there is "technology in hand" or available "off the shelf" that was not before. There may not be any new scientific theory, but that is not tech. My argument applies to CATS just as it does to memory chips. Just because the established aerospace companies aren't willing to invest their own money in designs that apply existing technology in new ways doesn't mean that CATS isn't possible. It could mean that the existing companies are unwilling to invest in revolutionary designs and instead focus on evolutionary designs. It would be inetersting to see what a launch using North Korean / Iranian ballistic missile derived launchers would cost. It may well be it could singinficantly reduce costs. Jeff -- Sander +++ Out of cheese error +++ |
#69
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
jeff findley
Vince: Rutan is advancing the state of the art in suborbital rockets. SpaceShipOne is new technology. You might say it is only incrementally better than the X-15. But I think that in terms of operating costs or safety it is better. What technology is new? You seen another airplane that bends in the middle so it is stable during atmospheric reentry? Seen another nitrous-oxide/rubber hybrid engine with fiber optics wound into the casing to detect if the case is burning through and shut off the engine? This is a very clever, innovative, and elegant solution to the problem. There really is plenty of new tech in SpaceShipOne. For what they are doing, the overall system is very safe. In my opinion, this is one of the most impressive advances in the state of the art in the last 30 years. -- Vince |
#70
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Vincent Cate wrote: Seen another nitrous-oxide/rubber hybrid engine with fiber optics wound into the casing to detect if the case is burning through and shut off the engine? *That* part is not particularly novel. The power wires to the solenoid valves of the shuttle RCS engines wrap around the combustion chambers, for the same reason. -- MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. | |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
No U.S. Hab Module may be good news | Peter Altschuler | Space Station | 5 | July 27th 04 01:59 AM |
Good news for DirecTV subscribers | Patty Winter | Space Shuttle | 7 | June 17th 04 08:35 PM |
Moon key to space future? | James White | Policy | 90 | January 6th 04 05:29 PM |
Requirements / process to become a shuttle astronaut? | Dan Huizenga | Space Shuttle | 11 | November 14th 03 08:33 AM |
Good news for space policy | Greg Kuperberg | Policy | 61 | August 4th 03 04:42 AM |