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An article about the ATFE test results at Hill AFB using hobby rockets and APCP is available from the the ARSA News story page


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Alan's Mojave WebLog has some very nice pictures of Burt's latest launch.

Update: Alan's blog is back…


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Via HobbySpace: The cell phone video of each of the segments at the Aldridge Commission are now available. This should help some of my comments in Personal Views From The Aldridge Commission Meeting make more sense.


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Via Space.com: BREAKING NEWS! Private Spaceship Completes Second Rocket-Powered Test Flight

It seems that Burt has been simply waiting on the license. 40 second burn, max speed of approximately Mach 2, to an altitude of 105,000 feet.

Two successful burns. I predict two more test flights at targets of 200K feet and an edge of space flight to break some records, and then an Xprize qualifying altitude test and then an actual Xprize winning attempt. IMHO, that means roughly two months total at Burt's current pace.

Update: New pictures up at scaled: a nice one of the motor and the TPS paint system


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April 12th is the anniversery of Yuri Gagarin's flight and to celebrate people around the world have a party called Yuri's Night. If there is one in your city you should go.

We're having one in Atlanta. Read on to see the press release. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:

Erik Kabo

Mars Society @ Georgia Tech

gte938u@mail.gatech.edu

Michael Mealling

Moon/Artemis Society

678-581-9656

michael@rocketforge.org

Local Space Enthusiasts Participate In World Wide Celebration

tlanta, GA, March 30, 2004 – On April 12th local space enthusiasts, space business leaders and students will participate in the world wide, grass roots celebration on the anniversary of the first manned space flight by Yuri Gagarin in 1961, as well as the anniversary of the first Space Shuttle flight in 1981.

The celebration, dubbed “Yuri's Night”, will link a constellation of events in 45 cities, 20 countries, and 6 continents. Many of these events will be directly connected with each other through the Internet via streaming video, chat rooms, and email.

The goal of Yuri's Night is to provide a venue for people of diverse backgrounds to connect with each other through a common inspiration – the future of space exploration. From the limitless opportunities of moving the human experience into space permanently to the possibility of scientific discoveries that redefine what being human really means, our future in space is something worth celebrating.

In Atlanta the celebration will be held at the Georgia Tech Global Learning & Conference Center at 85 5th Street from 8:00 until 11:30. Activities will include music, dancing, interaction with other Yuri's Night parties from around the world, and an evening long space trivia competition.

It has been 43 years since Yuri Gagarin became the first human to see the Earth from space. During the years since then many other humans have gone into space and returned with a new awareness of how small the Earth really is, how important it is to protect it, and how limitless our opportunities really are. It is this spirit of cooperation, exploration and learning that we commemorate with Yuri's Night.

Editors:

For information about the Atlanta event:

http://cyberbuzz.gatech.edu/msgt/yn/

For general information on Yuri's Night:

http://www.yurisnight.net

For a current list of countries participating:

http://www.yurisnight.net/parties/


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As many of you are aware, I blogged the Aldridge Commission hearings in Atlanta last week. This is an review of the meeting given my own re-reading of the logs and some time to reflect on them over the weekend. My gut reaction is one of very cautious optimism.

The thing that strikes me about all of the meetings is how utterly useless some of the presentations are. Some of the presentations are nothing more than infomercials for the organization being presented. Some presentations are apparently picked simply to “fill in the third seat”. The Commission has a rapidly approaching deadline and frankly only about half of the presentations seem to be cognizant of that fact. Many seem to simply want something but then offer nothing back to the commission that can help it meet its goal. Maybe that is just the nature of these things, but if I were a committee member I'd be extremely ticked off at the waste of time.

Ok, on to some specifics. I'm going to mix up the order here since I'm going to finish up on the various commercial space themes. The first will be various minor observations, the second will be a trimming of my diatribes during the various educations and labor union discussions, and finally a discussion of how I thought the commission viewed the various commercial space presentations.

There were several things that I found simply worth noting. In no particular

order:

Other, more minor, insights can be gleaned from the transcripts and from my inline comments.

The second thing I'm going to discuss is the “Building Space Jobs” section, which was mainly organized labor. As I said in the real time commentary, I'm not a fan of organized labor so if you are then ignore this part. It was my determination that this group is one of the main problems with how space is done these days. They are organized and seem to hold a very large amount of political capital because of that. Apparently their members have been a large determining factor behind ISS and Shuttle. They view these programs as purely ways of creating what they view as “high tech jobs”. At one point Paul Spudis threw out a strawman (transcripts aren't available yet so I can't quote directly) that asked that, if the goal of our space program was to “keep our technological sharpness” then should all of it belong as part of DoD as simply a national strategic priority? They answered yes! Not only did they agree with the premise but with its conclusion as well.

One of them even went so far as to suggest that the reason the US is losing jobs overseas is due to the cultural decay caused by television and the lack of good morality plays like they had during the old radio days! If this is what Big Labor has to offer these days no wonder we're losing jobs overseas.

Daniel Hegeman said it best during his presentation:

bq.

Also, if the government is the only customer and Congress can cancel out the whole space program on a yearly basis, we will seek a more secure profession to support our families and an entire generation will miss out. I support the planning and implementation of the President's vision that opens space to true private competition, even at the cost of loss of control and prestige for NASA and its contractors.

Daniel is saying something that Tom Peters is saying in Re-imagine. That the future of America is in its core value: that this land, this system that we've developed, is about radical opportunity. Simply 'earning a living' isn't enough. Simply 'manufacturing' isn't enough. Simply doing what we did last century isn't enough. Every moment has be to worked at the tip of innovation; at the sharp edge of creative distruction. And these labor guys find that to be the worst evil that could be visited on man because it means there is no such thing as job security. It means no such thing as jobs. Period. Every American's new responsibility is to be his/her own CEO of Me, Inc.

It means things like re-thinking the relationship between 'labor' and the processes it supports. It means having a worker in a factory actively spending his/her own time to figure out ways to not just increase his/her production, but to obsolete his own current job. It means things like figuring out how to build dark factories so that where one 'factory worker' ran one stop along an assembly line, that same 'worker' is the owner of an entire factory that runs itself. It means thinking of space as an opportunity and a market segment and not as a source for government ensured job security.

These are the people who have killed America's greatness in space. I lay Columbia and Challenger at their door.

Finally, the various commercial space presentations seem to have been very well received, except for some of Neil Tyson's appropriate scepticism. I do have some concerns though. Much of the conversations centered on finding the right model for how to interface with the commercial sector. The problem is that each market segment will require a different model. And those models are going to change over time. Neil's concern was how to deal with the mandated timelines in the vision they were given with that unpredictability.

These, and other comments led some of us to gather that the Commission is struggling with this issue on a regular basis. Thus, the commercial sector should be helping the commission figure that out. In my opinion, Jeff Greason had a good suggestion: for each NASA program, bid out that program at a 10th of its projected cost. If someone else can do it and qualify under FAR rules then do it. If no one can, then NASA does it. The other was to move launch contracts under FAR Part 12 rules, thus going to a fixed price instead of cost-plus.

It even seems as though they are toying with the idea of “creating an industry”. At one point Lauri Leshin rattled off three options. I don't have the transcript so I can recreate them but the way she asked the question suggested that the three alternatives were almost “verbal macros”, as though they had been said enough already that she really didn't have to think about it. And one of those was to create an new space industry. I'm going to guess that this means that they are actively considering it. Which is why I'm optimistic.

The other reason I'm optimistic is that, with few exceptions, the commission is being repeatedly told that NASA is incapable of realizing this vision on its own. In many cases its obvious that they're toying with the idea of an 'uber-agency'. Some kind of standing version of this Commission but with an oversight role over NASA and, to some extent, DoD and other agencies. The perfect solution in my mind would be for the commission to come out with recommendations for creating a real space industry, starting with encouraging the current crop of companies. And that strategy would be directed from outside NASA by a group that reported directly to the Whitehouse.

But the reason I'm cautious is that those labor unions have pull. They are in states that Bush will need to win. There are huge constituencies that will fight got keep the status quo. As one presenter put it, “the first thing you do when you're going to have a revolutions is to build pine boxes for all of the bodies”. Well, those bodies aren't going to go without a fight. So if this committee does attempt the bold, it will have to figure out how to throw a distracting bone to those constituencies so they won't know they're being put into pine boxes.

I'll wrap this up with a final observation: while watching and sometimes participating in politics is interesting (and seductive!), the real value of these hearings is the networking opportunities. I was able to meet fellow space entrepreneurs, space advocates, fellow bloggers, and students. But when I say 'networking', don't think in terms of “Business After Hours” parties with hundreds of insincere introductions. Think more of things like highly motivated individuals of like mind getting to know each other and working and competing together to build something important. So whether its one of these hearings, or a space conference like Space Access '04, Return To The Moon V, or ISDC 2004, go and meet people. Sit in the bar, have a beer and work out some crazy idea on a bar napkin. Then take that enthusiasm and go do something with it. That's how we built the Internet….


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from ARSAnews

US Court Rules APCP Is An Explosive

ATFE Acted Improperly Revoking PAD Status For Rocket Motors

March 25, 2004 - Judge Reggie B. Walton of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia issued a summary judgement on two counts in the case brought by NAR and TRA against the ATFE on March 19th. The court ruled in favor of the ATFE in that ammonium perchlorate composite propellant (APCP) was properly placed on the ATFE Explosives List. Judge Walton decided the court did not have the technical and scientific expertise to decide whether APCP was actually an explosive and deferred to the expertise of the ATFE. Instead, the court focused on the narrow issue of whether the ATFE had acting within the legal boundaries set by Congress in placing an item on the Explosives List. He decided that the ATFE had followed proper procedures.

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The court ruled in favor of NAR and TRA on the issue of the ATFE's decision to reclassify model rocket motors from propellant-actuated devices (PADs) to non-PAD status. The ATFE had issued two conflicting letters on the applicability of the PAD exemption to model rocket motors.

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Consequently the court ruled that fully assembled sport rocket motors are PADs and exempt from the ATFE permit requirements.

see the story page on ARSAnews for the complete story and links to the court documents


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I'll be actively blogging via IRC and Twiki from the Aldridge Commission meeting in Atlanta. To join in simply join the #arocket IRC channel on irc.freenode.net. To read the blog go to the #arocket wiki page here:

http://rocketforge.org/twiki/bin/view/Main/ArocketIRC.

Enjoy!


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The Aldridge Commission has its agenda up for the Atlanta meeting. Wednesday afternoon looks to be particularly interesting:

bq.

1:15 – 2:00 p.m. Space Entrepreneurs

Mr. Elon Musk, Founder, Zip2 and PayPal

Dr. Peter Diamandis, Chair & CEO, ZeroGravity Corp.

Mr. Jeff Greason, XCOR Aerospace

As does the same slot on Thursday:

bq.

1:15 – 2:00 p.m. Commercial Space & Economic Feasibility

Mr. Michael E. Kearney, President & CEO, Spacehab, Inc.

Mr. Marco H. Caceres, Senior Analyst & Director Space Studies

The Teal Group

Mr. Stephen Fleming, EGL Ventures

Stephen Fleming is a local Atlanta VC and an XCOR 'gadfly' (to quote his linkedin.com profile). Since I'm local I'll be attending. If there is wireless I'll blog the event from #arocket.


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From the 'shameless plug because I'm the one that wrote the release' department:

bq.

Plano, TX, March 5, 2004 – The Moon Society submitted position papers today concerning the implementation of the President's new space vision and the role that the moon plays in that vision to the Aldridge Commission. The Society stressed the importance of clarity about just why humans should return to the Moon, and how it should be done in a sustainable way.

As the commission emphasizes, it is that sustainability that is the most important factor in the long term success of the President's vision. If a return to the Moon is to provide the fullest possible support for a Mars exploration venture, the Moon's resources must be developed in a way that defrays lunar operations costs by providing an ever-growing portion of the needs of base personnel, by developing exports to minimize net costs of imports, and by manufacturing items needed to support the Mars missions.

The Society also reiterates its established position that private enterprise be as heavily involved as possible, both in direct support of governmental projects and in indirect ways, at private initiative, to develop lunar resources for profit. These profit motivated initiatives may include providing abundant clean energy for Earth's power needs, supporting tourism to and on the Moon, and providing spacecraft refueling services for the satellite industry. Such efforts will minimize the costs of government funded projects by creating consumer driven economies of scale.

The Society also submitted a proposal for the role that lunar observatories and other resources could play in either the recovery of the Hubble Space Telescope or in the development of follow on observatories. The lunar surface offers a much cleaner environment than low earth orbit: lunar orbital mechanics keeps the area clear of dust and debris, the lunar surface is seismically quiet, and the lunar far-side provides one of the best locations for radio astronomy.

The submissions, plus other Moon Society publications, can be found at http://www.moonsociety.org/whitepapers.

About The Moon Society

The Moon Society is a non-profit educational and scientific foundation formed to further scientific study and development of the moon. It was formed in July, 2000 by the members of the Artemis Society International as a way of broadening the range of efforts to include everything related to the moon and its development. Additional news and information about the organization is available at http://www.moonsociety.org/.

The documents in question are:

The Moon: Why and How we Should Return

The Hubble Space Telescope and the Future of Space-Based Astronomy in Light of a Return to the Moon


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