Jakki wrote:
Well looks like Soace X has got mission 6-55 into Soace , watched that at About 4 am today. , No Issues on take off
Carrying about 23 more Satillites up there... Upon the top of Falcon 9 rocket , that is based on a dramatically more current design.
![Cool 8)](./images/smilies/icon_cool.gif)
......Such a shame that NASA did not keep their hand in the Space program....
![Ninja :ninja:](./images/smilies/icon_ninja.gif)
...
Maybe those ancient Saturn5 rocket motors would have worked better ..
![Rolling Eyes :roll:](./images/smilies/icon_rolleyes.gif)
...Or came up with a different newer design..hopefully .
![Nerdy :nerdy:](./images/smilies/icon_nerdy.gif)
What are you talking about? NASA is all about "the Space program", and the "Space Program" still centers on NASA.
What NASA DID do was to A) stop sending humans above low earth orbit (ie space shuttle and space station), and to expand our use of unmanned probes to interplanetary space (if its farther than couple hundred miles above earth they stopped sending human astronauts, and switched to robot probes). IF its anywhere from 200 miles up (Im guessing) out to Pluto...they use only unmanned probes, And (b) to invite private enterprise into space.
During the glory days of Apollo NASA took a big chunk out of our GNP each year, and after Apollo the NASA budget shrank to a fraction of its former self (because the voters lost interest because...we won already, and beat the Ruskies to the Moon so who cares now?). But the unmanned probes of the last forty years since Apollo have given us a lot of scientific bang for the buck.
But yeah...it would be cool if they kept a few Saturn V motors around- to use alongside the newer models in the mix. Like we now have B1, B2, and B3 bombers, but we still use the B 52 along side these new fangled later "successors" . And the Russians still use their equivalent of the B52, the Soviet TU 95 (both it and the B52 came out in circa 1955). Sometimes an old design is still just right for the job even decades later.