#VentureStar
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cryptidwithacopiccollection · 2 months ago
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lonestarflight · 1 year ago
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final three X-33 entrants from Rockwell International, Lockheed and McDonnell Douglas.
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I was reading your tags and I couldnt help but add
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This man? Fruity? No way
right guys I asked folks over on Instagram but i know that most of the Yamato fandom is on here (there's like five of us in total but we're here)
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asknarashikari · 10 months ago
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The Gotchard cast are on vacation to relax from being Riders but it appears Kaguya found them and is approaching them in his golden helicopter, the "Legend-copter", to ask for Houtaro's hand in marriage, again. Thankfully or not in Kaguya's case, two Mini-con teams have decided to stop him from doing any of this by attacking him.
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The Sea Mini-con Team comprised of Oceanglide the "solar sail" boat, Stormcloud the speedboat, and Waterlog the hovercraft.
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The Air Defense Mini-con Team comprised of Jetstorm the Concorde SST, Runway the Boeing Sonic Cruiser, and Sonar the VentureStar shuttle.
The Sea Mini-con Team starts to fire upon Kaguya's "Legend-copter" to either force Kaguya to land the helicopter or cause the helicopter to crash. The Air Defense Mini-con Team decide to board the helicopter and fight Kaguya by ripping one of the doors off and attempt to fight but they accidently send the helicopter to crash and Kaguya is able escape by parachuting away but the parachute is "accidently" ripped by Jetstorm while fleeing from the crashing helicopter. Which, leads to Kaguya landing in the water to drown, but he is thankfully saved by a Mini-con from a different team commanded by Houtaro to save Kaguya.
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The Emergency Mini-con Team comprised of Firebot the crash-response truck, Makeshift the twin-rotor helicopter, and Prowl the Cybertronic police car.
Makeshift saves Kaguya from drowning and gets him on to land. Houtaro comforts Kaguya, who is slowly growing afraid of these machines, with the Emergency Mini-con Team, while the other members of the Gotchard cast scold the two other Mini-con teams for almost killing Kaguya.
What are the Riders' reactions to these sequence of events?
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Emu: ...You couldn't have left him to die? *everyone gasps and looks at Emu* What? Are we going to act like those two aren't that guy's role models? *gestures to the Magenta Menace and the Yandere Cyan*
Shinnosuke: Uh... I think it's for the better if we never tell Houtaro about what you just said... and everything that just happened...
And so Houtaro remains oblivious, bless him, and Hojo Emu scares the fuck out of the mini-cons
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piratesexmachine420 · 4 months ago
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God sometimes I really wish the VentureStar or CRV programs had gotten the funding and time they needed. I'd even settle for Kliper or HOPE or even Skylon; which we all know had a snowball's chance in hell of actually happening.
Out of all the possible crewed spacecraft for the ISS program to be stuck with why'd it have to be Crew Dragon, CST-100 and Soyuz MS.
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nikproxima · 2 years ago
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Horizon, in her fully complete configuration. Shown with Shuttle and Venturestar. Done by Jay.
As the Olympus program continued to hit its strides, it became clear that the premier international space outpost, Odyssey, had reached the end of its usable life. By the mid 2010s, she was approaching nearly 30 years old, having her first components launched in the late 1980s. While the modular assembly ability of the Space Shuttle had been proved useful in assembling Odyssey, it sat for nearly 4 years before crews could regularly access her and rotate through her, due to the lack of availability of lifeboat spacecraft. It was in this frame of mind that a new station concept would be considered, based on a concept called "Supermodule" from Ames, a giant, monolithic core leveraging the powerful Jupiter-OPAV system. She would be constructed using similar structures to that of the external tank, sharing the same 8.4 meter diameter, and augmented by 4.3 meter modules which could be launched onboard the Space Shuttle or Venturestar SSTO. On February 26th, 2014, OPAV Adventure would launch from Kennedy Space Center with the monolithic station core stacked on top, for a flawless 8 ½ minute ride to orbit. Here, she would be checked out by a variety of station crews, and only 3 assembly flights later, she was ready to support crew operations. Anna Douglass, commander of Olympus 3, would see her return to flight with Olympus 9 veteran Christopher Taylor - a heartwarming reunion and a symbol of strength in the face of adversity. Horizon would, after the retirement of the Shuttle, go on to be serviced by ACEV, Liberté and Venturestar, before the station was ultimately decommissioned in the late 2040s. Her replacements would be similar in form and function, forming a fleet of Horizon class stations served by both government operators and private corporations. Starlight, the first orbital tourism hub, would be based on the Horizon class, and grow into a popular tourist destination in the late 2030s. Horizon would pioneer the future of in space habitation, with future Interplanetary Transfer Vehicles incorporating lessons learned in habitat manufacturing and interior design.
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cryptidwithacopiccollection · 9 months ago
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Hi guys It's me I'm the mutual.
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A Christmas gift for a mutual Ahhhhhhh !! Meant to post this on monday but time kept getting away from me~
closeups on my fav bits below
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~
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usafphantom2 · 4 years ago
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The X-33 was intended to serve as a half-scale prototype for Lockheed’s proposed VentureStar reusable launch vehicle. Though the final product of the program was to be a SSTO, the X-33 was merely a suborbital aircraft, intended to reach a top speed of Mach 15 and validate the general design. Powered by two experimental aerospike engines, the X-33 was to have a takeoff weight of 285,000lb of which 210,000lb would be fuel. Plans called for it to take off vertically and land horizontally like the Space Shuttle, but, being an SSTO, no external fuel tanks or boosters would be required. Unfortunately, the X-33 ran into a host of technical difficulties, including stability issues and excess weight, and, in 1999, the failure of the composite liquid hydrogen tanks during a full-scale test led to major cost overruns. Ultimately, funding was cut in 2001, with the prototype 85% assembled and launch facility completed. Meanwhile, a significant drop in the number of commercial satellite launches meant that the VentureStar would no longer be profitable, so Lockheed dropped the project soon after.
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entertainmentnerdly · 6 years ago
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VentureStar Inspired SSTO's (2363x1331 Credit: James Vaughan) via /r/spaceporn http://bit.ly/2TvYBSy
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space-pics · 6 years ago
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VentureStar Inspired SSTO's (2363x1331 Credit: James Vaughan)
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photos-of-space · 6 years ago
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VentureStar Inspired SSTO's (2363x1331 Credit: James Vaughan)
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In those little moments where we can forget.
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lonestarflight · 1 year ago
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Comparison between the enlarged VentureStar and the X-33.
"This artist's rendering depicts the NASA/Lockheed Martin X-33 technology demonstrator alongside the Venturestar, a Single-Stage-To-Orbit (SSTO) Reusable Launch Vehicle (RLV). The X-33, a half-scale prototype for the Venturestar, is scheduled to be flight tested in 1999. NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California, plays a key role in the development and flight testing of the X-33. The RLV technology program is a cooperative agreement between NASA and industry. The goal of the RLV technology program is to enable signifigant reductions in the cost of access to space, and to promote the creation and delivery of new space services and other activities that will improve U.S. economic competitiveness. NASA Headquarter's Office of Space Access and Technology is overseeing the RLV program, which is being managed by the RLV Office at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, located in Huntsville, Alabama. The X-33 was a wedged-shaped subscale technology demonstrator prototype of a potential future Reusable Launch Vehicle (RLV) that Lockheed Martin had dubbed VentureStar. The company had hoped to develop VentureStar early this century. Through demonstration flight and ground research, NASA's X-33 program was to provide the information needed for industry representatives such as Lockheed Martin to decide whether to proceed with the development of a full-scale, commercial RLV program. A full-scale, single-stage-to-orbit RLV was to dramatically increase reliability and lower costs of putting a pound of payload into space, from the current figure of $10,000 to $1,000. Reducing the cost associated with transporting payloads in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) by using a commercial RLV was to create new opportunities for space access and significantly improve U.S. economic competitiveness in the world-wide launch marketplace. NASA expected to be a customer, not the operator, of the commercial RLV. The X-33 design was based on a lifting body shape with two revolutionary 'linear aerospike' rocket engines and a rugged metallic thermal protection system. The vehicle also had lightweight components and fuel tanks built to conform to the vehicle's outer shape. Time between X-33 flights was normally to have been seven days, but the program had hoped to demonstrate a two-day turnaround between flights during the flight-test phase of the program. The X-33 was to have been an unpiloted vehicle that took off vertically like a rocket and landed horizontally like an airplane. It was to have reached altitudes of up to 50 miles and high hypersonic speeds. The X-33 program was managed by the Marshall Space Flight Center and was to have been launched at a special launch site on Edwards Air Force Base. Due to technical problems with the liquid hydrogen tank, and the resulting cost increase and time delay, the X-33 program was cancelled in February 2001."
Date: September 23, 1999
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NASA Identifier: NIX-ED97-43929, ED97-43938-1
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superurmet1 · 2 years ago
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Cuando la NASA quiso sustituir el Transbordador con un vehículo espacial barato y futurista: VentureStar https://www.xataka.com/espacio/cuando-nasa-quiso-sustituir-transbordador-vehiculo-espacial-barato-futurista-asi-era-venturestar
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VentureStar Inspired SSTO's (2363x1331 Credit: James Vaughan)
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spaceexp · 7 years ago
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NASA's Big Mistake - The X-33 VentureStar
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