May 232013
 

In the early 1960’s, NASA wanted the Nova rocket: a launch system capable of orbiting around one million pounds. The primary missions included manned lunar and Mars missions, space station launches, that sort of thing. But other missions were contemplated, including military missions. Information on these military missions is pretty lean. This is most likely due to the fact that Nova was a NASA project with minimal DoD input… thus there would have been minimal actual work done on military launch planning for Nova. Nevertheless, a few snippets of military Nova data have come to light from time to time.

A General Dynamics/Astronautics presentation to NASA in August 1963 had a few paragraphs and a few charts discussing military missions. Sadly there was little more; it is impossible to determine if these concepts were actually requested by NASA or not, and whether these ideas went any further. BAMBI (BAllistic Missile Boost Intercept), an anti-missile satellite system, was studied by General Dynamics at the same time as Nova, and has largely remained classified (or at least, little has been made public). Like the anti-missile satellites studied during the SDI program of the 1980’s, for BAMBI to have had a chance of success at taking out a massed Soviet ICBM strike, a large number of the satellites would be needed. In the NOVA presentation, 14 million pounds worth of satellites  – each weighing 4,000 pounds – were claimed as needed. In this case, launching 3,500 or so satellites would be a chore that Nova could handle easier than much smaller launch vehicles.

More unconventionally, Nova was also proposed as a logistics transport. In this case, it could be used to chuck a capsule across the planet sub-orbitally… a capsule with 2.5 million pounds of payload. Additionally, Nova could put a 1 million pound capsule into orbit; the capsule would de-orbit itself and land to disgorge infantry. Orbital systems were in a way prefered, as orbital systems meant that the Nova itself would go into orbit. This meant that the Nova could de-orbit on command an return to Earth at convenient locations for recovery; ballistic lobs would essentially throw the Nova away. The orbital capsule was at least illustrated with a drawing.

Finally, Nova could be used to launch offensive weapons. One million pounds were the weights given, so presumably these were meant to go into orbit. The weapons loads were remarkable, and more than a little spooky:

  • 10,000 megatons worth of nukes (speculation: 10,000 one-megaton warheads)
  • Enough chemical weapons to kill everyone in a 1,000 square mile region
  • Enough biological weaponry to kill everyone in a 1,000,000 square mile region.

Note… these weapons loads are for a single launch.

Not provide in the presentation – or anywhere else that I’ve seen – is NASAs reaction to the idea of using their rocket to launch a million square miles worth of biological horror.

military nova

 

 Posted by at 10:41 pm
May 232013
 

Stockholm is on fire (guess why):

[youtube HvmLl331Y0Q]

Stockholm riots spread south on fourth night

Short form: Sweden has a serious unemployment problem… 25% of those under 25 have no job. And yet they have a large number of immigrants who brought nothing to the table, yet demand welfare benefits. This is a problem, but it’s a problem with a straightforward, obvious and humane solution: mass deportations.

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And in other news, the British legal system has decided that ignorance of the law *IS* an excuse.

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And in further other news, it seems a few Brits were upset about a soldier being butchered in the street.

[youtube GHW64y8hdRU]

 Posted by at 12:39 pm
May 232013
 

Charles Ramsey, who helped free Cleveland kidnap victims, gets burgers for life

See, now that’s something I can get behind. A guy does the decent thing, and local businesses decide, of their own accord, to provide him with some goodies to thank him. Now hopefully the same restaurants will also provide free burgers for life for the three women…

As you may recall, Ramsey gained a little bit of humorous press for mentioning several times that he was eating a Big Mac when he came to the rescue of the three kidnapped women. The articles lists a dozen or so local restaurants that have offered him burgers for life… an not a single McDonalds is listed. Hmm.

 Posted by at 10:03 am
May 232013
 

Grumman 619 orbiter coming in for a powered (turbojet) landing. Note the white underside… it is very unlikely that the underside would actually be painted white (much less that it would survive re-entry); instead, this is almost certainly artistic license.

 Posted by at 7:31 am
May 212013
 

Tonight I happened across a binder that I haven’t seen in many years, containing a number of reports that I had considered lost. Some of this is in dire need of being written about. But as a teaser and a test, here’s one line from a presentation chart from 1963. Who can say what this is describing?

 

NUCLEAR                 10^4 MT                    1.0

 

 Posted by at 10:51 pm
May 202013
 

An illustration of Grumman’s 619 Space Shuttle – the final competitor for the competition that North American Rockwell won – lifting off. This design from 1972 was laid out pretty much as the final Space Transportation System was, but with some notable differences:

1) Stabilizing fins on the external tank

2) A “humped” back

3) four turbojet engines could be stored in the rear of the cargo bay, used for landing range extension, go-around capability and self-ferrying

4) Smaller OMS pods

5) Separate reaction control pods on the wingtips

 Posted by at 5:23 pm