Transterrestrial Musings  


Amazon Honor System Click Here to Pay

Space
Alan Boyle (MSNBC)
Space Politics (Jeff Foust)
Space Transport News (Clark Lindsey)
NASA Watch
NASA Space Flight
Hobby Space
A Voyage To Arcturus (Jay Manifold)
Dispatches From The Final Frontier (Michael Belfiore)
Personal Spaceflight (Jeff Foust)
Mars Blog
The Flame Trench (Florida Today)
Space Cynic
Rocket Forge (Michael Mealing)
COTS Watch (Michael Mealing)
Curmudgeon's Corner (Mark Whittington)
Selenian Boondocks
Tales of the Heliosphere
Out Of The Cradle
Space For Commerce (Brian Dunbar)
True Anomaly
Kevin Parkin
The Speculist (Phil Bowermaster)
Spacecraft (Chris Hall)
Space Pragmatism (Dan Schrimpsher)
Eternal Golden Braid (Fred Kiesche)
Carried Away (Dan Schmelzer)
Laughing Wolf (C. Blake Powers)
Chair Force Engineer (Air Force Procurement)
Spacearium
Saturn Follies
JesusPhreaks (Scott Bell)
Journoblogs
The Ombudsgod
Cut On The Bias (Susanna Cornett)
Joanne Jacobs


Site designed by


Powered by
Movable Type
Biting Commentary about Infinity, and Beyond!

« Potpourri | Main | "A Patriotic Entertainer..." »

A Critical Milestone

Chief Engineer Dan DeLong of XCOR emails:

Patricia Grace Smith, FAA Associate Administrator, has made a public statement that there are three organizations with RLV launch licenses in process at AST. They are: Armadillo Aerospace, Scaled Composites, and XCOR Aerospace. Furthermore, she said that XCOR's license application has been deemed "sufficiently complete". This means the FAA now has a maximum of 180 days to either issue a license or report to Congress why they did not.

Notice the change in terminology from "substantially complete" to "sufficiently complete". Also, I do not yet have an on-line reference for her statement. It came to me from Jeff Greason; he and Randall Clague are currently in Washington DC, and were surprised at the speediness of the announcement.

This is good news, and will establish the precedent--another first for XCOR. I assume that means the Mojave Airport has passed the environmental review, but I'm sure that someone will correct me if that's a false inference.

I also assume that the license will be issued in less than the 180 days--I can't see why they would delay it much at this point.

Posted by Rand Simberg at October 30, 2003 03:24 PM
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.transterrestrial.com/mt-diagnostics.cgi/1892

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference this post from Transterrestrial Musings.
Comments

I can't see why they would delay it much at this point.

Umm, because they can? Although we would hope not.

Posted by John S Allison at October 31, 2003 06:26 AM

Kudos to XCOR! (Fingers crossed!)

Posted by Mike Puckett at October 31, 2003 11:50 AM

So are they building something other than the Xerus? What are they planning?

Posted by B.Brewer at October 31, 2003 05:47 PM

My understanding is that they are building Xerus, but that this license is for an intermediate test vehicle that will prove out many of the technologies necessary to build it.

Posted by Rand Simberg at October 31, 2003 07:19 PM

Mojave Airport's spaceport application is still in work, and you are correct about the license application being for an intermediate vehicle.

The appropriate quote, to the great surprise of absolutely no one, comes from Winston Churchill: "This is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. It is, perhaps, the end of the beginning."

-R

Posted by Randall Clague at November 3, 2003 11:53 AM


Post a comment
Name:


Email Address:


URL:


Comments: