Canon PowerShot S100
ƒ/3.2
5.2 mm
1/100
125

At Space Systems Loral HQ today, with my partner M.Jolly

The Russian Proton Breeze M and French Ariane 5 have been the heavy lift vehicles that Loral has used of late. I got a smile when I mentioned that the Proton made for some powerful fireworks this July. This statue is a token of their appreciation.

We took a tour of the high bay and the shake & bake test facilities. We wore bunny suits and beard and turban covers when walking among the satellites under construction. The gleaming heat radiators for the tube amps, solar panels folded under wing, and Ka-band waveguide micro-plumbing had the panache of haute-analog-couture.

We saw THOR 7 (destined to hang over the Baltic Sea), AsiaSat (digital TV or China) and SkyTerra-2 with its huge unfolding reflector (72 ft. across!) and phase array antennae that allows for ground station beam forming. The ground station can reconfigure the satellite on the fly to position 500 hundred simultaneous spot beams across the U.S. and Canada. The plan is to provide 4G voice and data connectivity across the entire region, no matter how remote. The enormous dish in space is needed to reach the small mobile handsets on Earth.

7 responses to “From Russia with Love”

  1. Models of various satellites, using a common bus:
    IMG_3757

    Renditions of: SkyTerra
    skyterra
    That little box at the hub is the size of a mini-bus, just like the other GEO birds, and those long solar arrays and 72-ft. reflector unfold in space.

    and THOR-7
    thor_7

  2. P.S., the one launch exception so far for Loral was from this modified oil platform, which I toured with my buddy Erik

    Ready for Launch

  3. Wow… and the space bus probably looks familiar….

    The recent Proton launch going horizontal off the pad reminded me of Loral’s experience launching with the Chinese Long March…

    Washington Post: "the Loral satellite — Intelsat 7A — blew up. The Chinese rocket detonated 22 seconds into flight, obliterating the hotel where Western observers had dropped off their luggage only hours before."

    They have a piece of that Loral satellite on the wall at Buck’s:

    Chinese Space Junk
    launch details

  4. I left FACC in about 1980-ish, before the Loral change, and the Long March fiasco. … I then misspent many yrs at the Blue Cube, and some other like places. I thought the same thing as you when I saw the video of the Proton launch failure. When I was a kid, in the ’50s, I remember seeing a docu-movie (16mm, B&W) of failed launch after failed launch. Mostly Vanguard, Viking and V-2s. Amazing how many spectacular failures had to be overcome. Inspired me to get into the space biz. 🙂 But now…. Failure is Not an Option… =8-0

  5. Amen…

    “In Apollo, they are famous for saying failure is not an option.
    But failure has to be an option.
    In art and exploration, it’s a leap of faith.
    In whatever you’re doing, failure is an option.
    But fear is not.”
    James Cameron

  6. And from the logic and marketing department… interview of Yuri Prokhorov (Director General of the Russian Satellite Communications Co.) in the current Space News, on why the Federal launches of the Proton have failed so dramatically but the commercial launches of the same rocket haven’t. Here’s an excerpt of the Q&A:

    What was your 2013 revenue?
    About 5.8 billion rubles… We lost AM1, AM2, MD1, MD2, AM4 and now AM4R, all within the last few years. Six satellites — three during launch, and three in orbit.

    Proton’s failures of late have been on Russian federal missions, even though commercial launches are more frequent. How can this be?
    It is like Russian roulette. We are being provided with a service for free, and we don’t have direct contract with Khrunichev.

    But Russian roulette over time would distribute risk to players from both sides. In recent years, it’s exclusively Russian federal missions that have failed.
    If you play Russian roulette with a machine gun there is 100 percent assurance of the outcome.

    Kapow! I can imagine his wry smile. He must have thought he just nailed it with that macho answer. =)

    And it reminds me that the hobby rocketry community launched a huge 1/12 scale Proton-M… video Screen shot 2010-11-09 at 8.24.14 AM Screen shot 2010-11-09 at 8.25.44 AM

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *