Virgin Galactic

Author
Discussion

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,170 posts

185 months

Stedman

7,227 posts

193 months

Tuesday 8th December 2009
quotequote all
Looks good. Will Virgin employees get discounts tongue out

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,170 posts

185 months

Tuesday 8th December 2009
quotequote all
Stedman said:
Looks good. Will Virgin employees get discounts tongue out
Sure you might get 5% !

J B L

4,200 posts

216 months

Tuesday 8th December 2009
quotequote all
I don't know if I am more impressed by the fact that in 2 years time people might be able to casually fly to the edge of space without specific training or by the design of the terminal!



Ha the glamour,
the champagne,
the dream,
the exclusivity,
th...
"any liquid in the bag? Take you laptop out!"

<sigh>

Edited by J B L on Tuesday 8th December 13:46

Penguinracer

1,593 posts

207 months

Tuesday 8th December 2009
quotequote all
Don't you think £121,000 for six minutes of weightlessness is a little steep? Total flight duration is two hours most of which is spent climbing around airliner attitudes followed by a 90-second zoom from 50,000 ft to 110km, six minutes floating around, a glide to the runway & a bill comparable to a mortgage. This is effectively just a high-flying aircraft. The ISS orbits at 380 kilometres, the shuttle operates in an altitude range of 190 - 960 kilometres, geostationary orbit is at 35,000 kilometres (at the equator) & the moon is approximately 385,000 km away. Even the old X-15 went up to 108km back in August 1963, so please excuse me if I don't get excited by Beardie's lastest venture - like most of his projects - it's more spin than substance.

Mattt

16,661 posts

219 months

Tuesday 8th December 2009
quotequote all
Penguinracer said:
Don't you think £121,000 for six minutes of weightlessness is a little steep? Total flight duration is two hours most of which is spent climbing around airliner attitudes followed by a 90-second zoom from 50,000 ft to 110km, six minutes floating around, a glide to the runway & a bill comparable to a mortgage. This is effectively just a high-flying aircraft. The ISS orbits at 380 kilometres, the shuttle operates in an altitude range of 190 - 960 kilometres, geostationary orbit is at 35,000 kilometres (at the equator) & the moon is approximately 385,000 km away. Even the old X-15 went up to 108km back in August 1963, so please excuse me if I don't get excited by Beardie's lastest venture - like most of his projects - it's more spin than substance.
Take it you've booked then?

dr_gn

Original Poster:

16,170 posts

185 months

Tuesday 8th December 2009
quotequote all
Penguinracer said:
This is effectively just a high-flying aircraft.
There are no aircraft capable of that altitude currently in service. The official altitude record is held by Space Ship One, bettering by a small margin the previous unofficial record held by an X-15.

A Virgin Galactic flight would be comparable with Alan Sheperd's "First American in space" flight in Freedom 7 in 1961, and he was hailed a hero...How much would you expect to pay for this kind of experience?

Eric Mc

122,077 posts

266 months

Tuesday 8th December 2009
quotequote all
Although Virgin Galactic does not break new ground regarding its technical capabilities, it does warant a number of firsts -

it's the first non-governmental effort to put people beyond the atmosphere

although the Russians have taken some fare paying passengers to help fund their programme, this is really the first ever truly commercial human space venture

Look on it as a beginning. There are other, more ambitious, private enterprise programmes waiting in the wings.

Ian974

2,946 posts

200 months

Tuesday 8th December 2009
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
Although Virgin Galactic does not break new ground regarding its technical capabilities, it does warant a number of firsts -

it's the first non-governmental effort to put people beyond the atmosphere

although the Russians have taken some fare paying passengers to help fund their programme, this is really the first ever truly commercial human space venture

Look on it as a beginning. There are other, more ambitious, private enterprise programmes waiting in the wings.
I'd agree with this. If it goes well and some real potential is visible in this, in both a business and a technological sense, it could be hugely important. I just hope that this doesn't become a one off project.

Due to the nature of these things, I'd imagine anything that happens will have been done beforehand by NASA etc. Opening the doors for everyone else will be the groundbreaking act.

mrmaggit

10,146 posts

249 months

Tuesday 8th December 2009
quotequote all
If I had the money, I'd be there in a flash.

Oily Nails

2,932 posts

201 months

Tuesday 8th December 2009
quotequote all
People your missing the point entirely...


the question is, which multi-millionare is gonna 'buy' all the seats on one flight so he and his 'trolley dolly' can be members 1&2 of the "110km club" or "Zero-G Club" hehe



My money is on this bloke, with his current form wink



Holst

2,468 posts

222 months

Wednesday 9th December 2009
quotequote all
Penguinracer said:
Don't you think £121,000 for six minutes of weightlessness is a little steep? Total flight duration is two hours most of which is spent climbing around airliner attitudes followed by a 90-second zoom from 50,000 ft to 110km, six minutes floating around, a glide to the runway & a bill comparable to a mortgage. This is effectively just a high-flying aircraft. The ISS orbits at 380 kilometres, the shuttle operates in an altitude range of 190 - 960 kilometres, geostationary orbit is at 35,000 kilometres (at the equator) & the moon is approximately 385,000 km away. Even the old X-15 went up to 108km back in August 1963, so please excuse me if I don't get excited by Beardie's lastest venture - like most of his projects - it's more spin than substance.
I think Branson and his customers also see themselves as investing in future projects.
It might only be 6 min at the moment, but they want to be in orbit for a few days in another decade.

Although it might seem a bit steep for you and me... for his customers its not all that expensive. For somebody on 6mil a year pension they could have 50 flights each year smile

Tonto

2,983 posts

249 months

Wednesday 9th December 2009
quotequote all
Stedman said:
Looks good. Will Virgin employees get discounts tongue out
If you upgrade to 'Tribe Universe' then yes! hehe