1. Space
2. User
3. Control
Space first because:
- the 11 Block IIA birds are aging with 8 one critical subsystem away
from total failure
- The Block IIF birds are five years late; the first set for launch in
June of 2010
User second. The GAO (http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d09325.pdf ) report
stated the following:
- "New Satellite Capabilities Will Not Be Leveraged Because of Delayed
Delivery of Ground and User Equipment Capabilities"
"GPS satellites that will broadcast the modernized military signal
require military user equipment capable of receiving and processing
the signal so that military users can take advantage of the improved
military capabilities. Before the modernized military signal can be
considered initially operational, it must be broadcast from at least
18 satellites, which is expected to occur in 2013. For full
operational capability, it must be broadcast from 24 satellites, which
is expected to occur in 2015. Consequently, the new military signal
will be made operational by the GPS satellites and ground control
system in about 2013, but the warfighter will not be able to take full
advantage of this new signal until about 2025— when the modernized
user equipment is completely fielded. See figure 6 for our analysis of
the gap between when the modernized military signal
will be available on the GPS satellites and when the military services
will be able to take advantage of it."
Control segment last. Why?
- AEP was just delivered and seems to be working fine
- It should be practical to gradually retrofit the best features of
OCX into AEP; it's just software
- OCX costs money that would be better spent on the space and user
segments
Mike Jr
>I would prioritize the three GPS segments thus:
>
>1. Space
>2. User
>3. Control
What was the question?
"it's just software" is possibly the phrase that has cost aerospace and
defense firms and their customers more time and money losses than any
other single issue.
I concur with Happy Trails.
The question is, given the priorities, why would you spend another
dime on OCX?
What do you think it will cost to just get OCX up to the point of
doing what AEP already does? IMHO, OCX is just another attempt to
sock it to the American tax payer.
Adding along track ranging, support for modernized signals, and many
other OCX goodies should fit easily within the existing AEP
architecture. That is what I meant by "it's just software". Believe
me, I know the ins and outs of software.
--Mike Jr
Evidently the Congress with you. A bill awaiting the president's
signature doesn't include $97.4 M requested for the upgraded GPS
control center:
http://pnt.gov/policy/legislation/funding/2010.shtml
I'd believe the new GPS features will still be controllable by the
system engineers. Air Force operations personnel will need to wait
for a new fancy user interface.
--- CHAS
> Air Force operations personnel will need to wait
> for a new fancy user interface.
I can't believe that AEP is ASCII on green tube; it's two years old!
>
> --- CHAS
--Mike Jr.
What does that matter if the job gets done? (rhetorical).