> > Nevertheless, EU has expressed concern about a lack of innovation
> > with respect to utilization of Galileo's superior attributes.
>
> > Certainly, NAVSTAR has served us well for general navigation and
> > precision timing. With augmentation submeter real-time positioning is
> > routinely achieved. With post processing, centimeter positioning is
> > achieved. The book of GIS applications is being written during the
> > NAVSTAR era. What superior applications can Galileo actually
> > achieve? I guess that depends upon how much superior the real world
> > performance actually will be.
>
> > --- CHAS
>
> In that tone, I should recognize that IIF-1 and IIF-2 are around 5th/
> 6th best performing NAVSTAR birds. Its interesting that they're still
> lagging behind many IIR and IIR-M birds (and IIR-M performance
> average). Their performance certainly isn't enough to consider going
> beyond the current 12 bird order. I contend that the single most
> important feature of the entire GPS III family will be the cross
> linked architecture starting with IIIB. I sure hope as few GPS IIIA as
> possible will be built. And we're still stuck at one launch per year
> throughout 2012, with a realistic projection of L2C IOC for 2021 and
> L5 FOC for 2030. Hopefully with the end of the current solar maximum
> and with an improving US economy, that launch pace can be upped to a
> twin launch yearly beginning in 2013 or 2014.
>
> Marcelo Pacheco
Marcelo,
I should have mentioned that United Launch Alliance has performed an
analysis confirming an Atlas 5 rocket can simultaneously orbit two GPS
III satellites. Until then the US still seriously lags behind
everyone else in launch assets.
Proton rockets do three GLONASS per launch. Now the EU plans two
launchers with Soyuz just having completed a dual Galileo mission and
Ariane 5 to be available for quad missions when the new satellites are
delivered. I'd say let's buy launch services but that's prohibited by
a US Law disallowing DoD payloads from foreign launchers. Only God,
the USAF and probably the Chinese know anything about those rumored
classified auxiliary payloads.
Several years ago, Perkin Elmer was awarded a sole source contract to
redesign the Rubidium frequency standards .. parts obsolesce. Those
probably are flying in the IIF satellites and, to the best of my
knowledge, they will be the black boxes flying aboard GPS III. You
are correct about those IIF satellites under performing the IIRM
series. I suppose a detailed analysis is underway to determine if
clock performance explains why.
Despite a gloom and doom sounding outlook, NAVSTAR still slightly
outperforms GLONASS and Galileo isn't here yet to claim 'Gold
Standard' status. I commented in another discussion about the
intellect behind NAVSTAR sustaining the constellation. Alan responded
how underlying program inadequacies, as analyzed by the General
Accounting Office back during 2009, remain. A point well taken.
--- CHAS