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GSLV MKIII Vs. Atlas V 501

so the common core booster of the Atlas V is more efficent than using those heavy solid rocket boosters??

wonder why India hasn't tried to get the RD-180 from russia?




The US up until the 21 century did everything they could to slow down India in every sphere. The US threatened to bring Russia under sanctions with the Semi Cyrogenic engine tech collaboration with India. Luckily, Russia held up its obligation of supplying India with 10-15 engines. The collaboration ended though. So from then on, India was working on it.


The reality is many powers, from West to East will do anything to slow down India. Its better now but the situation was quite different back then. India must remain vigliant. The killing of Homi Bhabba was not an accident. I am quite sure our disintguished scientists have been targetted in the past to slow down advances in key programs. That's the name of the game.


It really disgusts me when I see America supporting Pakistan 24-7. Haven't you guys learnt your lesson after Osama was discovered living there under their protection?
 
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TH04-ROCKET-BRSC_2231592e.jpg
atlas-5-501__x-37b-otv2__1.jpg


I was comparing rocket systems via Comparison of orbital launch systems - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and I noticed GSLV MK III and Atlas V 501 performance is roughly the same but, GSLV MKIII weights 304 tonnes more. why is that? is GLSV a inefficient design o_O



GSLV Mk III
Mass 640,000KG
LEO 8,000KG
GTO 4,000KG

Atlas V 501
Mass 337,000KG
LEO 8,250KG
GTO 3,970

the math just doesn't add up.


Because you are comparing Mig 21 with Mig 29. Ie You need to compare Atlas 3 with Gslv 3 .

Atlas 3
Height 52.8 m (173.2 ft)
Diameter 3.05 m (10 ft)
Mass 214,338 kg (472,338 lb)
Stages 2
Capacity
Payload to LEO IIIA: 8,640 kg (19,040 lb)
IIIB: 10,218 kg (23,630 lb)
Payload to
GTO IIIA: 4,055 kg (8,939 lb)
IIIB: 4,500 kg (9,900 lb)
Associated rockets
Family Atlas
Launch history
Status Retired
Launch sites SLC-36B, CCAFS
Total launches 6
(IIIA: 2, IIIB: 4)
Successes 6
(IIIA: 2, IIIB: 4)[1]
First flight IIIA: 24 May 2000
IIIB: 21 February 2002
Last flight IIIA: 13 March 2004
III
First stage
Engines 1 RD-180
Thrust 4,148.7 kN (932,670 lbf)
Specific impulse 311 sec
Burn time 132 seconds
Fuel RP-1/LOX
Second stage (Atlas IIIA) - Centaur (SEC)
Engines 1 RL-10A
Thrust 99.2 kN (22,290 lbf)
Specific impulse 451 sec
Burn time 738 seconds
Fuel LH2/LOX
Second stage (Atlas IIIB) - Centaur (DEC)
Engines 2 RL-10A
Thrust 147 kN (41,592 lbf)
Specific impulse 449 sec
Burn time 392 seconds
Fuel LH2/LOX

GSLV MK3
Height 43.43 m (142.5 ft)[1]
Diameter 4.0 m (13.1 ft)
Mass 640,000 kg (1,410,000 lb)[1]
Stages 3
Capacity
Payload to
LEO (600 km) 8,000 kg (18,000 lb)[1]
Payload to
GTO 4,000 kg (8,800 lb)[1]
Launch history
Status Development
Launch sites Satish Dhawan Space Centre SLP, Andhra Pradesh, India
Total launches 1 (2 stage version)
Successes 1 (2 stage version)
First flight 18 December 2014 (2 stage version; sub-orbital flight)
Booster Stage - S200
Length 25 m (82 ft)[1]
Diameter 3.2 m (10 ft)[1]
Propellant mass 207,000 kg (456,000 lb)[1]
Engines 2 Solid
Thrust 5,150 kN (525 tf) each[3][4][5]
Specific impulse 274.5 (vacuum)[1]
Burn time 130 sec[1]
Fuel HTPB[1]
Core Stage - L110
Length 17 m (56 ft)[1]
Diameter 4.0 m (13.1 ft)[1]
Propellant mass 110,000 kg (240,000 lb)[1]
Engines 2 Vikas engines
Thrust 1,598 kN (163.0 tf)[1][6][7]
Specific impulse 293 sec[1]
Burn time 200 sec[1]
Fuel UDMH/N2O4
Upper Stage - C25
Length 13.5 m (44 ft)[1]
Diameter 4.0 m (13.1 ft)[1]
Propellant mass 27,000 kg (60,000 lb)[1]
Engines 1 CE-20
Thrust 186 kN (19.0 tf)[1]
Specific impulse 450 sec
Fuel LOX/LH2
 
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The US up until the 21 century did everything they could to slow down India in every sphere. The US threatened to bring Russia under sanctions with the Semi Cyrogenic engine tech collaboration with India. Luckily, Russia held up its obligation of supplying India with 10-15 engines. The collaboration ended though. So from then on, India was working on it.


The reality is many powers, from West to East will do anything to slow down India. Its better now but the situation was quite different back then. India must remain vigliant. The killing of Homi Bhabba was not an accident. I am quite sure our disintguished scientists have been targetted in the past to slow down advances in key programs. That's the name of the game.


It really disgusts me when I see America supporting Pakistan 24-7. Haven't you guys learnt your lesson after Osama was discovered living there under their protection?

Victim mentality is why India is a poophole.
 
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GSLV is smaller but more or less same capacity

Victim mentality is why India is a poophole.

What a moron . He is right . US and the west did everything to stop advancement of Indian space agency . Thanks to Russians .We over came that all .Soon over take many of the western space agency . Jealous mindset is the reason why West entered into shithole economy
 
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Victim mentality is why India is a poophole.



I'm not concerned by victim mentality. The bigger concern for me is learning from our mistakes, our humiliations, our failures......then gaining constructive criticism and feedback....and making sure it never happens again.


The mentality you speak is a symptom of Inda that was constantly pushed by the previous govts under Congress. Unlike MK Gandhi, I believe in the quote "an eye for an eye." If the whole world goes blind, then so be it.
 
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GSLV Mk III
Mass 640,000KG
LEO 8,000KG
GTO 4,000KG

Atlas V 501
Mass 337,000KG
LEO 8,250KG
GTO 3,970

the math just doesn't add up.

It's a quantum leap of India in space technology. I think the difference in weight is MAY BE due to sophistication in western technology and simplicity in eastern technology that's usually a core part of 2 from the beginning of the techno era and MAY BE that would be the reason for cheap launches from East and add up of cheap labour in it in South Asia may cut down cost even more.
This opinion is with A Big "MAY BE" and nothing but my opinion.
 
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TH04-ROCKET-BRSC_2231592e.jpg
atlas-5-501__x-37b-otv2__1.jpg


I was comparing rocket systems via Comparison of orbital launch systems - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and I noticed GSLV MK III and Atlas V 501 performance is roughly the same but, GSLV MKIII weights 304 tonnes more. why is that? is GLSV a inefficient design o_O



GSLV Mk III
Mass 640,000KG
LEO 8,000KG
GTO 4,000KG

Atlas V 501
Mass 337,000KG
LEO 8,250KG
GTO 3,970

the math just doesn't add up.
Wrong comparison gslv mk3 is more compared to titan 3c
Titan IIIC - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
not only that but also in weight and config .....

GSLV Mk III
Mass 640,000KG
LEO 8,000KG
GTO 4,000KG

Titan 3c
Mass 626,190 kg
Payload to LEO 13,100kg
Payload to GTO 3,000 kg


270px-DF-SC-84-05192_cropped.jpeg
TH04-ROCKET-BRSC_2231592e.jpg


both of them uses heavy SRBs..................

The solid boosters were ignited on the ground and were designated "stage 0". Each booster composed of five segments and was 10 ft (3.0 m) in diameter, 85 ft (26 m) long, and weighed nearly 500,000 lb (230,000 kg). vs Propellant mass: 207,000 kg + material of booster
 
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How does it matter the

Maid is slim the
Maid is fat
Maid is Ugly
As long as maid is doing its Job that the full stop of it.............

By the way give ISRO NASA budget then people will ask NASA who

NASA has 18 billion $ budget. India cant provide that amount of money to ISRO when currently ISRO's budget is just a bit over 1 billion $
 
. .
TH04-ROCKET-BRSC_2231592e.jpg
atlas-5-501__x-37b-otv2__1.jpg


I was comparing rocket systems via Comparison of orbital launch systems - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and I noticed GSLV MK III and Atlas V 501 performance is roughly the same but, GSLV MKIII weights 304 tonnes more. why is that? is GLSV a inefficient design o_O



GSLV Mk III
Mass 640,000KG
LEO 8,000KG
GTO 4,000KG

Atlas V 501
Mass 337,000KG
LEO 8,250KG
GTO 3,970

the math just doesn't add up.



@C130 @Transhumanist @Abingdonboy

Thats because of technical advances and efficiency of fuel, specially Russian engines on Atlas.

But did you guys noticed one thing??



Atlas V cost: $ 164 million

GSLV mk III cost: $ 30 million


While they both do the same job. But I will say there are ways to work more on GSLV. It was designed 15 years back, now time to go to drawing board.
 
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Self-reliance most likely. India's boosters might not be up to the RD-180 yet, but if they keep progressing like they have been, and keep developing newer engine tech, they will be.

I'm sure they could get the RD-180 from Russia, Russia needs business and India is a reliable partner, but India is keen on developing its own industries and achieving self-reliance in space exploration.

I commend this.

slow going process. seems more successful than HAL
@C130 @Transhumanist @Abingdonboy

Thats because of technical advances and efficiency of fuel, specially Russian engines on Atlas.

But did you guys noticed one thing??



Atlas V cost: $ 164 million

GSLV mk III cost: $ 30 million


While they both do the same job. But I will say there are ways to work more on GSLV. It was designed 15 years back, now time to go to drawing board.


ULA overcharges because it mostly deals with government contracts.


Falcon 9 costs $60 million and it's performance is about the same as Atlas V
 
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