Che Guevara
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Declared, its successful
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its ok, India is making money. European lifters are usually the heavier weight rockets and lifting their lighter payload would be overkill. So this is where ISRO fits in. Also, the heavier satellites that india needs is launched by the ESA. So its a symbiotic relationship.
can you please provide the details of european "heavy lift" satelite launch vehicles??
Ariane 5 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
read it up yourself.
Even GLSV MKIII would still have 1/2 of lift capability of Ariane_5. So Indian would be relying on Europe for years to come.
Ariane 5 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
read it up yourself.
Even GLSV MKIII would still have 1/2 of lift capability of Ariane_5. So Indian would be relying on Europe for years to come.
Ariane 5 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
read it up yourself.
Even GLSV MKIII would still have 1/2 of lift capability of Ariane_5. So Indian would be relying on Europe for years to come.
its ok, India is making money. European lifters are usually the heavier weight rockets and lifting their lighter payload would be overkill. So this is where ISRO fits in. Also, the heavier satellites that india needs is launched by the ESA. So its a symbiotic relationship.
Ariane 5 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
read it up yourself.
Even GLSV MKIII would still have 1/2 of lift capability of Ariane_5. So Indian would be relying on Europe for years to come.
No because the heaviest sats that we launch are not over 6 tonnes. So we should be good. We wont need europeans after 2014. MK3 with 2 more boosters and improved stages will carry upto 15 tonnes to space. Thats more than enough for Indian space station. China did it with LM3b of only 12 tonnes.
GSLV around the corner.....waiting for another proud moment....afterall how many countries in the world has this capabilities
You guys need to think further. China's lack of true heavy lifting capability is hindering their launch of experimental space station and their first true space station. So once India get a Mk3 going, it will start to feel its limitations. Eventually, India will need a true heavy lift rocket for over 20+ tons
GSLV mk4 atleast 6 tonnes to gtoIts best to refrain from talking about GSLV and let a successful launch speak for itself. No need to brag about anything when its successful.
true said. Well I am sure that the calculations for bigger rockets and engines are already done. Development will still take a decade or more. India will trail China by a decade or more. Not because India couldn't do those missions because India choose to do them later. Indian space mission started 12 years later than China. We r doing fine. I am happy to see Chinese space station.