. 24/7 Space News .
The Next Shuttle Book Review


Marion IA (SPX) Dec 02, 2005
Dave Ketchledge, a high powered rocketry hobbyist, has written and e-published a new book, titled The Next Shuttle, devoted entirely to the construction and flight of Shuttle prototypes, their technical problems, how they were solved, and successors of the Shuttle today. Dave is a professional Instrumentation Engineer, a former Navy nuclear reactor operator and testing engineer, and a member of both NAR and TRA. Back in the 1990s, Dave coined the term Vertical Trajectory System, or VTS to describe several active guidance systems potentially useful to amateur rocketry.

He has written articles for the high power rocketry hobby, but this is his fi rst book. The Next Shuttle is the fi rst totally electronic book that I have read, and what a book it is.

It encompasses thirteen chapters, with well over 400 8 1/2 by 11 inch pages packed with color graphs, diagrams, charts, scale drawings, and photographs. Dave has compiled a wealth of information regarding the detailed history of failure and advancement and the visible future of the space shuttle and other flying spacecraft.

The Next Shuttle provides a technical discussion of problems encountered during development of the flying spacecraft and the solutions that overcame them.

I really enjoyed reading about difficulties encountered during spacecraft development and the innovations that were used to rectify them. The Next Shuttle provides eyewitness, pilot and engineering stories about developmental and flight concerns of various flying spacecraft.

But he didn't stop there. Dave also provides data for the construction of flying models of the prototypes that led to the design of the Rockwell Space Shuttle. Scaled drawings are provided for several of the lifting bodies, the Bell X-1, X-20 DynaSoar, the X-15, the Rockwell Shuttle, and the Lockheed Venture Star.

When I read a book that I really enjoy and I learn new things about the space program and the machines, I like to look over the sources used by the author. Some books are very skimpy on their sources lists.

The Next Shuttle provides an entire chapter listing the sources of the information used in the book. Dave goes even further than just a listing in his sources chapter; he describes the content and use of each source, and provides a brief review. Although these source descriptions and review are very valuable, I have never seen this done before now. What a great concept.

Conclusion

If you are interested in building and fl ying models of the Shuttle prototypes and successors, this is a great place to begin. If you are interested in the technological history of the development of the Shuttle and other fl ying spacecraft, this is a great place to become informed. If you are looking for a good listing of rocketry related source books complete with a brief review of each, this is your book. Visit the publisher's web site for more details and a sample of the book.

Pros

This book provides a dense collection of great data compiled into a single book. The Next Shuttle provides developmental stories, model making data and a very detailed source listing. The price is just $25 since you order on CD or download it from Dave's website in pdf format. This also allows Dave to provide a lot of color. A book of this size and with this amount of color would be very expensive if published in the normal fashion.

Cons

Dave is an instrument engineer. You will have to get past the sometimes troublesome tense and sentence structure, which tends to make some parts of the book not as clear as they could be. Although this problem does detract from the text, it is infrequent enough for the book to remain easily understood. The book could use the talents of a good editor.

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Shuttle's KSC Thermal Protection System Facility Gets Back To Business
Houston TX (SPX) Nov 24, 2005
The steady hum of oversized sewing machines is finally returning to the building where a team of dedicated employees pieces together the space shuttle's protective skin.







  • Northrop Grumman Establishes New Space Exploration Organization
  • Designing The Missions Of The Future
  • New NASA Advisory Council Holds Inaugural Meeting
  • VEGA Wins Three Year ESOC Flight Dynamics Framework Contract

  • Spirit Making Progress In Climb Down Columbia Hills
  • Mars Express Uncovering Buried Craters And Underground Ice
  • Mars Express Providing Evidence For Large Aquifers On Early Mars
  • Mars Express Unveils Lumpy Ionosphere And Glimpses Of Martian Subsurface

  • First Brazilian Rocket Launched From Esrange
  • Energia Could Be On Stock Exchange In Five Years
  • First Countdown For New Two Stage Rocket Motor At Esrange
  • Khrunichev Space Center Head Dismissed

  • Aerosonde Successfully Completes Weatherscout GUAM Trials
  • Landsat 5 Back-Up Solar Array Drive Having Technical Problems
  • New Model Protects Wetlands Of The Future
  • Earth From Space: Aircraft Contrails Over The United States

  • New Horizons Launch Preparations Move Ahead
  • Free Lectures On Exploring Pluto Coming Up At Pasadena City College
  • Astronomers Announce Discovery Of Two New Moons Of Pluto
  • NASA Says Pluto May Have Three Moons Instead Of One

  • Cornell Astronomers Investigate Cosmic Forces That Produce New Galaxies
  • Hubble And Sloan Quadruple Number Of Known Optical Einstein Rings
  • Astrophysicists Put Kibosh On Alternative Theory Of Star Formation
  • Spitzer Harvests Dozens Of New Stars

  • Russian Technologies Can Put Cosmonauts On Moon
  • India Awaits Approval For Chandrayan Lunar Mission
  • Apollo 2 Will Take Real Money To Emulate The Original
  • Trip Into Moon Orbit May Cost Tourists $100 Million

  • First Galileo Satellite Travels From ESTEC To Launch Site
  • Launch Of First Galileo GPS Satellite Underway At Baikonur
  • Left-Handed Metamaterials Hold Promise Of Cheaper Mobile Phones And GPS, With Enhanced Performance
  • India, Russia Agree On Joint Development Of Future Glonas Navigation System

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement