Vast space station qualification article passes major milestone
Date:
Wed, 12 Feb 2025 13:15:47 +0000
Description:
Vast is one step closer to launching its first private commercial space  station. The company The post Vast space station qualification article passes  major milestone appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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 Vast is one step closer to launching its first private commercial space  station. The company recently completed testing of its Haven-1 qualification  article in Mojave, California, and reported that it successfully passed its  tests. The companys current goal is to launch the flight article aboard a  SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket no earlier than May 2026. 
During a tour of Vasts facilities in Long Beach, California, with NSFs John  Galloway and D Wise, Vast gave insights into their plans to eventually win a  NASA contract to allow its larger space station, Haven-2 , to act as a  replacement following the deorbiting of the International Space Station 
(ISS), which is currently scheduled for 2030. 
 
None of us are actual space station companies, Vast CEO Max Haot said. I dont  have a space station in orbit. I cannot have a crew go to it and come back.  Neither have any of our competitors so if we want to create this amazing  future, we need to exist. To exist, we need to be profitable. So, to be  profitable, we believe we need NASA as an anchor customer. 
In 2026, NASA will select partners to continue the United States presence in  low-Earth orbit (LEO) through private space stations. Vast says it hopes to  have Haven-2 selected as part of the Commercial Low Earth Orbit Destination  Phase II Contract and that its advantage will be having had a space station  already in orbit by the time of selection. 
 
If we dont win [the contract], we dont think we can even exist, so its a  matter of survival, Haot said. Being realistic, how can we win? And the  strategy we came up with is Haven-1 . So, our thesis is, what if we actually  build a space station, launch it in orbit, have a crew of four go to it, 
spend two weeks at least in the space station, and come back home 
safelybefore the U.S. government makes their decision? 
 Haven-1 is a single-module space station set to launch aboard a Falcon 9 as 
a proving ground for the future larger station. While not permanently crewed,  Vast expects the station to host multiple missions during its useable 
lifespan of two to three years. 
Haot noted that one way they plan to achieve the ambitious 2026 launch date  involves extensive in-house manufacturing. This manufacturing occurs in three  buildings at its 4,645 square meters Long Beach facility, with additional  manufacturing in Hawthorne, California. Their testing site in Mojave is the  former test site of Virgin Orbit. One of Vasts three buildings at its Long  Beach, California, production site. (Credit: D Wise for NSF) 
If you can outsource to the supply chain, machine shops, and so on, you 
should do it. So you dont bottleneck our own internal department and only go  in-house if you need a quicker timeline or its a complex part and you need to  work quickly, Haot said. In the supply chain, using a [larger scale CNC]  machine will probably take six months before we get the part. We knock them  out in three or four days. 
 This became critical when designing the main shell for Haven-1 . The company  began with a 40% scale model of the station, which allowed it to test  different materials. Since outsourcing was not an option, Vast tried two  different materials: stainless steel and aluminum. 
We dual path it, and we did both in parallel. That was November of last year,  2023 is when we developed it, Haot noted. In February, we stopped the work on  stainless steel and moved the team to aluminum. 
The final design includes an ortho grid pattern located on the outside of the  panels for strength, with the design tapered toward the bottom and growing  before narrowing again toward the top. This was done with the design of 
Falcon 9 in mind. NSFs John Galloway (right) and Vasts Max Haot (left) inside  the Haven pathfinder article. (Credit: D Wise for NSF) 
The lower the [center of gravity] the better the launch, Haot noted. Thats 
why the propellant tanks are [toward the bottom] and not at the top its right  there where the [Falcon 9 payload] adapter attaches to it so the load is all  concentrated down there. 
Youre transferring the load from the top all the way through the main  structureand then you have the fairing interface. If you look at the render 
of the inside, the corridor, the most dense area, all of the propellant  its  all as low as possible. The common crew area is as forward as possible. 
 Vast does not plan to have a permanent human presence on the station.  Instead, a crew aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon vehicle will dock to Haven-1 ,  remain for approximately two weeks, and then return home, with three or four  different crew rotations flying to the station during the station s  operational lifetime. Haven-1s qualification article before being shipped to  Mojave, California, for testing. (Credit: D Wise for NSF) 
 According to Haot, the limiting factor for Haven-1 s crewed missions is  having consumables onboard the station when crews arrive. This is different  from the ISS, which receives regular resupply missions. 
With the Dragons payload, you could only bring consumables for a few days,  Haot noted. So if youre talking about [crews staying on Haven-1 for] 40 days,  the consumables are not coming from Dragon. They have to meet the crew 
thereso you cant really use the cargo area in the back of the Dragon. See 
Also ISS Updates L2 Space Station Section NSF Store Click here to Join L2 
 Typically, items placed in the trunk require a robotic arm to remove them.  However, Haven-1 does not have a robotic arm to conserve mass, simplify the  design, and fit inside the Falcon fairing. 
 The company ordered 40 carbon dioxide scrubbers from SpaceX. These scrubbers  will be identical to those used during Dragon free-flying missions like  Inspiration 4 and Polaris Dawn. Crews can swap out the cartridges after  lasting four to five days. For Haven- 2, Vast plans to use single-use  consumables before expanding to a closed-loop system. 
We should try to improve the life support system towards a closed loop that  recycles everything, features better CO scrubbing, and recycles the water as  quickly as you can so that you can have it permanently crewed as quickly as  you can, Haot said. 
Part of the contract with NASA stipulates that the station should have  permanent astronaut presence from day one, something Vast believes is  unrealistic. Instead, it aims to transition from part-time to full-time 
living gradually. 
Its never occurred on any space station, including the ISS, and we believe  that all that [the contracts stipulation] will do is just delay having  anything up there, Haot noted. Rendering of the complete Haven-2 space  station. (Credit: Vast) 
You know, maybe two ninety-day missions or two sixty-day missions using  consumables, which we will have proven with Haven-1 , and then were adding  module two, module three, module four every six months.Each extra module is  bringing more consumables, but our goal is that each module is bringing 
better technology. 
Vasts design for the station differs from those of the ISS, especially in its  modular design. Whereas the ISS has specific modules for science, living,  storage, and even power generation, Haven-2 is planning for each module to  include redundant systems. This means each module could operate as a  free-flying station of its own. 
If you have an anomaly on a module, we could get rid of it without  compromising the whole space station, Haot pointed out as a benefit to the  design. We can also be fully functional with the first module and so on. Its  also lower cost because we have one design. 
 Haven-2 will begin with four modules, each 3.8 m in diameter, designed to  launch aboard a Falcon Heavy using a specialized stretched fairing. The core  module, measuring seven meters in diameter, is designed to launch atop 
SpaceXs Starship. The company wants to be able to launch more using Starship,  but Vast says there are a few limiting factors, including the vehicles  currently unknown final specifications. 
We dont yet know the exact volume of the Starship fairing, and we dont know  the [deployment] mechanism yet, Haot pointed out. SpaceX is focused on what  they should be focused on, which is making money to get to Mars and launching  Starship and Starlink next year. 
The aim is to have Haven-2 in orbit two years before the end of the ISSs  operational lifetime, with the station fully built by 2032. The Haven Demo  satellite inside a clean room at Vasts headquarters. (Credit: D Wise for NSF) 
 Vast will launch a 500 kg satellite demonstration mission on an upcoming  SpaceX Bandwagon rideshare mission to test several key technologies featured  on its upcoming stations. Specifically, the Haven Demo satellite will test  major components of the Haven-1 station. 
Its designed to test all of our propulsion, avionics, RF systems, all the  subsystems [of Haven-1 ], Haot said. 
 It will not include any pressure modules. Vast estimates the mission will  cost approximately $10 million, which Haot notes is significantly less than  the $1 billion including revenue in the Haven-1 program at the time of the  first crewed mission. Furthermore, if additional testing is needed, the  company will have three slots on three future SpaceX rideshare missions. 
Vast hopes these fast technological leaps, including demonstrating  technologies on rideshare missions, will lead to significant leaps in 
American spaceflight and the commercial space station industry. 
The ISS [modules], many of them were built in the U.S. in the late 90s and  early 2000s, so its been twenty years since a space station primary structure  has been built in the U.S., Haot said. The reason we are doing it is because  we need to do it. [Were doing it with] low costs and high speeds of 
iteration, [so] were really proud to bring that capability back to the United  States. 
 (Lead image: Artists impression of the Vast Haven-1 space station with a  SpaceX Crew Dragon docked to it. Credit: Vast) 
The post Vast space station qualification article passes major milestone  appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/02/vast-interview-2025/
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