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Orbital Assembly Corporation Names Two Veteran Executives to its Board of Directors

By Doug Messier
Parabolic Arc
March 9, 2022
Filed under , ,

ROCKLIN, Calif., March 8, 2022 (Orbital Assembly Corporation PR) — Orbital Assembly Corporation (OAC), the only company advancing the development and operation of the first commercially viable, space-based business park with gravity, has appointed two highly-accomplished executives, William Tauskey and Drew Wahl to its board of directors.

“We are extremely fortunate to expand our board with executives who possess the vision, experience, and financing track records to help Orbital Assembly actualize our goal of building a space park with gravity,” says Rhonda Stevenson, chief executive officer of Orbital Assembly Corp. “These two successful business leaders have decades of operational and management success working with literally hundreds of companies from startup to IPO and acquisition. Their dedication and commitment will enable OAC to beat the competition with the first on-orbit facility with gravity for a sustainable, long-term economy of manufacturing, services, and tourism.”

Drew Wahl offers global fundraising and operational experience to assist in the Company’s financing efforts and facilitate OAC’s global supply chain management. He is a co-founder and managing director of IG Partners (IGP), a management consulting firm. Wahl has more than 20 years of experience delivering bottom-line results in highly competitive growth industries, ranging from start-ups to Fortune 100 companies. Wahl has raised funds on three continents from private investors, tier one VCs, and multi-national funds. He has also served as a board member in numerous public and private companies, and currently sits on a number of boards. ​He received an MBA in Accounting from Rutgers University, in New Jersey, and completed Stanford University’s Advanced Management College. Wahl received a BA in Political Science from Villanova University in Philadelphia, PA. 

William (Bill) Tauskey has significant space industry experience as well as 25 years of hands-on sales and marketing experience in related industries which will help drive a successful go-to-market strategy. He worked 10 years at IBM, nine years in general management positions with small and medium companies, and five years as a practice manager in a high-profile consulting firm before joining IG Partners in 2009. Since 2015, he has also been the managing partner at ConXtus a consulting firm. Tauskey’s general management experience includes roles as CEO/general manager of several firms, His successes include taking an early-stage company from start-up to a fully functioning, revenue generating operation and completing an exit plan. Tauskey received an MS from Texas A & M and a BS from the Virginia Military Institute.

Orbital Assembly plans to embark on a major fundraising initiative having successful raised an initial $2 million to move forward on deployment of the Pioneer Space station. Pioneer, the world’s first hybrid space station, for both work and stay, features a spacious microgravity module, and four modules on the rotating Gravity Ring.

About Orbital Assembly Corporation

Orbital Assembly Corporation (OAC) is the only company advancing the development and operation of the first commercially viable space-based business park with gravity that will enable humanity to work, play and thrive in the space ecosystem. Commercialization of these space parks will include manufacturing of integrated circuits, photonics, fiber optics, satellite rework, military applications, biomaterials, organ growth and pharmaceuticals. The company will also provide communications hubs and opportunities for space tourism. For more information about Orbital Assembly Corporation, please visit www.orbitalassembly.com.

5 responses to “Orbital Assembly Corporation Names Two Veteran Executives to its Board of Directors”

  1. SLSFanboy says:
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    Well…artificial gravity is a requirement but so is a cosmic ray shield, which would be massive, but of there is nothing to be said about that. Or it being in LEO, which is a dead end. Or it pandering to billionaut tourists, which is a dead end. Or what it is going to manufacture, which is nothing since there are no products in close to half a century from space stations.

    As for the mentioned “Gravity Ring”; any rotation close to 3 R.P.M. is very likely not going to be tolerable and going with a conservative 1 R.P.M. the “ring” would be over a mile in diameter.

    This is actually the way it is going to happen…two multi-thousand ton masses spinning around each other using a approximately kilometer long structure or tether and likely a combined light stabilizing structure and tether system.

    The main obstacle is where to get the massive amount of water shielding. Bringing water derived from lunar ice up from the Moon requires 20 to 25 times less energy than from Earth. And then, back to what is it going to manufacture- the answer to that might be gravity itself. Factory workers on the Moon, or rather under the Moon, in subsurface lunar industry, may need to go up into Lunar orbit periodically to rehabilitate with one gravity. What are those factories on the Moon making? Space Solar Power components as the solution to climate change.

    • duheagle says:
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      Perhaps you should do OAC, as well as us, the favor of telling them they’re doing it all wrong. Share the love.

      • SLSFanboy says:
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        Who is “us”?

        Who do you think you represent?

        • duheagle says:
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          “Us” would be regular readers of, commenters on and even lurkers at this website. I don’t claim to “represent” them, just to be numbered among them. I was simply suggesting that dropping the same note to OAC that you posted here would stand a better chance of moving things in your preferred direction than simply posting your thoughts here and leaving it at that. Of course, if simply complaining is your sole objective, then I can see why you might not do that.

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