looks like a fun way of getting tourists into space to me.ladajo wrote:...
As I recall, they were previously fired from the USS Glacier (AGB-4) circa 1957 in Antarctica.
i'm starting to wrestle inwardly with issue of tethering cables

looks like a fun way of getting tourists into space to me.ladajo wrote:...
As I recall, they were previously fired from the USS Glacier (AGB-4) circa 1957 in Antarctica.
falcon = 60m$/55TSkipjack wrote:rcain, SpaceX is planning to launch their Flacon Heavy next year. This has a payload of 55 (and with later improvements even more) metric tons.
The SLS has a payload of 70 tons at first and in later stages is supposd to have 130 tons of payload, though I am not sure whether these are english tons or metric tons (I dont think the senate knows either).
The thing is that even though the SLS has on paper a higher payload capability than the Falcon Heavy a single launch with the thing is going to cost about 1.5 billion USD IIRC.
A launch with the Falcon Heavy only costs 60 million...
You can launch a lot of Falcon Heavies for that 1.5 billion.
Anyway, with the current budget NASA will only be able to do a launch of the SLS once every two years. It is to expensive otherwise. Unfortunately, development and the standing army for manufacturing of new SLS rockets and the launch crews still have to be paid, whether you launch once or many times.
The development cost including the Orion capsule until the first unmanned testflight in 2017 will be 18 billion USD. Then it will cost an ADDITIONAL 23 billion to do yet another unmanned testflight in 2019 and a manned testflight in 2021.
http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/ ... for%20$18B
Yeah, you hear right 2021 and that only if we dont see cost overruns and time overruins. The senators does not care about that. They dont expect the thing to ever take off. They just want to keep the money flowing to their districts.
The thing is that it is not even in the best interest for their districts. Texas would actually benefit more from the commercial space industry. SpaceX is already employing hudreds of workers in Texas and is planning to expand that. But Hutchinson is for some reason for wasting money on the SLS. I think that there is some heavy lobbying and campaign financing from the usual suspects going on. I really dont have any other explanation for this sort of insanity.
Talking about super heavy lift provided by commercials. SpaceX has plans for future launch vehicles that can do that as well, though I think that the Falcon Heavy is already on the upper end of what you really need. I know that Elon Musk rather wants to try reusability.
Yes, they are. I posted links to back them up and I can post several more. In fact my cost projections for the SLS were OPTIMISTIC. The SLS would have to launch twice a year to meet the projected 1.8 billion cost per launch.They aren't.
Just FYI, Skipjack basically has no idea what he's on about...
First off, a launch on Falcon Heavy costs about $80-125M according to SpaceX, not $60M. And that's only sustainable at a launch rate of 10 Falcon 9s and 10 Falcon Heavies per year. And it's 53 tonnes, not 55.Skipjack wrote:Yes, they are. I posted links to back them up and I can post several more. In fact my cost projections for the SLS were OPTIMISTIC. The SLS would have to launch twice a year to meet the projected 1.8 billion cost per launch.They aren't.
Just FYI, Skipjack basically has no idea what he's on about...
I think it is YOU, who has no idea what he is talking about.
Yes, I mixed it up with the prices for the Falcon 9.I appollogize. The launch cost is still about 1/20 of the projected launch cost of the SLS.First off, a launch on Falcon Heavy costs about $80-125M according to SpaceX, not $60M. And that's only sustainable at a launch rate of 10 Falcon 9s and 10 Falcon Heavies per year. And it's 53 tonnes, not 55.
1B plus 400 mill (assuming one flight a year) ~ 1.5 billion.The launcher itself, once developed, should have somewhere between $1B and $2B fixed costs (the graphs in the "leaked" Budget Availability Scenarios document the WSJ got hold of seem to imply the low end of that, but it's hard to tell; the document is blatantly and egregiously not a cost estimation document), and costs maybe $300-400M incremental to launch with the upper stage, or ~$200-300M without it.
Space X is currently selling launches on FH for the prices given on their website. So I am sure they are relyable. Certainly more relyable than the numbers you have projected for the SLS. The numbers given in the document I provided were called optimistic anyway.Falcon Heavy still beats SLS solidly on $/kg (assuming their numbers are reliable),
There are several plans to do BEO missions with Falcon Heavy. I have to look them up. In addition to that SpaceX is planning a more powerful upper stage.but SpaceX's launchers are narrowbody with short-duration kerolox upper stages, which makes them virtually unusable for exploration (and suboptimal even with a long-duration depot-fed US).
Of couree if you disregard the development cost for the SLS and I read somewhere that even the EELVs would beat it. I have to look it up again.EELV Heavy does not beat SLS on $/kg (well, it's within the error bars at that upmass rate).
This is utter nonsense. SpaceX has designed their launchers with manned missions to LEO and also BEO in mind from the start.The key technical reason to have SLS is that a true HLV makes manned exploration architecture design much easier, since you don't have to cram everything onto launchers that were designed to put unmanned comsats in GTO. (For this reason, a straight comparison at the same upmass rate is misleading.)
darn if SLS doesn't look like DIRECT. Wiki cites an SLS cargo capacity of 70-130 tonnes to LEO - DIRECT again. So dies the last of Griffin's obsessions.rcain wrote:falcon = 60m$/55T
SLS = say 1500m$130T
yep factor of 10 at least out there. well spotted. (if your figures are correct).
certainly on that basis they have discovered no economies of scale and seem to offer little or no advantage to the existing market.
I thought so. It's certainly possible to oppose SLS reasonably, based on known facts, but you don't seem to be doing that. Your level of knowledge and understanding on this topic doesn't seem to be much past the level of the blogs and mass media.Skipjack wrote:I lurk there occasionally.Are you on NSF?
I am more on the new space related sites, like Hobby Space.