Skipjack wrote:I would counter that the "build cheap" idea is not so important anymore once you aim for reusability.
Well, I think "build cheap" is not so important once you
achieve reusability, but right now renouncing to it would mean accepting a higher level of risk, something SpaceX seems to be quite reluctant to do.
I'm fascinated by the simplicity of the idea Elon Musk is trying to implement: just apply to space the same simple engineering principles that the automotive industry discovered a century ago in the process of turning cars from luxury to commodity.
It's so simple, so straightforward, that I'm surprised that for the last 50 years no other entrepreneur had it:
- 1) Simplify
2) Standardize
3) Reuse (from tooling to design, to materials, etc.)
4) Aim for high volume
5) Improve slowly but continuously, make it part of the process
6) Quality control is paramount
And so on.
Nothing new under the sun. Why neither NASA nor ESA or the Russians, or Boeing, or Lockheed Martin, have ever tried it?
P.D. Has anyone researched the possibility of standardizing space probes, to design something that could be used to visit the orbit of Venus, or Mars, the asteroids, sun's polar orbits, a few NEO objects, etc., or an exterior system probe, able to travel to Io, Saturn, or even the Kuiper belt?
"The problem is not what we don't know, but what we do know [that] isn't so" (Mark Twain)