thanks for the links. Excellent interview to Wired.DeltaV wrote:Assorted recent news about SpaceX and its competition.
Elon Musk's Latest Interview
Elon Musk’s Mission to MarsReaching for the stars in MojaveWe have essentially no patents in SpaceX. Our primary long-term competition is in China—if we published patents, it would be farcical, because the Chinese would just use them as a recipe book.
Blue Origin Successfully Tests Crew Capsule Escape Rocket
SpaceX News
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Another successful Grasshopper hover test (small, but still important):
http://twitter.yfrog.com/f362mloybjbosdefkdeoytqsz
http://twitter.yfrog.com/f362mloybjbosdefkdeoytqsz
New videos with sound:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-VjaBSSnqs&feature=plcp
The caption gives some more information. Grasshopper is sooo huge. What looks like it barely getting of the ground is actually a two story hopp.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-VjaBSSnqs&feature=plcp
The caption gives some more information. Grasshopper is sooo huge. What looks like it barely getting of the ground is actually a two story hopp.
Typical teething problems:
SpaceX Cargo Mission Suffered Other Anomalies
I do have to wonder, though, about counterfeit/hacked chips and software in the electronics. China is (or will be) SpaceX's main competition, after all.
SpaceX Cargo Mission Suffered Other Anomalies
I do have to wonder, though, about counterfeit/hacked chips and software in the electronics. China is (or will be) SpaceX's main competition, after all.
Turns out they don't even use rad-hard parts, rather a rad-hard architecture. Redundancy, cross-checking and voting is the standard practice, as with Shuttle.
Dragon's "Radiation-Tolerant" Design
C++ to Mars? Yuk.
"Entry interface in 4 seconds. 2 seconds. Hey! What's with the spinning circle thingy?!"
Dragon's "Radiation-Tolerant" Design
C++ to Mars? Yuk.
"Entry interface in 4 seconds. 2 seconds. Hey! What's with the spinning circle thingy?!"
It is funny how everyone is ohhh sooo concerned about the failure of one first stage engine (that did not even directly affect its ability to fulfill its mission) and completely forget that the first launch of Ariane5 was total failure with loss of vehicle and payload and it still turned into a rather relyable launcher in the end.
The biggest problem for Arianespace and EADS is politics. There is no doubt that the engineers have the skills. They would probably know how to do it all cheaper and better, probably even have ideas for RLVs (like the Skylon). The problem is that with so many parties involved that all have their own interests and want to get a piece of the cake, supply lines get longer and processes get inefficient. It takes forever to make even the simplest decisions. It is very clear that Europe can not and will never be able to compete with SpaceX via process. The system does not allow for enough optimizations to lower cost. The only chance they have is to innovate by design and engineering, but even that will be difficult due to the fact that noone wants to take risks with new designs.
What I hope is that Europe will not get to a decision on Ariane 6 before SpaceX has their reusable first stage operational. I hope that once SpaceX does the first step, the stigma of "RLV cant be done" will be broken and competitors will dare to think in that direction again. At that point they will definitely have to in order to even pretend to ever be cost competitive again.
The biggest problem for Arianespace and EADS is politics. There is no doubt that the engineers have the skills. They would probably know how to do it all cheaper and better, probably even have ideas for RLVs (like the Skylon). The problem is that with so many parties involved that all have their own interests and want to get a piece of the cake, supply lines get longer and processes get inefficient. It takes forever to make even the simplest decisions. It is very clear that Europe can not and will never be able to compete with SpaceX via process. The system does not allow for enough optimizations to lower cost. The only chance they have is to innovate by design and engineering, but even that will be difficult due to the fact that noone wants to take risks with new designs.
What I hope is that Europe will not get to a decision on Ariane 6 before SpaceX has their reusable first stage operational. I hope that once SpaceX does the first step, the stigma of "RLV cant be done" will be broken and competitors will dare to think in that direction again. At that point they will definitely have to in order to even pretend to ever be cost competitive again.