Quote from: daedalus1 on 08/10/2025 12:15 pmWhat do you class as less than a full flight?Well TBH what he described (basically a starship crewed by robots, as an immediate precursor to a manned flight) is a lot more than I'd have thought was even entertained.I was hoping that they'll be able to get orbital refueling done, and be able to send something that will try to land in one piece and probably fail. Maybe just "touch" land.
What do you class as less than a full flight?
Quote from: daedalus1 on 08/10/2025 12:15 pmWhat do you class as less than a full flight?Well TBH what he described (basically a starship crewed by robots, as an immediate precursor to a manned flight) is a lot more than I'd have thought was even entertained.I was hoping that they'll be able to get orbital refueling done, and be able to send something that will try to land in one piece and probably fail. Maybe just "touch" land.Not very different than the expectation I had from the first Earth EDL... "Please let the engine at least relight".I'd consider any Mars intersecting flight with an attempt to relight a win.It'll give a 2028 robo-flight a better chance, and still I think, even if that's successful, it'll take one more window before people can go, since they need to demonstrate reliable EDL.---l'll tell you something else tho. Starship as a program is like 10 years old now. For me as an observer, the breakout of AI is about 2 years old. I expect people on the inside, like Musk, have seen this coming 2-3 years earlier.I'm not talking about General AI but just "Useful" AI.This will have more of an impact on the timeline going forward post first landings than a new form of propulsion would have. Say in the 10-yr timeframe and onwards.How long before they land a nuclear reactor - brain cluster?(And this is from someone who up to a year ago dismissed any notion of useful even semi autonomous robots on Mars)
I'd consider any Mars intersecting flight with an attempt to relight a win.
Quote from: meekGee on 08/10/2025 12:30 pmQuote from: daedalus1 on 08/10/2025 12:15 pmWhat do you class as less than a full flight?Well TBH what he described (basically a starship crewed by robots, as an immediate precursor to a manned flight) is a lot more than I'd have thought was even entertained.I was hoping that they'll be able to get orbital refueling done, and be able to send something that will try to land in one piece and probably fail. Maybe just "touch" land.That seems very optimistic interpretation of what he described.Musk wrote "flight to Mars crewed by Optimus". What does this mean?"To Mars" could optimistically interpreted mean landing on Mars or it could (more realistically) be just a flyby"crewed by Optimus" could optimistically interpreted mean Optimus is doing tasks on the journey but more realistically Starship computers and software will be running the mission and all they will get Optimus to do is wave at a camera with Mars in the background.If you take the optimistic interpretations as what you believe, and this was no longer possible or only a slight chance, Musk would almost certainly then still be trying to do something like put Marslink satellites in orbit around Mars. So it is only sensible for us to conclude he was talking about an Optimus wave flyby mission and that is all that remains as a slight chance. Even calling that a slight chance is probably optimistic.How many seriously actually believes such an optimistic interpretation? How does that compare to the numbers that take the more pessimistic view that the terminology is likely marketing speech / intended as inspiring stuff that will in reality likely take a lot longer?
Quote from: crandles57 on 08/10/2025 02:36 pmQuote from: meekGee on 08/10/2025 12:30 pmQuote from: daedalus1 on 08/10/2025 12:15 pmWhat do you class as less than a full flight?Well TBH what he described (basically a starship crewed by robots, as an immediate precursor to a manned flight) is a lot more than I'd have thought was even entertained.I was hoping that they'll be able to get orbital refueling done, and be able to send something that will try to land in one piece and probably fail. Maybe just "touch" land.That seems very optimistic interpretation of what he described.Musk wrote "flight to Mars crewed by Optimus". What does this mean?"To Mars" could optimistically interpreted mean landing on Mars or it could (more realistically) be just a flyby"crewed by Optimus" could optimistically interpreted mean Optimus is doing tasks on the journey but more realistically Starship computers and software will be running the mission and all they will get Optimus to do is wave at a camera with Mars in the background.If you take the optimistic interpretations as what you believe, and this was no longer possible or only a slight chance, Musk would almost certainly then still be trying to do something like put Marslink satellites in orbit around Mars. So it is only sensible for us to conclude he was talking about an Optimus wave flyby mission and that is all that remains as a slight chance. Even calling that a slight chance is probably optimistic.How many seriously actually believes such an optimistic interpretation? How does that compare to the numbers that take the more pessimistic view that the terminology is likely marketing speech / intended as inspiring stuff that will in reality likely take a lot longer?But he didn't just say that.He also talked about the next flight with humans, right? This frames the function of the first flight, which has to be a dress rehearsal. There are other much simpler 2026 scenarios, but he didn't address those at all, for the obvious reasons.
Slight chance of Starship flight to Mars crewed by Optimus in Nov/Dec next year. A lot needs to go right for that. More likely, first flight without humans in ~3.5 years, next flight ~5.5 years with humans.Mars city self-sustaining in 20 to 30 years.
Quote from: meekGee on 08/10/2025 06:21 pmQuote from: crandles57 on 08/10/2025 02:36 pmQuote from: meekGee on 08/10/2025 12:30 pmQuote from: daedalus1 on 08/10/2025 12:15 pmWhat do you class as less than a full flight?Well TBH what he described (basically a starship crewed by robots, as an immediate precursor to a manned flight) is a lot more than I'd have thought was even entertained.I was hoping that they'll be able to get orbital refueling done, and be able to send something that will try to land in one piece and probably fail. Maybe just "touch" land.That seems very optimistic interpretation of what he described.Musk wrote "flight to Mars crewed by Optimus". What does this mean?"To Mars" could optimistically interpreted mean landing on Mars or it could (more realistically) be just a flyby"crewed by Optimus" could optimistically interpreted mean Optimus is doing tasks on the journey but more realistically Starship computers and software will be running the mission and all they will get Optimus to do is wave at a camera with Mars in the background.If you take the optimistic interpretations as what you believe, and this was no longer possible or only a slight chance, Musk would almost certainly then still be trying to do something like put Marslink satellites in orbit around Mars. So it is only sensible for us to conclude he was talking about an Optimus wave flyby mission and that is all that remains as a slight chance. Even calling that a slight chance is probably optimistic.How many seriously actually believes such an optimistic interpretation? How does that compare to the numbers that take the more pessimistic view that the terminology is likely marketing speech / intended as inspiring stuff that will in reality likely take a lot longer?But he didn't just say that.He also talked about the next flight with humans, right? This frames the function of the first flight, which has to be a dress rehearsal. There are other much simpler 2026 scenarios, but he didn't address those at all, for the obvious reasons.The tweet was https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1953028261044187204QuoteSlight chance of Starship flight to Mars crewed by Optimus in Nov/Dec next year. A lot needs to go right for that. More likely, first flight without humans in ~3.5 years, next flight ~5.5 years with humans.Mars city self-sustaining in 20 to 30 years.Don't you see it is all highly aspirational? He clearly doesn't literally mean one single Starship flight in 2028/9 then humans on the second Starship flight in 2031. There would be lots of flights in the 2028/9 synod to take equipment and there would have to be a very high success rate with those 2028/9 flights in order to risk sending humans in 2031. He is admitting the chances are lower than previously admitted then trying to counter that by saying 'but we are still going to do it soon'.
It's easy to dismiss because of recent track record, but you're forgetting how fast things go when they go right.If v3 is successful, much can be done in 8-9 months
Quote from: meekGee on 08/11/2025 12:27 amIt's easy to dismiss because of recent track record, but you're forgetting how fast things go when they go right.If v3 is successful, much can be done in 8-9 months8-9 months? you think lots can happen? huh?Ship 38 was first identified 6 Dec 2024, 9 months later it probably won't be launched.SpaceX needs to:Launch v3Get to full orbitDemonstrate pinpoint accuracy for splashdown after a proper deorbit burnCatch a pez dispenser ship from orbitThis allows them to examine recovered ship and learn lessons needed for improving design.With those lessons, they can improve the ship design They need a test tanker built before they learn those lessons or maybe they can use two adapted shipsTest fuel transferLearn lessons from fuel transfer to finalise tanker design.Build those tankers.Add solar panels to ship for power during journeyTest engine relight after long cold soak. (maybe not needed if it is just a flyby at a distance?)Sure some things can happen in parallel. Still lots to do and 8-9 months isn't a lot of time when building the tankers could take most if not all of that time.Maybe one of ships 40 to 44 will be a test tanker and be close to being built by end of year? They still have to test fuel transfer and then build more tankers. Maybe all the tankers needed can be well on in production, with only the refuelling components to be finalised, before and during the refuelling tests. However this is a lot of build capacity devoted to building tankers when that build capacity might be needed for v3 boosters and ships to test if early v3 ship tests do not go well.It is tricky to see a coherent timeline path to a simple flyby mission at end of 2026 and SpaceX are certainly more aware of lots of constraints than I am.
SpaceX needs to:Launch v3Get to full orbitDemonstrate pinpoint accuracy for splashdown after a proper deorbit burnCatch a pez dispenser ship from orbitThis allows them to examine recovered ship and learn lessons needed for improving design.With those lessons, they can improve the ship design Recovery is convenient, but not necessary. Deploy high-impulse RCS system.They need a test tanker built before they learn those lessons or maybe they can use two adapted ships Easier just to go straight to depot. Any ol' Starship will work as a tanker.Test fuel transferLearn lessons from fuel transfer to finalise tanker design. Finalizing the design won't happen for years. But they do need to get it good enough that 4 tankers can transfer to a depot, and the depot can do one larger transfer to the target Ship.Build those tankers. Any random Starship will work.Add solar panels to ship for power during journeyTest engine relight after long cold soak. (maybe not needed if it is just a flyby at a distance?) Testable in a translunar orbit. But Starship should be able to make it to Mars EDL with only heavy-duty RCS. Only landing requires Raptor relight.Interplanetary nav and comms, including provision for returning hypersonic entry telemetry.If landing is intended to be successful (not strictly necessary), landing legs are necessary. They can probably make do with the current size header tanks if payload is very small.
You are just repeating discussion several pages ago, where I said chance of Starship being launched towards Mars in 2026 is 0%.
Quote from: daedalus1 on 08/11/2025 06:14 amYou are just repeating discussion several pages ago, where I said chance of Starship being launched towards Mars in 2026 is 0%.Yup you said that.At any point in the last 20 years, there were those who were betting it'll never work, it'll be decades away, it won't be viable. (For various values of "it")And the caravan kept moving.So, we'll see. I can't estimate the probability of a smooth v3 up-ramp. But I am pretty certain that if v3 flights go smoothly, we will see a 2026 Mars intercepting flight with an EDL attempt.I'm also pretty sure that if v3 ships continue to RUD, then they won't.
Quote from: meekGee on 08/11/2025 07:26 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 08/11/2025 06:14 amYou are just repeating discussion several pages ago, where I said chance of Starship being launched towards Mars in 2026 is 0%.Yup you said that.At any point in the last 20 years, there were those who were betting it'll never work, it'll be decades away, it won't be viable. (For various values of "it")And the caravan kept moving.So, we'll see. I can't estimate the probability of a smooth v3 up-ramp. But I am pretty certain that if v3 flights go smoothly, we will see a 2026 Mars intercepting flight with an EDL attempt.I'm also pretty sure that if v3 ships continue to RUD, then they won't.Well no you definitely won't. It will require about 5 tanker refills.A lunar surface and takeoff demonstration in 2026 will require at least that many.Plus Starlink flights, and not to mention actually getting to orbit for the first time.It is obvious that in designing the worlds largest ever launcher and making it fully reusable, there is going to be a considerable difference between the projected timeline and reality. As has been demonstrated many times.
Quote from: daedalus1 on 08/11/2025 07:46 amQuote from: meekGee on 08/11/2025 07:26 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 08/11/2025 06:14 amYou are just repeating discussion several pages ago, where I said chance of Starship being launched towards Mars in 2026 is 0%.Yup you said that.At any point in the last 20 years, there were those who were betting it'll never work, it'll be decades away, it won't be viable. (For various values of "it")And the caravan kept moving.So, we'll see. I can't estimate the probability of a smooth v3 up-ramp. But I am pretty certain that if v3 flights go smoothly, we will see a 2026 Mars intercepting flight with an EDL attempt.I'm also pretty sure that if v3 ships continue to RUD, then they won't.Well no you definitely won't. It will require about 5 tanker refills.A lunar surface and takeoff demonstration in 2026 will require at least that many.Plus Starlink flights, and not to mention actually getting to orbit for the first time.It is obvious that in designing the worlds largest ever launcher and making it fully reusable, there is going to be a considerable difference between the projected timeline and reality. As has been demonstrated many times.I don't think they'll let anything get in the way of the window. They might make some flights dual-purpose, but otherwise they'll push for Mars.Starlink can continue at 250 v2.mini on F9 just fine for another year.Regarding moon, all they promised is that they won't be the long pole. I don't think there will be a shortage of long poles... Basically - don't count on distractions on derailing the campaign.Your 5 refueling flights - that's after the 8-9 months of development. That's the launch campaign proper, starting September-October, and utilizing two pads, if development was successful enough.All they need is to get to reliable orbital flights (2-3 good flights) then simultaneously iterate on refueling and EDL.. this can fit in 8-9 months.
You are aware aren't you that Artemis 3 is way behind schedule and the unmanned demo to the lunar surface has to be successfully completed before the manned version, so 2026 demo is really the latest it can be.The next sub orbital flight of Starship is September at the earliest. And a tanker version is not even built yet.Less than 17 months now until the end of the window, and a problem with ship 37 means they had to reverse the adaptation of the pad to do more test.
Your 5 refueling flights - that's after the 8-9 months of development. That's the launch campaign proper, starting September-October, and utilizing two pads, if development was successful enough.
My notes in-line.Quote from: crandles57 on 08/11/2025 03:02 amSpaceX needs to:Launch v3Get to full orbitDemonstrate pinpoint accuracy for splashdown after a proper deorbit burnCatch a pez dispenser ship from orbitThis allows them to examine recovered ship and learn lessons needed for improving design.With those lessons, they can improve the ship design Recovery is convenient, but not necessary. Deploy high-impulse RCS system.They need a test tanker built before they learn those lessons or maybe they can use two adapted ships Easier just to go straight to depot. Any ol' Starship will work as a tanker.Test fuel transferLearn lessons from fuel transfer to finalise tanker design. Finalizing the design won't happen for years. But they do need to get it good enough that 4 tankers can transfer to a depot, and the depot can do one larger transfer to the target Ship.Build those tankers. Any random Starship will work.Add solar panels to ship for power during journeyTest engine relight after long cold soak. (maybe not needed if it is just a flyby at a distance?) Testable in a translunar orbit. But Starship should be able to make it to Mars EDL with only heavy-duty RCS. Only landing requires Raptor relight.Interplanetary nav and comms, including provision for returning hypersonic entry telemetry.If landing is intended to be successful (not strictly necessary), landing legs are necessary. They can probably make do with the current size header tanks if payload is very small.All that said, I don't disagree that the chance of even attempting an interplanetary mission in '26 is very small. The chance of successfully landing is almost zero. But picking up some telemetry in 2027 would definitely increase the chances of a successful landing in 2029.Chance of interplanetary departure in 2026: <25%Chance of return of useful EDL telemetry in 2027: <15%Chance of successful landing in 2027: <5%Chance of successful landing in 2029: ~75%Chance of successful uncrewed landing in 2031: >80%Chance of crewed landing in 2029: 0Chance of crewed landing in 2031: <20%Chance of crewed landing in 2033: <33%Chance of crewed landing in 2035: <50%Chance of crewed landing in 2037: >50%
Quote from: meekGee on 08/11/2025 08:43 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 08/11/2025 07:46 amQuote from: meekGee on 08/11/2025 07:26 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 08/11/2025 06:14 amYou are just repeating discussion several pages ago, where I said chance of Starship being launched towards Mars in 2026 is 0%.Yup you said that.At any point in the last 20 years, there were those who were betting it'll never work, it'll be decades away, it won't be viable. (For various values of "it")And the caravan kept moving.So, we'll see. I can't estimate the probability of a smooth v3 up-ramp. But I am pretty certain that if v3 flights go smoothly, we will see a 2026 Mars intercepting flight with an EDL attempt.I'm also pretty sure that if v3 ships continue to RUD, then they won't.Well no you definitely won't. It will require about 5 tanker refills.A lunar surface and takeoff demonstration in 2026 will require at least that many.Plus Starlink flights, and not to mention actually getting to orbit for the first time.It is obvious that in designing the worlds largest ever launcher and making it fully reusable, there is going to be a considerable difference between the projected timeline and reality. As has been demonstrated many times.I don't think they'll let anything get in the way of the window. They might make some flights dual-purpose, but otherwise they'll push for Mars.Starlink can continue at 250 v2.mini on F9 just fine for another year.Regarding moon, all they promised is that they won't be the long pole. I don't think there will be a shortage of long poles... Basically - don't count on distractions on derailing the campaign.Your 5 refueling flights - that's after the 8-9 months of development. That's the launch campaign proper, starting September-October, and utilizing two pads, if development was successful enough.All they need is to get to reliable orbital flights (2-3 good flights) then simultaneously iterate on refueling and EDL.. this can fit in 8-9 months.You are aware aren't you that Artemis 3 is way behind schedule and the unmanned demo to the lunar surface has to be successfully completed before the manned version, so 2026 demo is really the latest it can be.
My notes in-line.Quote from: crandles57 on 08/11/2025 03:02 amSpaceX needs to:Launch v3Get to full orbitDemonstrate pinpoint accuracy for splashdown after a proper deorbit burnCatch a pez dispenser ship from orbitThis allows them to examine recovered ship and learn lessons needed for improving design.With those lessons, they can improve the ship design Recovery is convenient, but not necessary. Deploy high-impulse RCS system.They need a test tanker built before they learn those lessons or maybe they can use two adapted ships Easier just to go straight to depot. Any ol' Starship will work as a tanker.Test fuel transferLearn lessons from fuel transfer to finalise tanker design. Finalizing the design won't happen for years. But they do need to get it good enough that 4 tankers can transfer to a depot, and the depot can do one larger transfer to the target Ship.Build those tankers. Any random Starship will work.Add solar panels to ship for power during journeyTest engine relight after long cold soak. (maybe not needed if it is just a flyby at a distance?) Testable in a translunar orbit. But Starship should be able to make it to Mars EDL with only heavy-duty RCS. Only landing requires Raptor relight.Interplanetary nav and comms, including provision for returning hypersonic entry telemetry.If landing is intended to be successful (not strictly necessary), landing legs are necessary. They can probably make do with the current size header tanks if payload is very small.