Quote from: daedalus1 on 08/04/2025 08:11 amQuote from: meekGee on 08/04/2025 08:07 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 08/04/2025 06:19 amMy measure as I've outlined many times is for just this thread headline question. And as I've outlined several times, is my opinion. You seem to have a problem accepting another person's opinion that differs from yours. Again my opinion is zero chance of SpaceX sending a Starship during next mars launch window.Yup you own your opinion. It's just that when you try to give it credence, you fall back on general "SpaceX is fail" tropes, like "Starship is late", or "hasn't (officially) made orbit" - so you basically fail to connect the dots.And then it falls upon us to show you the errors of your way.I've given several reasons for my opinion all of which are valid. Especially the quote from Kathy Lueder.You have not shown me anything to change my opinion.A quote about flying many times in a previous year? Yes we know the program is late. The very question of whether it will fly to Mars in 2026 is proof of that - we hoped it would fly in 2024 too, and maybe 2022...So no, you're not connecting any dots.
Quote from: meekGee on 08/04/2025 08:07 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 08/04/2025 06:19 amMy measure as I've outlined many times is for just this thread headline question. And as I've outlined several times, is my opinion. You seem to have a problem accepting another person's opinion that differs from yours. Again my opinion is zero chance of SpaceX sending a Starship during next mars launch window.Yup you own your opinion. It's just that when you try to give it credence, you fall back on general "SpaceX is fail" tropes, like "Starship is late", or "hasn't (officially) made orbit" - so you basically fail to connect the dots.And then it falls upon us to show you the errors of your way.I've given several reasons for my opinion all of which are valid. Especially the quote from Kathy Lueder.You have not shown me anything to change my opinion.
Quote from: daedalus1 on 08/04/2025 06:19 amMy measure as I've outlined many times is for just this thread headline question. And as I've outlined several times, is my opinion. You seem to have a problem accepting another person's opinion that differs from yours. Again my opinion is zero chance of SpaceX sending a Starship during next mars launch window.Yup you own your opinion. It's just that when you try to give it credence, you fall back on general "SpaceX is fail" tropes, like "Starship is late", or "hasn't (officially) made orbit" - so you basically fail to connect the dots.And then it falls upon us to show you the errors of your way.
My measure as I've outlined many times is for just this thread headline question. And as I've outlined several times, is my opinion. You seem to have a problem accepting another person's opinion that differs from yours. Again my opinion is zero chance of SpaceX sending a Starship during next mars launch window.
Guys. Is this going to be another Twark_Main/Coastal Ron type relationship ??Please don’t 🙏
The only connecting right now are the explosion of the Starship...It's almost imposible, that they go to Mars in less than 17 months...
So based on current and projected turnaround times and other wild estimatesLet's assume we get a successful Starship reuse flight by June of 2026, and their refurb time is 2 weeks.That their build rate is one Starship a month.That their booster turnaround time is a week and they have 4 reused or new boosters ready to go by Oct 2026That the pad turnaround time is 2 days, and they only have one pad.They will have also demonstrated orbital rendezvous and refuel at least once by Sept 2026It takes 5 total Starship launches to get the fuel and Mars-bound Starship on its way.June, July, Aug, Sept - 4 Starships built and used once and refurbished, plus the one they successfully reused the first time.in October, over the course of 10 days, they launch the 5 Starships and 4x refuel one Starship, and it heads to Mars.This is plausible, but it's definitely a stretch. They really can't afford any more explosions especially the kind that take out ground infrastructure.
Quote from: InterestedEngineer on 08/04/2025 01:59 pm..There will likely use one pad to launch and one to catch ships with...But this is what I think a nominal effort would look like.
..There will likely use one pad to launch and one to catch ships with...But this is what I think a nominal effort would look like.
Quote from: meekGee on 08/04/2025 03:16 pmQuote from: InterestedEngineer on 08/04/2025 01:59 pm..There will likely use one pad to launch and one to catch ships with...But this is what I think a nominal effort would look like.meekGee Is the entire plan on Pad-A to stay as-is but only be used for catching and potentially ongoing Ship static firing in addition to Massey when it's reconstructed? There will be more ships manufactured than boosters performing static fire tests; thus, having two Ship static fire test stands could help with scheduling.Tony
Quote from: catdlr on 08/04/2025 03:24 pmQuote from: meekGee on 08/04/2025 03:16 pmQuote from: InterestedEngineer on 08/04/2025 01:59 pm..There will likely use one pad to launch and one to catch ships with...But this is what I think a nominal effort would look like.meekGee Is the entire plan on Pad-A to stay as-is but only be used for catching and potentially ongoing Ship static firing in addition to Massey when it's reconstructed? There will be more ships manufactured than boosters performing static fire tests; thus, having two Ship static fire test stands could help with scheduling.TonyDon't know!I laid out one timeline that assumes a bunch of stuff, is plausible, and leads to a 2026 mars attempt...There can be many alternatives.Like they may run late, and there won't be dedicated Mars vehicles, they'll just chuck something in the general direction...Or there may be a stretch involved, where pad A gets really reworked for a longer booster/ship...I should add a "Mars surface ship spotted" on the timeline... (Just did)
A different possibility I see is that if ship 39 is likely to approach being ready fairly early but pad B and/or v3 booster are facing longer delays then they will still have a v2 booster. Could they do a crossover hot stage ring that fits to v2 booster below it and v3 ship above it? Do you wait to either do this or until they can rule it out before starting OLM complete rebuild?
Quote from: crandles57 on 08/04/2025 06:00 pmA different possibility I see is that if ship 39 is likely to approach being ready fairly early but pad B and/or v3 booster are facing longer delays then they will still have a v2 booster. Could they do a crossover hot stage ring that fits to v2 booster below it and v3 ship above it? Do you wait to either do this or until they can rule it out before starting OLM complete rebuild?IIRC, V3 SH was to have 35-37 Raptor 3 engines. SS V3 wet mass is considerably more than SS V2. While a SH V2 with 33 Raptor 2 engines topped by SS V3 (far more prop plus 9 Raptors) would probably have >1 T/W for liftoff, how much >1 is a big question. If it is only marginally >1, then we are talking enormous gravity losses for the early seconds of the flight. If this assumption is accurate, a substantially higher mass SS on top of an underpowered SH seems self-defeating.
Using the pad A tower only for ship catch seems like it fits the near-term timeline while clearly not being sustainable. Eventually they'll want to convert pad A for v3 SH use as well. Given the Starship rapid development methodology I put even odds on conversion of the pad A OLM as soon as they get a sufficiently successful test flight off that pad.
Like they may run late, and there won't be dedicated Mars vehicles, they'll just chuck something in the general direction...
Quote from: TomH on 08/04/2025 06:59 pmQuote from: crandles57 on 08/04/2025 06:00 pmA different possibility I see is that if ship 39 is likely to approach being ready fairly early but pad B and/or v3 booster are facing longer delays then they will still have a v2 booster. Could they do a crossover hot stage ring that fits to v2 booster below it and v3 ship above it? Do you wait to either do this or until they can rule it out before starting OLM complete rebuild?IIRC, V3 SH was to have 35-37 Raptor 3 engines. SS V3 wet mass is considerably more than SS V2. While a SH V2 with 33 Raptor 2 engines topped by SS V3 (far more prop plus 9 Raptors) would probably have >1 T/W for liftoff, how much >1 is a big question. If it is only marginally >1, then we are talking enormous gravity losses for the early seconds of the flight. If this assumption is accurate, a substantially higher mass SS on top of an underpowered SH seems self-defeating.I think the version 3 at ~end of year are still 33 and 6 engines. You are talking about the future version which is a long way away yet?
Quote from: meekGee on 08/04/2025 05:04 pmLike they may run late, and there won't be dedicated Mars vehicles, they'll just chuck something in the general direction...That's my thought. Just do something. Throw mass in the general direction of Mars, and if it blows up on the way there, well we learned more than we did before.
I don't think Ship reuse is actually necessary for this. They could demonstrate relight with Ships already built (37 or 38). One or two v3 flights to demonstrate v3 also works, a couple Starlink launches, two Ships for propellant transfer test, add two or three more for further destructive mishaps, five or so for the actual cruise test (1 + 4 tankers)... That's only 16 Ships or thereabouts (the first one already built), so I think they could build that in 17 monthsThat does require NASA letting them delay the HLS test until early 2027, or building even more Ships, though.