So a setback already. The orbital launch mount has stopped work to convert it back, and it is being made a Starship testing mount again. T - 17 months
Quote from: daedalus1 on 08/05/2025 06:46 amSo a setback already. The orbital launch mount has stopped work to convert it back, and it is being made a Starship testing mount again. T - 17 monthsYou're embarrassing yourself.
Quote from: Norm38 on 08/05/2025 12:05 amQuote 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.Yeah.I think the chance of a Mars landing in 2027 (launched in 2026) is incredibly low.An interplanetary cruise test (does the fuel boil off, can Raptors restart after months, etc.) pointed in the general direction of Mars (TMI, but no EDL) might be possible. Whether that fits this thread's criteria *shrug*. I meant "to Mars" to be that broad (going through TMI counts even if it doesn't make orbit or landing) but others might disagree.I think an interplanetary cruise test like that might be possible in 17 months IF1) V3 comes into service fairly smoothly (no more than one explosive failure setting back from what had previously been achieved)2) they get FAA permission to do full-orbits by spring of next year (demonstrating relight with either the last couple v2 or the first or second v2)3) propellant transfer test is demonstrated successfully by summer of next year (August or so)Those imply 4) no major GSE destruction costing multiple months to repair --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.
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.
Like they may run late, and there won't be dedicated Mars vehicles, they'll just chuck something in the general direction...
Getting a ship to TMI with a minimal payload is probably feasible with 0 tankers and 1 expended booster, ...
Quote from: envy887 on 08/05/2025 02:11 pmGetting a ship to TMI with a minimal payload is probably feasible with 0 tankers and 1 expended booster, ...I seriously doubt that.
Quote from: Lee Jay on 08/05/2025 02:16 pmQuote from: envy887 on 08/05/2025 02:11 pmGetting a ship to TMI with a minimal payload is probably feasible with 0 tankers and 1 expended booster, ...I seriously doubt that.The Silverbird calculator says they can reach C3=8.7 with payload if they hit 6.5% dry mass on the booster and 7.7% on the upper stage, with the "Version 2" / "Next Gen" prop mass numbers. That's a 250 t booster and 120 t ship. I think that's probably feasible, especially if they take off a few EDL parts they don't need like TPS, flaps, and fins.I think SpaceX would much rather recover the booster and try for refueling, but a expended shot isn't outside the realm of possibility.
Aerocapture at mars data
No fuel left after TMI and boil off would mean no aerocapture attempt and the mission is just a PR, Optimus wave as Mars goes by.
Aerocapture at mars dataReaching Mars orbitDeploying marslink satellitesAttempting ED for dataAttempting EDL for dataSuccessfully landingUnloading StarshipPics of Optimus walking on Mars
The Silverbird calculator says they can reach C3=8.7 with payload if they hit 6.5% dry mass on the booster and 7.7% on the upper stage, with the "Version 2" / "Next Gen" prop mass numbers. That's a 250 t booster and 120 t ship. I think that's probably feasible, especially if they take off a few EDL parts they don't need like TPS, flaps, and fins.
Quote from: envy887 on 08/05/2025 02:45 pmThe Silverbird calculator says they can reach C3=8.7 with payload if they hit 6.5% dry mass on the booster and 7.7% on the upper stage, with the "Version 2" / "Next Gen" prop mass numbers. That's a 250 t booster and 120 t ship. I think that's probably feasible, especially if they take off a few EDL parts they don't need like TPS, flaps, and fins.According to my slightly-hacked version of the late lamented EasyPorkchop, the minimum C3 for Mars in the 2026 window is 9.2km²/s².ε=6.5% for the booster isn't completely unreasonable, but it's awfully aggressive for a program whose first priority has to be launching stuff reliably for refueling tests. ε=7.7% for the Ship I could believe if you stripped off the TPS, flaps, and header tanks. But then you really can't do anything other than a flyby, and your restart-after-cold-soak Raptor tests probably don't happen. And any kind of aerocapture test really can't happen with no TPS or nose ballast.
QuoteAerocapture at mars data6-9 months of coast is a long time for a very short duration test with a high risk of failure and may need significant iteration.Is there an Earth orbit, or an Earth-Moon orbit that skims through the high atmosphere that would match the expected dynamic forces and heating of a Mars entry?I would want to see that be successful a dozen times in a row before sending a ship to Mars to try it. If that pushes a Mars trip to 2028, so be it. Better to be successful 2 years later with actual flight data under the belt than to just wing it. That might sound like a contradiction from what I said yesterday, but I'd rather get data faster in Earth orbit.I suppose they could launch a ship to Mars and then spend the 6 months doing Earth tests to inform the flight profile, but that doesn't allow any changes to hardware.
The NASA Ames trajectory browser returns these when asked for the lowest velocity injections in 2026:
Arrival window: 28-05-01 - 28-06-29Departure window: 26-04-01 - 26-05-30Departure vinf Limit: 4000.0Grid Size: 400 x 400Latest available departure:Departs: 26-05-30Arrives: 28-06-01Transit duration: 732.65 days
The 10/26/26 departure is the one that EasyPorkchop had at v∞ = 3.03km/s. I'd trust an Ames calculator more than the one I'm using. The ones before that are more than 360º orbits.
Arrival window: 28-05-01 - 28-09-27Departure window: 26-03-01 - 26-07-28Departure vinf Limit: 4000.0Grid Size: 600 x 600Latest available departure:Departs: 26-07-15Arrives: 28-08-27Transit duration: 774.0 days
Elon Musk@elonmuskSlight 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: TheRadicalModerate on 08/06/2025 02:55 amThe 10/26/26 departure is the one that EasyPorkchop had at v∞ = 3.03km/s. I'd trust an Ames calculator more than the one I'm using. The ones before that are more than 360º orbits.I wonder about the granularity of the search used to generate the Ames table. Do they claim each of those is a local optimum?
Quote from: envy887 on 08/05/2025 08:40 pmThe NASA Ames trajectory browser returns these when asked for the lowest velocity injections in 2026:The 10/26/26 departure is the one that EasyPorkchop had at v∞ = 3.03km/s. I'd trust an Ames calculator more than the one I'm using. The ones before that are more than 360º orbits.Note: "Delta-v" is really v∞ here. The "other delta-v" value is the arrival v∞.
QuoteElon Musk@elonmuskSlight 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.https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1953028261044187204
Quote from: catdlr on 08/06/2025 11:44 amQuoteElon Musk@elonmuskSlight 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.https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1953028261044187204Slight, hmmm