Quote from: meekGee on 08/06/2025 12:15 pmQuote 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, hmmmMy initial thoughts are:1) He is attempting to launch outside the optimal launch window, but2) he wants to use Robots that can be turned off during the longer transit time, less lifesupport weight,3) his "Slight chance " means 2027
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
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
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: meekGee on 08/06/2025 12:15 pmQuote 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, hmmmMy initial thoughts are:1) He is attempting to launch outside the optimal launch window, but2) he wants to use Robots that can be turned off during the longer transit time, less lifesupport weight,3) his "Slight chance " means 2027 (T-17 months) opps, sorry, did I just embarrass myself?
People need to cool their heels.There's a far cry between "SpaceX sends a ship to Mars" (the topic of this thread) and a "ship crewed by robots landing on Mars".The latter implies a full blown basically human-capable ship landing on Mars as an immediate precursor to landing people.
I also think that "feasible" is not the same as "likely"... But I'll track against these (arbitrary) milestones:- 2025-10-01: Massey's is back for v3 ships- 2025-12-01: Pad B is functional.- 2026-01-01: First v3 ship is launched.- 2026-02-01: Pad-A is functional again.- 2026-04-01: Last one-time ship has flown.- 2026-05-01: We see a ship with legs.- 2026-06-01: Refueling demonstrated.- 2026-07-01: Campaign starts.
In the span of a couple months, Musk's target has shifted 2+ years. Let's put aside the idealistic rhetoric and come back to reality:- Test flight to Mars: 2028- Humans to Mars: Not even worth discussing yet- Self-sustaining city on Mars: Not happening this century
Quote from: sstli2 on 08/06/2025 02:58 pmIn the span of a couple months, Musk's target has shifted 2+ years. Let's put aside the idealistic rhetoric and come back to reality:- Test flight to Mars: 2028- Humans to Mars: Not even worth discussing yet- Self-sustaining city on Mars: Not happening this centuryEh, even if a human mission is 3-4 synods away it's definitely worth discussing. NASA was planning for humans to the moon way back with Mercury.And any delay that pushes a Mars mission out of one synod will bump it about 26 months, so two years' delay in a couple months doesn't really mean much.
NASA’s proposed budget eyes human exploration of Mars
- Self-sustaining city on Mars: Not happening this century
Quote from: sstli2 on 08/06/2025 02:58 pm- Self-sustaining city on Mars: Not happening this centuryActually, I wish Elon would give up on that. He wants humanity to be space-faring, so how about a large rotating space station in LEO. Easy to get to, gets man living in space.
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: 27-02-17 - 28-06-10Departure window: 26-10-20 - 27-01-17Departure vinf Limit: 3500.0Grid Size: 600 x 600Latest available departure:Departs: 26-12-29Arrives: 28-02-20Transit duration: 417.2 days
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.What does your EasyPorkchop-derived tool indicate happens along the upper lobe of the plot as the departure date gets later? I'm showing a feasible departure vInf as late as the end of December 2026, with 1 < years_in_itransit < 2.Arrival window: 27-02-17 - 28-06-10Departure window: 26-10-20 - 27-01-17Departure vinf Limit: 3500.0Grid Size: 600 x 600Latest available departure:Departs: 26-12-29Arrives: 28-02-20Transit duration: 417.2 days
Surely the ideal data visualization here would be to "flatten" the plot down to a simple line graph, with departure date on the horizontal axis and delta-v from the parking orbit (or similar) on the vertical axis. Everything you need, nothing you don't!
Quote from: sstli2 on 08/06/2025 02:58 pmIn the span of a couple months, Musk's target has shifted 2+ years. Let's put aside the idealistic rhetoric and come back to reality:- Test flight to Mars: 2028- Humans to Mars: Not even worth discussing yet- Self-sustaining city on Mars: Not happening this centuryEh, even if a human mission is 3-4 synods away it's definitely worth discussing. NASA was planning for humans to the moon way back with Mercury.