Quote from: Vultur on 08/06/2025 09:44 pm 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.Yep, exactly.When Bush announced Constellation in 2005, the goal is to land on the Moon in 2020, so planning 15 years ahead just for the Moon. Most human spaceflight hardware takes at least 6~8 years to develop.So not discussing human mission 6~8 years away is extremely dumb.As for self-sustaining city on Mars, I think there's a good chance for this to happen in this century given the assistance of AI and robotics.
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.
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
Back to near term work for 2026, SpaceX is now working on what I think are two entirely separated tracks:- v2 ships (37,38) / pad A, an effort that for better or worse will not extend past December - v3 ships (39 and onwards) / Massey's/ pad B, probably catch on pad A later onThe learnings of v2 should be centered around heat shield, payload deploy, fuel management. I'm pretty sure the thrust/structure learnings, to a great extent, have been incorporated into v3 already and what's really needed is to test and fly THAT.The v3 track is the gating one, and what I'm watching. The sooner they hit any milestone at Massey's the better. v2 is important but doesn't directly affect v3....and, v2 mishaps and recoveries eat up engineering bandwidth and mind share. That's the sucky part.
As for T/W>1 though, upper stages don't start out vertically, so T/W at separation is a desirement, not a requirement.
Gwynn’s post is very interesting.https://x.com/Gwynne_Shotwell/status/1953432708014600369
Quote from: meekGee on 08/07/2025 04:18 amBack to near term work for 2026, SpaceX is now working on what I think are two entirely separated tracks:- v2 ships (37,38) / pad A, an effort that for better or worse will not extend past December - v3 ships (39 and onwards) / Massey's/ pad B, probably catch on pad A later onThe learnings of v2 should be centered around heat shield, payload deploy, fuel management. I'm pretty sure the thrust/structure learnings, to a great extent, have been incorporated into v3 already and what's really needed is to test and fly THAT.The v3 track is the gating one, and what I'm watching. The sooner they hit any milestone at Massey's the better. v2 is important but doesn't directly affect v3....and, v2 mishaps and recoveries eat up engineering bandwidth and mind share. That's the sucky part.Yes, I think the major thing to test and validate in the two remaining v2 flights is the new flaps. If they don't manage to get to a controlled reentry v2 will have been a total waste and they will basically start from scratch with v3. The satellite dispenser is important too, but this is basically independent from the rest of the vehicle. The flaps aren't, they need to gather data with this as soon as possible so they can apply this to v3.And to "Mars in 2026": Throwing a ship towards Mars certainly isn't totally impossible if they manage to get the propellant depot working right away and get it filled (which needs the tankers working fine) and can fill a Mars ship with this without getting in the way of Artemis. Then to have the ship make it to Mars they need to get the thermal management and power (solar panels) and avionics for this together and it also will need some propulsion for course corrections and they have to nail all of this down until 2026. I'd say to launch a ship in 2026 even to a close Mars fly-by (never mind EDL) they need to do everything perfectly right in a hurry now. Does it look this way? To me it doesn't. It's not totally impossible, but that's all.
Quote from: uhuznaa on 08/07/2025 10:47 amQuote from: meekGee on 08/07/2025 04:18 amBack to near term work for 2026, SpaceX is now working on what I think are two entirely separated tracks:- v2 ships (37,38) / pad A, an effort that for better or worse will not extend past December - v3 ships (39 and onwards) / Massey's/ pad B, probably catch on pad A later onThe learnings of v2 should be centered around heat shield, payload deploy, fuel management. I'm pretty sure the thrust/structure learnings, to a great extent, have been incorporated into v3 already and what's really needed is to test and fly THAT.The v3 track is the gating one, and what I'm watching. The sooner they hit any milestone at Massey's the better. v2 is important but doesn't directly affect v3....and, v2 mishaps and recoveries eat up engineering bandwidth and mind share. That's the sucky part.Yes, I think the major thing to test and validate in the two remaining v2 flights is the new flaps. If they don't manage to get to a controlled reentry v2 will have been a total waste and they will basically start from scratch with v3. The satellite dispenser is important too, but this is basically independent from the rest of the vehicle. The flaps aren't, they need to gather data with this as soon as possible so they can apply this to v3.And to "Mars in 2026": Throwing a ship towards Mars certainly isn't totally impossible if they manage to get the propellant depot working right away and get it filled (which needs the tankers working fine) and can fill a Mars ship with this without getting in the way of Artemis. Then to have the ship make it to Mars they need to get the thermal management and power (solar panels) and avionics for this together and it also will need some propulsion for course corrections and they have to nail all of this down until 2026. I'd say to launch a ship in 2026 even to a close Mars fly-by (never mind EDL) they need to do everything perfectly right in a hurry now. Does it look this way? To me it doesn't. It's not totally impossible, but that's all.Yes, agreed. I thought only v3 has new flaps.
Quote from: meekGee on 08/07/2025 06:01 pmQuote from: uhuznaa on 08/07/2025 10:47 amQuote from: meekGee on 08/07/2025 04:18 amBack to near term work for 2026, SpaceX is now working on what I think are two entirely separated tracks:- v2 ships (37,38) / pad A, an effort that for better or worse will not extend past December - v3 ships (39 and onwards) / Massey's/ pad B, probably catch on pad A later onThe learnings of v2 should be centered around heat shield, payload deploy, fuel management. I'm pretty sure the thrust/structure learnings, to a great extent, have been incorporated into v3 already and what's really needed is to test and fly THAT.The v3 track is the gating one, and what I'm watching. The sooner they hit any milestone at Massey's the better. v2 is important but doesn't directly affect v3....and, v2 mishaps and recoveries eat up engineering bandwidth and mind share. That's the sucky part.Yes, I think the major thing to test and validate in the two remaining v2 flights is the new flaps. If they don't manage to get to a controlled reentry v2 will have been a total waste and they will basically start from scratch with v3. The satellite dispenser is important too, but this is basically independent from the rest of the vehicle. The flaps aren't, they need to gather data with this as soon as possible so they can apply this to v3.And to "Mars in 2026": Throwing a ship towards Mars certainly isn't totally impossible if they manage to get the propellant depot working right away and get it filled (which needs the tankers working fine) and can fill a Mars ship with this without getting in the way of Artemis. Then to have the ship make it to Mars they need to get the thermal management and power (solar panels) and avionics for this together and it also will need some propulsion for course corrections and they have to nail all of this down until 2026. I'd say to launch a ship in 2026 even to a close Mars fly-by (never mind EDL) they need to do everything perfectly right in a hurry now. Does it look this way? To me it doesn't. It's not totally impossible, but that's all.Yes, agreed. I thought only v3 has new flaps.V3 Ship 39 has the new flaps installed in the factory production line. It appears they are working ahead of testing and obtaining the results of them on V2 Ships (or are they different on Ship 37 & 38)?
Quote from: Vultur on 08/06/2025 09:44 pmEh, 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.Yep, exactly.When Bush announced Constellation in 2005, the goal is to land on the Moon in 2020, so planning 15 years ahead just for the Moon. Most human spaceflight hardware takes at least 6~8 years to develop.
Eh, 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.
So not discussing human mission 6~8 years away is extremely dumb.
Quote from: thespacecow on 08/07/2025 03:16 amQuote from: Vultur on 08/06/2025 09:44 pmEh, 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.Yep, exactly.When Bush announced Constellation in 2005, the goal is to land on the Moon in 2020, so planning 15 years ahead just for the Moon. Most human spaceflight hardware takes at least 6~8 years to develop.What? Not for hardware meant to go to space with humans. The Orion MPCV contract was awarded in 2006, so 19 years and counting without a human-rated version. For Commercial Crew it took SpaceX 9 years from initial award to first Dragon Crew operational flight (and they could leverage the Dragon Cargo version as a starting point), and Boeing is at 15+ years so far for Starliner.The Artemis program lucked out that SpaceX was already building Starship BEFORE the Artemis Human Landing System (HLS) competition, and the carbon fiber version of Starship (i.e. BFR then) started construction in 2018, so Starship has been in hardware development for at least 7 years.I think your estimate comes from the 1960's, when the goals and hardware were more simple and more risk was acceptable. Depending on who is building what, and how much political will there is during development, I'd say that at least 10 years is needed for a brand new design.QuoteSo not discussing human mission 6~8 years away is extremely dumb.When this thread was started the "irrational exuberance" level was much higher, but now that SpaceX has had a string of failures, and the public has a good idea what the challenges still are, I'd say that the chances are highly unlikely that a Starship (without humans onboard) will leave for Mars in 2026. But regardless the odds, talking about it makes sense.
When this thread was started the "irrational exuberance" level was much higher, but now that SpaceX has had a string of failures,...
« Reply #5 on: 08/26/2022 11:20 pm »LOLs, memory fades so quickly...It's been only 3 years since StarHopper's flight, and this includes the entire build-up of Starbase, the FAA saga, and the major design decisions for SH and SS.So yeah, of course they'll fly to Mars in 2024.
Quote from: Coastal Ron on 08/08/2025 03:29 amWhen this thread was started the "irrational exuberance" level was much higher, but now that SpaceX has had a string of failures, and the public has a good idea what the challenges still are, I'd say that the chances are highly unlikely that a Starship (without humans onboard) will leave for Mars in 2026. But regardless the odds, talking about it makes sense.Sure, but the rocket and vehicle are already flying.
When this thread was started the "irrational exuberance" level was much higher, but now that SpaceX has had a string of failures, and the public has a good idea what the challenges still are, I'd say that the chances are highly unlikely that a Starship (without humans onboard) will leave for Mars in 2026. But regardless the odds, talking about it makes sense.
Sure there's iterations ahead, especially on Ship, but we're not at an early award stage for starting a design.
Most human spaceflight hardware takes at least 6~8 years to develop.
Quote from: meekGee on 08/08/2025 04:57 amQuote from: Coastal Ron on 08/08/2025 03:29 amWhen this thread was started the "irrational exuberance" level was much higher, but now that SpaceX has had a string of failures, and the public has a good idea what the challenges still are, I'd say that the chances are highly unlikely that a Starship (without humans onboard) will leave for Mars in 2026. But regardless the odds, talking about it makes sense.Sure, but the rocket and vehicle are already flying.Yes, and the Booster seems like it is progressing nicely in its development program. However the Ship, which has a number of different flight environments that it has to successfully succeed in, has shown that "space is hard".QuoteSure there's iterations ahead, especially on Ship, but we're not at an early award stage for starting a design.Quote from: thespacecow on 08/07/2025 03:16 amMost human spaceflight hardware takes at least 6~8 years to develop.Specifically because of the Ship, not the Booster, I think the chances are slim that SpaceX makes a 2026 launch to Mars with an uncrewed Starship. Not impossible, but based on the learning curve we have been watching with the Ship, pretty slim in my opinion...
I don’t see why they couldn’t attempt an EDL in 2026.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 08/10/2025 05:03 amI don’t see why they couldn’t attempt an EDL in 2026.Read comment #457.The 1st attempt will be a Mars landing as Elon Musk has stated several times. Also he says 2026 is extremely tight even if there were no problems in between.
Quote from: daedalus1 on 08/10/2025 06:20 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 08/10/2025 05:03 amI don’t see why they couldn’t attempt an EDL in 2026.Read comment #457.The 1st attempt will be a Mars landing as Elon Musk has stated several times. Also he says 2026 is extremely tight even if there were no problems in between.What he said was that to perform a robot-crewed in 2026 flight ("full plan") is very difficult.He didn't say (nor can he predict) what they'll be able to do come say August when it becomes clear that the full plan just won't happen in time.It stands to reason that if a full plan flight is not possible, a less-than-full flight (e.g. EDL only) might still be.
What do you class as less than a full flight?