>"Recovery is convenient, but not necessary."I would suggest reuse of ships is useful to get in more test flights but may not be necessary if everything goes really well.
>"Easier just to go straight to depot. Any ol' Starship will work as a tanker.""Any random Starship will work."Easier? You then have 3 ship types to develop Mars, depot and Tanker. I would have thought easier with just two types to develop Mars and Tanker. Either way you have to develop hardware for supplying propellants and receiving propellants so maybe there isn't much in it?For testing purposes maybe any [new if no reuse] Starship will work as a tanker for testing propellant transfer purposes, but you still need to build multiple tankers for the refuelling campaign as ordinary Starships just won't have fuel capacity to be much use, unless you are designing tanks for payload section.
Waiting for recovery and a refuelling test before starting to build tankers for the refuelling campaign already seems to be impossible to me if it takes a total of 6-9 months for full build of a ship/tanker.
Good deletions, but I see you're riding your old "I need need need comms during blackout" hobby-horse. Obviously this part is a nice-to-have, not really a need-to-have.
Is the least thing more than a flyby, an aero-non-capture? (aiming for some aerocapture data even if it is not ideal data)If COSPAR probably won't approve a Hail Mary inadequately prepared plan that involves an aerocapture then this might also be the most they could aim for?Would a long lasting (high impulse?) RCS system be all they needed for this or would they also need (proven?) raptor relight ability and propellants to get the power needed to escape if the aero-non-capture did not work as planned?Is there anything else that can be added to a flyby mission short of aerocapture? Drop off Marslink sats a couple of months before flyby and use all the power they can generate over that period for propulsive capture efforts?
If COSPAR probably won't approve a Hail Mary inadequately prepared plan that involves an aerocapture then this might also be the most they could aim for?
[...] Let's do some back-of-napkin math to figure out what's available from a vanilla-flavored Ship with no payload. We'll assume:dry mass = 130tprop mains = 1550tNominal payload to LEO = 100tMass ratio = (130 + 100 + 1550) / (130 + 100) = 7.74. That's what's needed to get a Starship from staging to LEO and back to landing. Now let's run the same Ship with no payload, which should require the same mass ratio:(130 + 0 + 1550) / (130 + propRemain) = 7.74propRemain = 87t
QuoteWaiting for recovery and a refuelling test before starting to build tankers for the refuelling campaign already seems to be impossible to me if it takes a total of 6-9 months for full build of a ship/tanker. That number sounds way, way too slow. The gating item is engine production, and that's reputed to be at >5 Raptor 2's per week. I'd guess that Raptor 3 will ramp to those rates fairly quickly, which means that they'll be able to produce and engine set in less than 2 weeks.TPS and flaps are a fairly long-lead operation, but if you've decided to go expendable, those aren't needed operations. A ship every two weeks should feed two pads with a 4-week turnaround. That gives SpaceX the ability to launch 15 expendable ships between now and when the interplanetary flight would need to go.They won't do expendable ships unless they need to--or they're really emphasizing a Mars attempt over getting reusability up and running, commencing Starlink v3 (fka v2 maxi) deployments, and HLS commitments. That's nuts.So, while an expendable Mars campaign is theoretically possible if everything goes perfectly, it comes at a very heavy price. Then, if everything doesn't go perfectly, they're left with no Mars campaign, re-use pushed back, Starlink v3 later than they'd like, and NASA angry with them.
Quote from: TheRadicalModerate on 08/11/2025 06:34 pm[...] Let's do some back-of-napkin math to figure out what's available from a vanilla-flavored Ship with no payload. We'll assume:dry mass = 130tprop mains = 1550tNominal payload to LEO = 100tMass ratio = (130 + 100 + 1550) / (130 + 100) = 7.74. That's what's needed to get a Starship from staging to LEO and back to landing. Now let's run the same Ship with no payload, which should require the same mass ratio:(130 + 0 + 1550) / (130 + propRemain) = 7.74propRemain = 87tI'm confused. This ship can deliver 100t of payload to LEO, unless that payload happens to be prop, in which case it can deliver only 87t?
Quote from: Twark_Main on 08/11/2025 03:46 pmGood deletions, but I see you're riding your old "I need need need comms during blackout" hobby-horse. Obviously this part is a nice-to-have, not really a need-to-have.That hobby-horse still seems to hold up pretty well
especially if the rationale behind messing up everything on your schedule is to get the engineering data needed to make the '28-'29 window as likely to succeed as possible. If all you're getting is the seven-minutes-of-terror-style tones, that doesn't really move the ball forward--unless the EDL actually succeeds, which has a near-zero probability of occurring.I guess they could engineer some kind of black box that can survive a breakup event, parachute to the surface, and transmit the data, but that sounds like roughly the same amount of work as designing a JPL-style lander. Seems a lot cheaper--and more useful--to tackle the comms blackout problem with tech that they already mostly have.BTW: the comms I'm talking about in the list is just vanilla interplanetary comms. It's not the end of the world to do it, but it's definitely an item if you plan to hit a Mars entry window. You have to be able to control the vehicle in transit.
"Hypersonic reentry telemetry" is not a feature of "vanilla interplanetary comms."
Tech we mostly already have is using existing orbiters as relays, and existing imaging assets to monitor the reentry.
Even just knowing the exact time of breakup and the probable breakup mode (how many pieces) would be a hugely valuable data point, and way more information than most Mars landers ever had access to.
(Also if you did have a black box, you'd just transmit the data after comm blackout and before it impacts the ground. No parachute, no landing, simple batteries instead of solar panels, high power omni transmitting to nearby orbiters, much much much simpler than a lander)
I'm confused. This ship can deliver 100t of payload to LEO, unless that payload happens to be prop, in which case it can deliver only 87t?
Quote from: Twark_Main on 08/11/2025 08:04 pm"Hypersonic reentry telemetry" is not a feature of "vanilla interplanetary comms."Hey, you're the one who wanted to insult my hobby horse. I was only talking about the vanilla stuff.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 08/11/2025 08:04 pmTech we mostly already have is using existing orbiters as relays, and existing imaging assets to monitor the reentry.That's fine if you happen to have an orbiter that you can send to through the plasma sheath.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 08/11/2025 08:04 pmEven just knowing the exact time of breakup and the probable breakup mode (how many pieces) would be a hugely valuable data point, and way more information than most Mars landers ever had access to.No, it's exactly the same info they generate via the tones. One can quibble about how many tones you have, but JPL is pretty confident in their current lander architecture. Starship, not so much.The big unknown for Mars is how the TPS is gonna oxidize. I imagine that's something you can instrument, but it likely requires a lot of channels from a lot of different tiles.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 08/11/2025 08:04 pm(Also if you did have a black box, you'd just transmit the data after comm blackout and before it impacts the ground. No parachute, no landing, simple batteries instead of solar panels, high power omni transmitting to nearby orbiters, much much much simpler than a lander)That's a mighty fancy antenna you're envisioning.
Remember, your black box needs to not burn up, so it's not exactly the ideal surface.
Plus, what's the bandwidth ground-to-LMO for the existing birds? Enough to get enough channels of stuff spooled up before the box hits the ground?
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.
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.
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 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.
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 09:16 amYou 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.Not sure. Artemis I - Nov 2022Artemis II - maybe April 2026? (3 years 5 months)Artemis III could easily slip to 2029*, so I'm not sure a 2027 HLS demo is that unreasonable.*(Will the spacesuits be ready? What problems will be discovered with Orion during Artemis II? How will the post Artemis I heat shield modifications work out?)
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.
Speaking of Artemis's spacesuits, has there been any news about them lately?
"Hypersonic reentry telemetry" is a quote directly from your earliest post, so you were trying to insert the hobby horse's nose into the tent from the very beginning.
Quote from: TheRadicalModerate on 08/11/2025 09:04 pmThat's fine if you happen to have an orbiter that you can send to through the plasma sheath.It's also fine if you don't. Plenty of Mars missions have dealt with the Seven Minutes of Terror, and they didn't cancel or delay missions over it. Starship is no different.
That's fine if you happen to have an orbiter that you can send to through the plasma sheath.
FWIW my model says Starship to Mars will happen independently of Starship HLS demo for multiple reasons.* Dis-similar vehicles (HLS demo needs landing gear, and likely wants surface cargo deployment)* Different pads (my model says NASA wants HLS launching from the Cape)* Different cultures (Mars is development heavy 'cowboy' risk, HLS is production quality caution)
Quote from: sdsds on 08/12/2025 08:31 pmFWIW my model says Starship to Mars will happen independently of Starship HLS demo [...]I think they're coupled because of tanker cadence.
FWIW my model says Starship to Mars will happen independently of Starship HLS demo [...]
Even if Mars is totally written off, I'm actually still rather skeptical of HLS Demo in 2026. I think that probably has a lower tolerance for failure, and it requires actual landing and I think now takeoff too; probably harder than an interplanetary cruise test.