Quote from: Ludus on 04/02/2018 05:06 pmWhat’s the business case for P2P on earth? The business case?Time. When there is now a non stop London/Sydney flight of 17 hrs and you can cut that to 45mins of flights (maybe 90 mins in total on the vehicle) and your longest time cost is the trip in and out of your destination city, and the ongoing absurdity that is security (hint. Check how fast things move at Reagan National, where most of the US lawmakers transit through, against a regular airport). The idea of "Breakfast in London, Lunch in New York, dinner in London" was real during the Concorde era. How much (and how many) people would pay for that to be extended to Shanghai, Beijing, San Francisco?As for size I'll note that people though Concorde was the smallest vehicle that was viable for this service (despite the French initially wanting to build it smaller). AIUI most "Concorde II" design studies have gone bigger thinking at least 300 passengers.
What’s the business case for P2P on earth?
So suborbital P2P would be vulnerable against competition of "The new Concorde / new Boeing 2707".Similar total trip time (including trip to pad) 3~4hrs.
Perfect safety.
No new infrastructure, operable to airport London, Paris, JFK, SFO, LAX,Tokyo, HK, Shanghai, Beijing, DubaiFlying over land in subsonic mode is OK, so the sonic boom problem only affects SFO-LAX or cities deep (>500km) inside land.
No ITAR problem, while HK, Shanghai, Beijing, Dubai are ITAR prohibitive to US rocket vehicles.
>Landing in international waters is not an ITAR problem. Even a platform in territorial waters might not be a problem, since it's technically not "export" until it reaches land.
Quote from: envy887 on 06/05/2018 06:47 pm>Landing in international waters is not an ITAR problem. Even a platform in territorial waters might not be a problem, since it's technically not "export" until it reaches land.Tell that to the PRC. They'll just build and island next to your plantform, drop a bridge and....Likely not, but just to illustrate that proximity trumps ITAR given a change in the receiving ends attitude.
Quote from: docmordrid on 06/05/2018 06:53 pmQuote from: envy887 on 06/05/2018 06:47 pm>Landing in international waters is not an ITAR problem. Even a platform in territorial waters might not be a problem, since it's technically not "export" until it reaches land.Tell that to the PRC. They'll just build and island next to your plantform, drop a bridge and....Likely not, but just to illustrate that proximity trumps ITAR given a change in the receiving ends attitude.That's still not export. The bigger issue with China (and some other countries) is that they will likely want a detailed understanding of the design of the vehicle to make sure it can safely operate in the locations required and to allow their citizens to use it. I doubt they would accept an FAA certification for safety, even if the FAA were to certify a spacecraft for passenger transport.That would be at minimum an IP issue, and probably also an ITAR issue, regardless of where it lands.
Similar total trip time (including trip to pad) 3~4hrs.
Quote from: Katana on 06/05/2018 04:17 pmSimilar total trip time (including trip to pad) 3~4hrs.Concorde can fly from New York to Paris in 3.5 hours, the distance is about 5840km, that's no where near what a BFR can do in one trip.QuotePerfect safety.If we go by Concorde's record, LoC = 1 in ~85,000, far from perfect
Many people will be willing to pay a high price because of the adventure element of the flight... This is the cheapest way for the average person to get into space, so I expect many people would pay $100,000 for a trip...
I've heard Elon speculate about Mars trips, point-to-point and lunar bases but never about an artificial gravity space station. I conclude that if/when such a AG station becomes reality it will be with someone else's money and engineering resources.
Quote from: philw1776 on 08/03/2018 02:28 pmI've heard Elon speculate about Mars trips, point-to-point and lunar bases but never about an artificial gravity space station. I conclude that if/when such a AG station becomes reality it will be with someone else's money and engineering resources.That’s in Jeff Bezos’ domain. He’s got the franchise on the O’Neill millions of people living is near earth/moon space thing.
Quote from: Ludus on 08/03/2018 04:22 pmQuote from: philw1776 on 08/03/2018 02:28 pmI've heard Elon speculate about Mars trips, point-to-point and lunar bases but never about an artificial gravity space station. I conclude that if/when such a AG station becomes reality it will be with someone else's money and engineering resources.That’s in Jeff Bezos’ domain. He’s got the franchise on the O’Neill millions of people living is near earth/moon space thing.Just to ballpark, profit from 2 SpaceX tourist station flights (2 x ~100 passengers) could conceivably equal recent profit from a Falcon 9 launch (~$25M). Passenger flights would presumably be more streamlined and routine than F9 launches, and in most respects easier.In which case, why lose the easy money, and good press, by refusing Marsliner tourism? Were you in Musk's shoes, or perhaps Bezos', would you refuse it?
Quote from: LMT on 08/03/2018 08:08 pmQuote from: Ludus on 08/03/2018 04:22 pmQuote from: philw1776 on 08/03/2018 02:28 pmI've heard Elon speculate about Mars trips, point-to-point and lunar bases but never about an artificial gravity space station. I conclude that if/when such a AG station becomes reality it will be with someone else's money and engineering resources.That’s in Jeff Bezos’ domain. He’s got the franchise on the O’Neill millions of people living is near earth/moon space thing.Just to ballpark, profit from 2 SpaceX tourist station flights (2 x ~100 passengers) could conceivably equal recent profit from a Falcon 9 launch (~$25M). Passenger flights would presumably be more streamlined and routine than F9 launches, and in most respects easier.In which case, why lose the easy money, and good press, by refusing Marsliner tourism? Were you in Musk's shoes, or perhaps Bezos', would you refuse it?Goalposts moving. The responses were to SpaceX's AG station being a high value destination enabling BFR point to point. There is zero indication that SpaceX is going to build a AG station. Were they interested it would have been in their P2P presentation. I predict it will not be an "I forgot this"part of SpaceX's plans revealed in 2018 either.What is Marsliner tourism? An orbital ride in a BFS or BO orbiter?Of course Bezos is interested in such. That's his game. He's said so. People living and working in space.Rides in a BFS to LEO for some to be determined period would be an excellent precursor to P2P BFR. FWIW I do not think any P2P service will happen before the 2040s at the very earliest.
Quote from: philw1776 on 08/03/2018 02:28 pmI've heard Elon speculate about Mars trips, point-to-point and lunar bases but never about an artificial gravity space station. I conclude that if/when such a AG station becomes reality it will be with someone else's money and engineering resources.The attached GIF is of 2001's Discovery centrifuge main deckhttps://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1004936605797212160?s=19Elon Musk ✔ @elonmusk Running track in @SpaceX BF Spaceship will look something like this12:02 AM - Jun 8, 2018
Wouldn't it be more like Skylab in this gif? The IPS won't have spin gravity. (Right?)
Yeah, actually closer to Skylab, but with 50% larger inner diameter