SS is developing variants on one... design to address different uses/markets.
Actually the opposite, SpaceX is developing ONE design... that will only have three variants with rather as 'minimal' of design changes as possible.
that I find hard to assume will be 'cheap' when all we have to go by is non-operational, non-prototypes which have very little to do with actually working orbital launch vehicles
SS has to have just about as many flights as the STS was requiring to meet similar economic goals.
As per usual neither Congress nor OMB were willing to buy enough Orbiters to come close to the needed flight rate
I've seen on these very forums someone 'crow' that ONE cargo/SS could fly off the entire planned annual launch inventory in a single month... And then not understand the follow of question of "Ok, then what?"The idea that the launch market will expand to fill such capability lacks an understanding of the actual launch market and the economics involved
I actually don't see anything to support this view point as SS is based on much the same economic and launch market theory that the STS was
STS was expensive primarily because it was a government program spread over a large portion of the United States and a very ambitious first attempt at a reusable space vehicle. It was arguably too large and complex for the launch market it was aimed at, (which can be argued about Starship as well), and aimed at doing too many things with one system but it had a lot of potential that was also unrealized.
Starship at first glance does not appear to have similar flaws but in fact it has all the same flaws and is just as dependent on government financing
People wonder why there are no 'Starship" competitors but that's like asking why there were originally no STS or EELV "competitors".
Similarly Starship is based on a lot of assumptions and numbers that COULD apply as easily as they could not and are just as valid as not.
This will essentially infuse a bunch of public money into a singular private space launch system which in and of itself then becomes perilously close to if not in effect a government subsidized monopoly. As such it stifles competition and since it is subsidized by the government there is vastly less incentive to do anything about it. Due to it's size Starship, like the Shuttle, requires a hefty segment if not domination of the overall launch market to be economic. It can't help it and reusability actually encourages this to keep the price down.
I have to admit, I am concerned with the nearly unlimited roles people are proscribing to Starship. Each variant would have to be tested extensively and you introduce a whole gambit of failure modes.Isn't that what doomed Space Shuttle trying to accomplish too many roles?
They are: Tanker, Cargo and mixed Passenger/Cargo. Developing anything ELSE gets expensive and as I said even if the customer demands it there's actually not a lot of incentive to go that way. Contracts or no, (and keep in mind the HLS is NOT as specific as people tend to think it is otherwise Starship, no matter how cheap, would not have even been considered) the monetary penalties are likely be trivial for 'over-performance' than 'under-performance'. Especially as there is likely to be no 'backup plan' in place....I'd argue that what we'll see for "HLS" will simply be a "Starship" prototype, (and actual one) with a lot of low-complexity systems packed in to meet the minimum requirements. i don't know if people have been paying attention but SpaceX illustrations have already dumped the 'lunar landing engines' and I fully expect that SpaceX will argue they aren't needed so they won't have to 'compromise' the Starship design. I won't be at all surprised if SpaceX uses the NASA money to finally get serious about a actual working landing leg system but it will be 'compatible' with the "standard" Starship not something specific for the Moon.time....Quote from: VSECOTSPE on 05/11/2021 05:39 pmSTS tried to do too much in one (very expensive) design. SS is developing variants on one (relatively cheap) design to address different uses/markets.Actually the opposite, SpaceX is developing ONE design, (that I find hard to assume will be 'cheap' when all we have to go by is non-operational, non-prototypes which have very little to do with actually working orbital launch vehicles) that will only have three variants with rather as 'minimal' of design changes as possible. SS has to have just about as many flights as the STS was requiring to meet similar economic goals. As per usual neither Congress nor OMB were willing to buy enough Orbiters to come close to the needed flight rate but in a similar fashion SpaceX has to have a certain 'minimum' number of SS/SH's AND fly them often enough to be economical.QuoteLike every LV, SS will have problems. But it’s not repeating that particular STS mistake.I actually don't see anything to support this view point as SS is based on much the same economic and launch market theory that the STS was with arguably less basis to rest on. STS was expensive primarily because it was a government program spread over a large portion of the United States and a very ambitious first attempt at a reusable space vehicle. It was arguably too large and complex for the launch market it was aimed at, (which can be argued about Starship as well), and aimed at doing too many things with one system but it had a lot of potential that was also unrealized. Starship at first glance does not appear to have similar flaws but in fact it has all the same flaws and is just as dependent on government financing and support rather than the existing launch market and relevant economic factors.
STS tried to do too much in one (very expensive) design. SS is developing variants on one (relatively cheap) design to address different uses/markets.
Like every LV, SS will have problems. But it’s not repeating that particular STS mistake.
Quote from: Khadgars on 05/11/2021 02:58 pmI have to admit, I am concerned with the nearly unlimited roles people are proscribing to Starship. Each variant would have to be tested extensively and you introduce a whole gambit of failure modes.Isn't that what doomed Space Shuttle trying to accomplish too many roles?SpaceX does not need to do everything. They can deliver a Starship cargo section to NASA. NASA builds a habitat to their own specs into it and SpaceX plants it on a propulsion section and sends it off.
Musk is more pragmatic than the NASA and can turn his company on a dime or a moments notice.
He is bound and determined go to Mars the cheapest with the least hassle possible.
Starship is much cheaper to build and probably to operate than Shuttle ever was.
Without re-entry, it can become an in space workhorse.
The engines are cheap to build. One RS-25 or SSME is $100 million. Raptor with similar thrust, Musk said is around $2 million each.
Starship can have stretched fuel tanks and become a tanker. With habitats on board, becomes a human transporter. The large fairing space, it becomes a heavy lifter for anything you want in space.
There is really no comparison to Shuttle. Shuttle had wings which limited its cargo carrying capacity to a certain width and length.
Shuttle had a disposable fuel tank. Solids weren't as easy to refurbish as originally thought.
Falcon 9 has proven liquids are better for reusability with essentially the same payload capability.QuoteAgain not really 'comparable'. Arguably at the time the Shuttle was designed it was well understood that liquid rockets were better for reusability. That's why the Shuttle use them In fact the idea was to use liquids both in the orbiter and the booster but economics prevented this. This is why almost all 'reusable' concepts have used liquid propellant. Falcon 9 has had ZERO influence on this thinking it's been around since the 40s. Lets not over-blow accomplishments here QuoteStarship/Superheavy will be completely reusable and is designed from the get go to be easier to launch and re-use.And we'll see how that works out, but that's not proven in anyway and arguably there are some serious operational questions that appear to make that argument less likely rather than more. QuoteNow, for the Artemis program, Starship can be the reusable lander and have tankers bring fuel for it. It is large enough to be the habitat while astronauts are on the moon. With several lunar Starships, tons of equipment and supplies could be brought to a moon base.In theory if Starship works mostly as advertised, yes. On the other hand it is quite arguably that you could do the same with a much smaller and cheaper fully reusable system than Starship/Superheavy flying more often. (Yes that actually helps reduce the cost) But, as well all know Starship/Superheavy isn't DESIGNED for the Moon or even going to Earth orbit on a regular basis The thing is at this point we don't KNOW any of this and therefore the 'comparison' is fully speculative.It is likely cheaper than either of the other two lander concepts but as a whole that's actually NOT really a main consideration. ("Cost" is due to the limited budget but that also isn't 'economic' or market driven but politics which is all I'll say)Randy
Again not really 'comparable'. Arguably at the time the Shuttle was designed it was well understood that liquid rockets were better for reusability. That's why the Shuttle use them In fact the idea was to use liquids both in the orbiter and the booster but economics prevented this. This is why almost all 'reusable' concepts have used liquid propellant. Falcon 9 has had ZERO influence on this thinking it's been around since the 40s. Lets not over-blow accomplishments here QuoteStarship/Superheavy will be completely reusable and is designed from the get go to be easier to launch and re-use.And we'll see how that works out, but that's not proven in anyway and arguably there are some serious operational questions that appear to make that argument less likely rather than more. QuoteNow, for the Artemis program, Starship can be the reusable lander and have tankers bring fuel for it. It is large enough to be the habitat while astronauts are on the moon. With several lunar Starships, tons of equipment and supplies could be brought to a moon base.In theory if Starship works mostly as advertised, yes. On the other hand it is quite arguably that you could do the same with a much smaller and cheaper fully reusable system than Starship/Superheavy flying more often. (Yes that actually helps reduce the cost) But, as well all know Starship/Superheavy isn't DESIGNED for the Moon or even going to Earth orbit on a regular basis The thing is at this point we don't KNOW any of this and therefore the 'comparison' is fully speculative.It is likely cheaper than either of the other two lander concepts but as a whole that's actually NOT really a main consideration. ("Cost" is due to the limited budget but that also isn't 'economic' or market driven but politics which is all I'll say)Randy
Starship/Superheavy will be completely reusable and is designed from the get go to be easier to launch and re-use.
Now, for the Artemis program, Starship can be the reusable lander and have tankers bring fuel for it. It is large enough to be the habitat while astronauts are on the moon. With several lunar Starships, tons of equipment and supplies could be brought to a moon base.
Quote from: spacenut on 05/11/2021 10:10 pmMusk is more pragmatic than the NASA and can turn his company on a dime or a moments notice.So? NASA is a government agency beholden to and answerable to Congress and the US public. SpaceX is beholden to Musk but also to the market and economic forces. Musk can 'want' to pivot on a dime but he's as bound by those factors as any other company.
i don't know if people have been paying attention but SpaceX illustrations have already dumped the 'lunar landing engines' and I fully expect that SpaceX will argue they aren't needed so they won't have to 'compromise' the Starship design.
Actually the opposite, SpaceX is developing ONE design, (that I find hard to assume will be 'cheap' when all we have to go by is non-operational, non-prototypes which have very little to do with actually working orbital launch vehicles) that will only have three variants with rather as 'minimal' of design changes as possible.
Actually the opposite, SpaceX is developing ONE design,. . . . . . that will only have three variants with rather as 'minimal' of design changes as possible.
SS has to have just about as many flights as the STS was requiring to meet similar economic goals. As per usual neither Congress nor OMB were willing to buy enough Orbiters to come close to the needed flight rate but in a similar fashion SpaceX has to have a certain 'minimum' number of SS/SH's AND fly them often enough to be economical.
Quote from: Khadgars on 05/11/2021 02:58 pmI have to admit, I am concerned with the nearly unlimited roles people are proscribing to Starship. Each variant would have to be tested extensively and you introduce a whole gambit of failure modes.Isn't that what doomed Space Shuttle trying to accomplish too many roles?You could ask the same question about variants of commercial jetliners like 747, how many 747 variants are there? Probably dozens if you count specialized version, I mean NASA even has their own version for Shuttle transport, and for carrying telescope, and of course another version is being used by Virgin Orbit to launch rockets. It all worked out very well, probably because Boeing has a production line pumping these out like sausages, and each variant is specialized for its particular role without needing to worry about other roles, this disentangle the dependencies.In other words, the difference between 747 variants and Shuttle is this: When you ask 747 to be Shuttle transporter, a flying telescope and a rocket launch platform, you bring in 3 separate 747 aircrafts and each is modified to do its thing and only its thing. Shuttle is like refitting a single 747 to carry Shuttle, carry telescope and launch rocket all at the same time, that's where it went south.
Quote from: su27k on 05/12/2021 05:27 amQuote from: Khadgars on 05/11/2021 02:58 pmI have to admit, I am concerned with the nearly unlimited roles people are proscribing to Starship. Each variant would have to be tested extensively and you introduce a whole gambit of failure modes.Isn't that what doomed Space Shuttle trying to accomplish too many roles?You could ask the same question about variants of commercial jetliners like 747, how many 747 variants are there? Probably dozens if you count specialized version, I mean NASA even has their own version for Shuttle transport, and for carrying telescope, and of course another version is being used by Virgin Orbit to launch rockets. It all worked out very well, probably because Boeing has a production line pumping these out like sausages, and each variant is specialized for its particular role without needing to worry about other roles, this disentangle the dependencies.In other words, the difference between 747 variants and Shuttle is this: When you ask 747 to be Shuttle transporter, a flying telescope and a rocket launch platform, you bring in 3 separate 747 aircrafts and each is modified to do its thing and only its thing. Shuttle is like refitting a single 747 to carry Shuttle, carry telescope and launch rocket all at the same time, that's where it went south.While I understand the point you are trying to make with 747, I don't think that really applies. You don't have to add thrusters or additional engines to carry the shuttle or transport telescopes and the take off and landing are essentially unchanged.Moonship will have thrusters that Starship won't have and will operate in very different environment for extended amount of time on the moons surface. Mars Starship will have an ECLSS beyond anything we have ever seen and will land in one of the most punishing environments humans will attempt in our life times.All three of those variants are quite different from tanker starship which will be the largest re-fueling spacecraft ever produced. I am surprised so many people believe certifying all of these will be cheap and easy. As a lowly program manager, I see extensive risk associated with all of these with most of the issues we won't even know exist until we're deep into the program. SpaceX ethos of rapid build/test/repeat definitely helps in this regard but the task at hand is monumental.
Quote from: Khadgars on 05/13/2021 01:42 pmQuote from: su27k on 05/12/2021 05:27 amQuote from: Khadgars on 05/11/2021 02:58 pmI have to admit, I am concerned with the nearly unlimited roles people are proscribing to Starship. Each variant would have to be tested extensively and you introduce a whole gambit of failure modes.Isn't that what doomed Space Shuttle trying to accomplish too many roles?You could ask the same question about variants of commercial jetliners like 747, how many 747 variants are there? Probably dozens if you count specialized version, I mean NASA even has their own version for Shuttle transport, and for carrying telescope, and of course another version is being used by Virgin Orbit to launch rockets. It all worked out very well, probably because Boeing has a production line pumping these out like sausages, and each variant is specialized for its particular role without needing to worry about other roles, this disentangle the dependencies.In other words, the difference between 747 variants and Shuttle is this: When you ask 747 to be Shuttle transporter, a flying telescope and a rocket launch platform, you bring in 3 separate 747 aircrafts and each is modified to do its thing and only its thing. Shuttle is like refitting a single 747 to carry Shuttle, carry telescope and launch rocket all at the same time, that's where it went south.While I understand the point you are trying to make with 747, I don't think that really applies. You don't have to add thrusters or additional engines to carry the shuttle or transport telescopes and the take off and landing are essentially unchanged.Moonship will have thrusters that Starship won't have and will operate in very different environment for extended amount of time on the moons surface. Mars Starship will have an ECLSS beyond anything we have ever seen and will land in one of the most punishing environments humans will attempt in our life times.All three of those variants are quite different from tanker starship which will be the largest re-fueling spacecraft ever produced. I am surprised so many people believe certifying all of these will be cheap and easy. As a lowly program manager, I see extensive risk associated with all of these with most of the issues we won't even know exist until we're deep into the program. SpaceX ethos of rapid build/test/repeat definitely helps in this regard but the task at hand is monumental.Thrusters are going to be off the shelf, not something they are going to need an excessive amount of development for, at least not above developing the booster landing RCS.The issue, with both starship and the 747, is the structrual hardpoints to mount stuff, which applies equally to the shuttle mount as the engine mount.
Quote from: rakaydos on 05/13/2021 01:50 pmQuote from: Khadgars on 05/13/2021 01:42 pmQuote from: su27k on 05/12/2021 05:27 amQuote from: Khadgars on 05/11/2021 02:58 pmI have to admit, I am concerned with the nearly unlimited roles people are proscribing to Starship. Each variant would have to be tested extensively and you introduce a whole gambit of failure modes.Isn't that what doomed Space Shuttle trying to accomplish too many roles?You could ask the same question about variants of commercial jetliners like 747, how many 747 variants are there? Probably dozens if you count specialized version, I mean NASA even has their own version for Shuttle transport, and for carrying telescope, and of course another version is being used by Virgin Orbit to launch rockets. It all worked out very well, probably because Boeing has a production line pumping these out like sausages, and each variant is specialized for its particular role without needing to worry about other roles, this disentangle the dependencies.In other words, the difference between 747 variants and Shuttle is this: When you ask 747 to be Shuttle transporter, a flying telescope and a rocket launch platform, you bring in 3 separate 747 aircrafts and each is modified to do its thing and only its thing. Shuttle is like refitting a single 747 to carry Shuttle, carry telescope and launch rocket all at the same time, that's where it went south.While I understand the point you are trying to make with 747, I don't think that really applies. You don't have to add thrusters or additional engines to carry the shuttle or transport telescopes and the take off and landing are essentially unchanged.Moonship will have thrusters that Starship won't have and will operate in very different environment for extended amount of time on the moons surface. Mars Starship will have an ECLSS beyond anything we have ever seen and will land in one of the most punishing environments humans will attempt in our life times.All three of those variants are quite different from tanker starship which will be the largest re-fueling spacecraft ever produced. I am surprised so many people believe certifying all of these will be cheap and easy. As a lowly program manager, I see extensive risk associated with all of these with most of the issues we won't even know exist until we're deep into the program. SpaceX ethos of rapid build/test/repeat definitely helps in this regard but the task at hand is monumental.Thrusters are going to be off the shelf, not something they are going to need an excessive amount of development for, at least not above developing the booster landing RCS.The issue, with both starship and the 747, is the structrual hardpoints to mount stuff, which applies equally to the shuttle mount as the engine mount.Which off the shelf engines will moonship use? Its not just the mounting but additional plumbing and failure modes on a crew vehicle that is an issue. If this were solely a cargo vehicle things would be easier.
Quote from: su27k on 05/12/2021 05:27 amQuote from: Khadgars on 05/11/2021 02:58 pmI have to admit, I am concerned with the nearly unlimited roles people are proscribing to Starship. Each variant would have to be tested extensively and you introduce a whole gambit of failure modes.Isn't that what doomed Space Shuttle trying to accomplish too many roles?You could ask the same question about variants of commercial jetliners like 747, how many 747 variants are there? Probably dozens if you count specialized version...While I understand the point you are trying to make with 747, I don't think that really applies.
Quote from: Khadgars on 05/11/2021 02:58 pmI have to admit, I am concerned with the nearly unlimited roles people are proscribing to Starship. Each variant would have to be tested extensively and you introduce a whole gambit of failure modes.Isn't that what doomed Space Shuttle trying to accomplish too many roles?You could ask the same question about variants of commercial jetliners like 747, how many 747 variants are there? Probably dozens if you count specialized version...
The Shuttle was perceived to be a failure from a cost standpoint because during the design phase it was designed to be a vehicle that could do everything. And the Shuttle was not modified into different variants, they were all the same.
Quote from: guckyfan on 05/11/2021 05:18 pmQuote from: Khadgars on 05/11/2021 02:58 pmI have to admit, I am concerned with the nearly unlimited roles people are proscribing to Starship. Each variant would have to be tested extensively and you introduce a whole gambit of failure modes.Isn't that what doomed Space Shuttle trying to accomplish too many roles?SpaceX does not need to do everything. They can deliver a Starship cargo section to NASA. NASA builds a habitat to their own specs into it and SpaceX plants it on a propulsion section and sends it off.You'd be correct for any 'standard' launch service but that's exactly the opposite of what SpaceX is aiming for. With Starship they plan from going from "Launch Services" to "Transport System" which is arguably a sea-change in that the 'service' will no longer be driven by customer requirements but by the transport system capability.(Arguably btw that's a GOOD thing )In the context here, SpaceX tells NASA what the capability is of the Starship cargo bay, NASA then builds a habitat that will fit into those requirements and ships it to the launch site. SpaceX puts it in the cargo bay and then delivers it to the destination. NASA can 'want' a bigger or more capable hab but if it doesn't "fit" it doesn't fly. Again this transforms space access from custom to mass production as it were. So far so good.The downside here is that unlike standard space launch a transport system REQUIRES a certain steady volume of transported good because unused 'space' is lost money. You lose things like 'secondary' or 'ride along' payloads because instead of a 'single' customer ALL customers have to load share the price. Again all well and good but the load market has to be there in advance because it is very much not a "build it and they will come" type market.Randy