I would consider betting money that Starliner-6 won’t fly until 2029.
...which doesn't mean Starliner won't get another mission ever. There's Orbital Reef, plus Gateway/Artemis, if NASA wants to retire Orion and go with commercial providers for later missions.
With reduced flights, what does Starliner’s overall cost per flight end up being (including the ~$4B development cost)?That development cost is now spread over fewer flights, while Crew Dragon’s already lower development cost gets spread over more flights.Widening the already significant cost gap between the two vehicles even more.
Quote from: M.E.T. on 06/03/2022 05:18 amWith reduced flights, what does Starliner’s overall cost per flight end up being (including the ~$4B development cost)?That development cost is now spread over fewer flights, while Crew Dragon’s already lower development cost gets spread over more flights.Widening the already significant cost gap between the two vehicles even more.But sunk costs are sunk. Going forward, Boeing must complete the CFT to get the remaining development milestone payment, at which point they will account for the loss for the development phase of the project. After that, their operating profit or loss is the difference between the price and the per-mission operating cost. This is affected by the current launch rate, not by the past history. It is the operating profit or loss that determines whether or not they should terminate Starliner. It also determines whether or not they should invest in the development and certification effort for launching on a new launcher.
Quote from: DanClemmensen on 06/03/2022 05:55 amQuote from: M.E.T. on 06/03/2022 05:18 amWith reduced flights, what does Starliner’s overall cost per flight end up being (including the ~$4B development cost)?That development cost is now spread over fewer flights, while Crew Dragon’s already lower development cost gets spread over more flights.Widening the already significant cost gap between the two vehicles even more.But sunk costs are sunk. Going forward, Boeing must complete the CFT to get the remaining development milestone payment, at which point they will account for the loss for the development phase of the project. After that, their operating profit or loss is the difference between the price and the per-mission operating cost. This is affected by the current launch rate, not by the past history. It is the operating profit or loss that determines whether or not they should terminate Starliner. It also determines whether or not they should invest in the development and certification effort for launching on a new launcher.I’m not talking about it from Boeing’s perspective. I’m talking about total program cost per flight from the taxpayer’s perspective, when all is said and done.
That’s a pretty high price. Maybe there is a market for Dream chaser.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 06/03/2022 01:04 pmThat’s a pretty high price. Maybe there is a market for Dream chaser.Orbital Reef will also use crewed Dream Chaser.
Quote from: yg1968 on 06/03/2022 01:06 pmQuote from: Robotbeat on 06/03/2022 01:04 pmThat’s a pretty high price. Maybe there is a market for Dream chaser.Orbital Reef will also use crewed Dream Chaser.Who's gonna pay for crew dream chaser? NASA won't.
Quote from: deadman1204 on 06/03/2022 01:56 pmQuote from: yg1968 on 06/03/2022 01:06 pmQuote from: Robotbeat on 06/03/2022 01:04 pmThat’s a pretty high price. Maybe there is a market for Dream chaser.Orbital Reef will also use crewed Dream Chaser.Who's gonna pay for crew dream chaser? NASA won't.Nasa wouldn't pay for development but that can do barter no cost certifying and paying for seats.
Quote from: M.E.T. on 06/03/2022 06:34 amQuote from: DanClemmensen on 06/03/2022 05:55 amQuote from: M.E.T. on 06/03/2022 05:18 amWith reduced flights, what does Starliner’s overall cost per flight end up being (including the ~$4B development cost)?That development cost is now spread over fewer flights, while Crew Dragon’s already lower development cost gets spread over more flights.Widening the already significant cost gap between the two vehicles even more.But sunk costs are sunk. Going forward, Boeing must complete the CFT to get the remaining development milestone payment, at which point they will account for the loss for the development phase of the project. After that, their operating profit or loss is the difference between the price and the per-mission operating cost. This is affected by the current launch rate, not by the past history. It is the operating profit or loss that determines whether or not they should terminate Starliner. It also determines whether or not they should invest in the development and certification effort for launching on a new launcher.I’m not talking about it from Boeing’s perspective. I’m talking about total program cost per flight from the taxpayer’s perspective, when all is said and done.That's nice, but sunk costs are still sunk. We as taxpayers have already paid or agreed to pay for the development milestones: that money is gone forever and cancelling Starliner now would not recover that money. I think taxpayers should focus on money yet to be spent, not money already spent. In theory we should also try to learn from the past and use when creating new programs, but that will not affect the operating cost of the Starliner. NASA already agreed on the fixed price per mission, so Boeing's operating cost does not affect the amount of taxpayer money being paid per mission, either.One lesson NASA might learn: don't let a contractor hustle you into committing to pay for six operational missions when you initially agreed to commit to two missions plus four optional missions. NASA agreed to this (and provided an additional $287 million) in 2019 when Boeing threatened to pull out of the program. Without this change, NASA would have been free to use the cheaper Crew Dragon for these missions. At the time of this hustle, NASA (and everybody) thought of Starliner as the real spacecraft and Crew Dragon as a long shot, so NASA thought they had no choice.
NASA wouldn’t have gotten backup capability then. Relations with Russia haven’t exactly improved, so this isn’t nothing.
Quote from: M.E.T. on 06/03/2022 06:34 amQuote from: DanClemmensen on 06/03/2022 05:55 amQuote from: M.E.T. on 06/03/2022 05:18 amWith reduced flights, what does Starliner’s overall cost per flight end up being (including the ~$4B development cost)?That development cost is now spread over fewer flights, while Crew Dragon’s already lower development cost gets spread over more flights.Widening the already significant cost gap between the two vehicles even more.But sunk costs are sunk. Going forward, Boeing must complete the CFT to get the remaining development milestone payment, at which point they will account for the loss for the development phase of the project. After that, their operating profit or loss is the difference between the price and the per-mission operating cost. This is affected by the current launch rate, not by the past history. It is the operating profit or loss that determines whether or not they should terminate Starliner. It also determines whether or not they should invest in the development and certification effort for launching on a new launcher.I’m not talking about it from Boeing’s perspective. I’m talking about total program cost per flight from the taxpayer’s perspective, when all is said and done.Boeing charges NASA approximately $90M per seat for Starliner. NASA is strongly encouraging Commercial LEO Destinations (CLD) providers to use two different commercial crew transportation systems. The CLD and Commercial Crew Programs are working on models for certifying new crew transportation systems. I would expect Boeing and the new LV to be certified as part of the CLD Program. Blue has already said that they will be using the Starliner (and crewed Dream Chaser) for their Orbital Reef station.
Quote from: yg1968 on 06/03/2022 01:01 pmQuote from: M.E.T. on 06/03/2022 06:34 amQuote from: DanClemmensen on 06/03/2022 05:55 amQuote from: M.E.T. on 06/03/2022 05:18 amWith reduced flights, what does Starliner’s overall cost per flight end up being (including the ~$4B development cost)?That development cost is now spread over fewer flights, while Crew Dragon’s already lower development cost gets spread over more flights.Widening the already significant cost gap between the two vehicles even more.But sunk costs are sunk. Going forward, Boeing must complete the CFT to get the remaining development milestone payment, at which point they will account for the loss for the development phase of the project. After that, their operating profit or loss is the difference between the price and the per-mission operating cost. This is affected by the current launch rate, not by the past history. It is the operating profit or loss that determines whether or not they should terminate Starliner. It also determines whether or not they should invest in the development and certification effort for launching on a new launcher.I’m not talking about it from Boeing’s perspective. I’m talking about total program cost per flight from the taxpayer’s perspective, when all is said and done.Boeing charges NASA approximately $90M per seat for Starliner. NASA is strongly encouraging Commercial LEO Destinations (CLD) providers to use two different commercial crew transportation systems. The CLD and Commercial Crew Programs are working on models for certifying new crew transportation systems. I would expect Boeing and the new LV to be certified as part of the CLD Program. Blue has already said that they will be using the Starliner (and crewed Dream Chaser) for their Orbital Reef station.How wil that work in practice? Orbital Reef will rely on paying tourists, right? Why would a tourist pay $90M for a seat on Starliner if they can pay $60M for the same trip on Crew Dragon?That’s a recipe to go out of business before you even get started.
Quote from: Tomness on 06/03/2022 02:06 pmQuote from: deadman1204 on 06/03/2022 01:56 pmQuote from: yg1968 on 06/03/2022 01:06 pmQuote from: Robotbeat on 06/03/2022 01:04 pmThat’s a pretty high price. Maybe there is a market for Dream chaser.Orbital Reef will also use crewed Dream Chaser.Who's gonna pay for crew dream chaser? NASA won't.Nasa wouldn't pay for development but that can do barter no cost certifying and paying for seats.Yup, and NASA *is* paying for cargo Dream Chaser.