Quote from: jimgagnon on 03/02/2010 01:06 amFrom what I understand, both SpaceX and Bigelow have plunked down something in the neighborhood of a quarter of a billion dollars in start-up money over a period of about ten years. SpaceX's contract with NASA calls for 12 supply flights for a total of $1.6B, for about $130M/flight (they're making money on this contract, by the way). Let's assume we have a fat field of six companies competing for services in a few years, and it's in NASA's interests to keep them all alive. $2B divided by six is about $330M/year for each, or two and a half of SpaceX's initial price on a supply flight. That just might be enough to keep a company alive and still flying, even assuming they're unable to drum up any other business outside of NASA's ISS efforts.So, does the "price per flight" equate to covering the operating costs of the entire company, or that division at least, for a period of time before the next flight and the next infusion of money?The answer in many cases is probably not entirely and therefore it will probably require sustainment from either corporate funds, which is not going to be popular if a business is continuously in a defecit mode, or the government is going to have to continue to step in in order to keep them afloat.
From what I understand, both SpaceX and Bigelow have plunked down something in the neighborhood of a quarter of a billion dollars in start-up money over a period of about ten years. SpaceX's contract with NASA calls for 12 supply flights for a total of $1.6B, for about $130M/flight (they're making money on this contract, by the way). Let's assume we have a fat field of six companies competing for services in a few years, and it's in NASA's interests to keep them all alive. $2B divided by six is about $330M/year for each, or two and a half of SpaceX's initial price on a supply flight. That just might be enough to keep a company alive and still flying, even assuming they're unable to drum up any other business outside of NASA's ISS efforts.
Quote from: OV-106 on 03/02/2010 01:41 amQuote from: jimgagnon on 03/02/2010 01:06 amFrom what I understand, both SpaceX and Bigelow have plunked down something in the neighborhood of a quarter of a billion dollars in start-up money over a period of about ten years. SpaceX's contract with NASA calls for 12 supply flights for a total of $1.6B, for about $130M/flight (they're making money on this contract, by the way). Let's assume we have a fat field of six companies competing for services in a few years, and it's in NASA's interests to keep them all alive. $2B divided by six is about $330M/year for each, or two and a half of SpaceX's initial price on a supply flight. That just might be enough to keep a company alive and still flying, even assuming they're unable to drum up any other business outside of NASA's ISS efforts.So, does the "price per flight" equate to covering the operating costs of the entire company, or that division at least, for a period of time before the next flight and the next infusion of money?The answer in many cases is probably not entirely and therefore it will probably require sustainment from either corporate funds, which is not going to be popular if a business is continuously in a defecit mode, or the government is going to have to continue to step in in order to keep them afloat. Or other customers. Clearly that is possible.EDIT: Not only is it possible, but SpaceX has customers on their manifest already, and they've already launched one into orbit. There are already DragonLab missions on the manifest. Orbital is an even better position since they are an established spacecraft and small launch vehicle company with a substantial existing revenue stream.
Quote from: Bill White on 02/27/2010 02:35 pmI would imagine that Senator Hutchinson will arrange for her space policy staff people to transition to another Senator thereby allowing her space staffers to "stay in the game" so to speak. Well, we'll see what tomorrow night brings with the primary election, but that aside the question would be whether that other Senator has more or less influence in the Senate than Senator Hutchinson.
I would imagine that Senator Hutchinson will arrange for her space policy staff people to transition to another Senator thereby allowing her space staffers to "stay in the game" so to speak.
neilh: that quote from the budget is so vague...there are ifs and maybes all through it.The biggest proof: "...to improve the chance of mission success..."So clearly they are not confident in the current plan being a success.
We might be able to do just this with the Shuttle and the emergent commercial market if we privatize the Shuttle. After a three year weaning period, the Shuttle company would have to compete with the rest of the private companies. It's my take that such a company would not have long term financial viability, but there may be others who are willing to try and make a go of it. It's the only possible way forward I can see that preserves the Shuttle capability long enough for privately operated manned spaceflight to become operational.It's all a matter of Congress willing to pay the $2B/year for three years plus whatever fees are incurred in privatization.
Hmm, just occurred to me... Would the Shuttle consortium be taking on a lot of liabilities to decommission the infrastructure once the programme gets shut down? That could be the real killer.
Quote from: robertross on 03/02/2010 01:19 amneilh: that quote from the budget is so vague...there are ifs and maybes all through it.The biggest proof: "...to improve the chance of mission success..."So clearly they are not confident in the current plan being a success.Wait a minute, back the CM up a sec. Earlier you accused the COTS of being "more than 67% over-budget." Over budget meaning they needed more money to do work they were already contracted to do. If their funding is being increased to pay for additional flights and testing, that's not even in the same ballpark. I'm looking at neilh's quotes and I'm seeing an acceleration and expansion, not a Nunn-McCurdy breach. You may not agree with said expansion, and question why it appears to lack detail, but nowhere is there anything about failure to reach milestones or failure to stay within cost goals.
It is fascinating to consider that the Texas governor's primary could influence space policy -- if Perry defeats Hutchinson tomorrow and there is no run-off then Senator Hutchinson will have considerably more time to devote to space policy.
I'm worried by the fact that they are still talking about continuing with 'Constellation', by which they very clearly mean Ares-I. Ares-I is a death-note to US-indigenous HSF.
Politically there are two groups - reinstate Cx/Ares I and commercial.
Florida Today has Senator Hutchison's press release:http://flametrench.flatoday.net/2010/03/in-senate-hutchison-echoes-kosmasposey.htmlDon't see it on her Senate site yet.
Quote from: psloss on 03/03/2010 08:32 pmFlorida Today has Senator Hutchison's press release:http://flametrench.flatoday.net/2010/03/in-senate-hutchison-echoes-kosmasposey.htmlDon't see it on her Senate site yet.Since I live in Texas:Big news last night as Perry defeated Hutchison in the primary she is thus out of the running. I imagine her next order of buisness is (I hope) to go to D.C. and get involved in the pro SDHLV lobby. (crosses fingers).
http://posey.house.gov/News/DocumentSingle.aspx?DocumentID=174535This is part of a multi-lawmaker effort. There's other Congressmen involved and Senator Hutchison's sponsored Bill.Should be released publically at about 3pm Eastern and a press release shortly after. I'm talking about the March 3 version "Space15". Has inputs from most of the major players, from USA to SpaceX, from Lockheed to NASA. Massive changes to the FY2011 proposal, including shuttle extension by five years. Commercial elements change a lot too. HLV moved up.
An SD-HLV is getting the majority of the backing right now, along with continued Orion funding.