It is very unlikely that any Mars-bound 9 meter Starship that returns to Earth will ever be re-used, though, because by the time a ship makes it to Mars and back, its design, systems, and engines will be antiques. The earliest this could possibly happen is in the early 2030s using a ship manufactured in the late 2020s.
Space shuttles were used for about 3 decades. That’s enough for 7 to 14 uses.
Quote from: nycdotnet on 07/29/2023 06:35 pmIt is very unlikely that any Mars-bound 9 meter Starship that returns to Earth will ever be re-used, though, because by the time a ship makes it to Mars and back, its design, systems, and engines will be antiques. The earliest this could possibly happen is in the early 2030s using a ship manufactured in the late 2020s.On this point, does it actually matter if there are more modern ships available? If your 20 year old ship can still get to Mars and back the way it always has done, will it really be a problem if it can't haul quite as much as some other ships in the fleet?
Quote from: steveleach on 07/29/2023 08:01 pmQuote from: nycdotnet on 07/29/2023 06:35 pmIt is very unlikely that any Mars-bound 9 meter Starship that returns to Earth will ever be re-used, though, because by the time a ship makes it to Mars and back, its design, systems, and engines will be antiques. The earliest this could possibly happen is in the early 2030s using a ship manufactured in the late 2020s.On this point, does it actually matter if there are more modern ships available? If your 20 year old ship can still get to Mars and back the way it always has done, will it really be a problem if it can't haul quite as much as some other ships in the fleet?Does anyone fly the original 737 any more?737-200? Barely, a few third world cargo airlines.Now triple the depreciation curve rate on a 737.Now when the Starship equivalent of a mature 737-600 (NG) comes out, then reuse might make more sense as the volumes of Starships goes up and production levels level off.
Quote from: InterestedEngineer on 07/29/2023 08:59 pmQuote from: steveleach on 07/29/2023 08:01 pmQuote from: nycdotnet on 07/29/2023 06:35 pmIt is very unlikely that any Mars-bound 9 meter Starship that returns to Earth will ever be re-used, though, because by the time a ship makes it to Mars and back, its design, systems, and engines will be antiques. The earliest this could possibly happen is in the early 2030s using a ship manufactured in the late 2020s.On this point, does it actually matter if there are more modern ships available? If your 20 year old ship can still get to Mars and back the way it always has done, will it really be a problem if it can't haul quite as much as some other ships in the fleet?Does anyone fly the original 737 any more?737-200? Barely, a few third world cargo airlines.Now triple the depreciation curve rate on a 737.Now when the Starship equivalent of a mature 737-600 (NG) comes out, then reuse might make more sense as the volumes of Starships goes up and production levels level off.Plenty of 30 year old planes are still flying.More than 30 years doesn’t really matter to the economics of Starship, so probably best ignored.But 7-14 potential reused is not nothing, it is roughly the average reused of Falcon 9. And it’s possible the ships could be used at Mars and Earth for other purposes while waiting for the planets to line up.
Plenty of 30 year old planes are still flying.More than 30 years doesn’t really matter to the economics of Starship, so probably best ignored.But 7-14 potential reused is not nothing, it is roughly the average reused of Falcon 9. And it’s possible the ships could be used at Mars and Earth for other purposes while waiting for the planets to line up.