To me, costs could decrease by using roll steel and having only one vertical weld per ring. Less welding, less welders. Eventually having a large building like the VAB with all building inside to minimize weather problems such as rain and wind, steady building could improve output and maybe save time also. Having pre-cut nose pieces would minimize re-dos and make for quicker welding also. Many things could improve speed of building with less labor. However, the sunk costs of a huge multi-million dollar building would increase $/kg. Horizontal construction in a horizontal building might be even cheaper.
But costs of $7m per SS are taking things too far, and appears unrealistic. And we dont even need such fantastical numbers. $100/kg to LEO beats a space elevator for cost, and opens up the solar system to mankind.
Elon Musk ✓ @elonmuskThis will sound implausible, but I think there’s a path to build Starship / Super Heavy for less than Falcon 9https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1094793664809689089
To me that puts the optimistic end state manufacturing cost target of SS/SH at F9’s equivalent cost.That is the benchmark he is chasing.
It is impossible for starship to be so cheap. Impossible to be cheaper than Falcon9.Are you joking here?
Quote from: pochimax on 09/20/2019 08:49 pmIt is impossible for starship to be so cheap. Impossible to be cheaper than Falcon9.Are you joking here?The consensus is that it is very FAR from Impossible. We're all a long way down the path of discussions that have raised that possibilities. You might want to review if not already familiar.The differential manufacturing processes and materials make it eminently possible. Probable? Who knows?
Quote from: AC in NC on 09/20/2019 09:19 pmThe consensus is that it is very FAR from Impossible. We're all a long way down the path of discussions that have raised that possibilities. You might want to review if not already familiar.The differential manufacturing processes and materials make it eminently possible. Probable? Who knows?It's not a consensus. There is the assertion by Elon Musk that they have a way to do it, but it's not safe to say that a majority of people believe that there is a path to it, let alone the idea that they've already done so.
The consensus is that it is very FAR from Impossible. We're all a long way down the path of discussions that have raised that possibilities. You might want to review if not already familiar.The differential manufacturing processes and materials make it eminently possible. Probable? Who knows?
If SS/SH is so incredible cheap to build it will be because it will be incredible easy to made. In that case it will be very easy to copy, everywhere in the world.Cheap = easy.
Quote from: pochimax on 09/21/2019 08:04 amIf SS/SH is so incredible cheap to build it will be because it will be incredible easy to made. In that case it will be very easy to copy, everywhere in the world.Cheap = easy.You keep missing that it's 'easy' for SpaceX but it's not for anyone following. Many companies could replicate the cheap and mature part of building the steel structures. What they can't duplicate easily or cheaply is the years invested in vertical landing, engine development and operating reusable boosters. Blue's the exception, but development for them is all about New Glenn for the next couple of years. We don't know if their next vehicle will use lessons learned from Starship.
Quote from: Cheapchips on 09/21/2019 08:30 amQuote from: pochimax on 09/21/2019 08:04 amIf SS/SH is so incredible cheap to build it will be because it will be incredible easy to made. In that case it will be very easy to copy, everywhere in the world.Cheap = easy.You keep missing that it's 'easy' for SpaceX but it's not for anyone following. Many companies could replicate the cheap and mature part of building the steel structures. What they can't duplicate easily or cheaply is the years invested in vertical landing, engine development and operating reusable boosters. Blue's the exception, but development for them is all about New Glenn for the next couple of years. We don't know if their next vehicle will use lessons learned from Starship.Several organizations have demonstrated small scale take off and landing using engine vectoring. OK these are far from orbital, but TVC of the engine is not a big problem .... maybe the hyper-sonic retro-propulsion is.However the knowledge that it works, and of the visible technologies is a big leg up!
It may be "cheap" and "easy" to copy the rocket body. (Lets ignore the GNC and computing.)But despite the designs on NSF showing schematics of Raptor, re-producing such engines without engineering details etc etc etc would be difficult, time consuming and expensive. So the engines are a significant hurdle. Clearly other engines could be used, and if the organization was not focused on Mars, then Methane might not be their choice. However now the rocket is no longer a copy of Starship ....