Thanks for the concise explanation, and I'm sorry that this did not sink in originally. If these missions are not going to be landers, then why fly them at all? What do they accomplish?
It has done badly on the high profile missions: Shuttle, ISS, JWST, and of course SLS.
I think I have said this several times... Starship HLS is the critical-path item for the PoR Artemis III and IV...
But I'm also very skeptical that his proposed brand new small lunar lander would but ready by then.
In principle it's certainly possible,
I’d argue no. Based on the above, it’s not even possible in principle. The only way a small lander could theoretically fly with crew before 2030 is if we assume Mercury/Gemini development times and practices, which are from an era when we basically didn’t understand what we were doing. No one is going back to that era. Even the unmanned capsule and the transfer stage of the COTS program took 7 and 5 years each.
It's interesting what it says about technology when doing something when you don't know what you're doing is faster than doing it when you know.
Two Democratic senators are pressing the Trump administration’s nominee for Secretary of the Air Force, Troy Meink, over his past role in awarding contracts to SpaceX. Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), both members of the Senate Armed Services Committee, sent a letter to Meink seeking clarity on his relationship with SpaceX and its chief executive, Elon Musk, who now holds a significant advisory role in the administration.
Quote from: pochimax on 03/01/2025 01:32 pmI think I have said this several times... Starship HLS is the critical-path item for the PoR Artemis III and IV...Assumes facts not in evidence. You may easily be right, but the other potential critical path items are the AxEMU, the Arty 3 Orion, and the Arty 3 SLS.
Quote from: TheRadicalModerate on 03/01/2025 09:38 pmQuote from: pochimax on 03/01/2025 01:32 pmI think I have said this several times... Starship HLS is the critical-path item for the PoR Artemis III and IV...Assumes facts not in evidence. You may easily be right, but the other potential critical path items are the AxEMU, the Arty 3 Orion, and the Arty 3 SLS.If you don' t see evidence is because you don't wanna see, I think.
Mar 2, 2025This week's Artemis news starts on the political front: after Trump/Musk "go in a different direction" with NASA, another agency leader is out, Congress wants to know if Artemis can beat China back to the Moon, and a policy analyst recommends a phase out of SLS.Launch preps continue: at the Kennedy Space Center, Orion prime contractor Lockheed Martin got the Artemis II spacecraft ready for final installs, beginning with its solar array wings, and down at Starbase, SpaceX got the next Starship prototype ready for the eighth flight test in two years, following a mid-January test flight setback.While Elon Musk contemplates DOGE changes to Artemis, he also revealed more SpaceX delays to Artemis-critical Starship technology demonstrations, out to 2026. NASA provided a little more Gateway imagery and Boeing provided an update on SLS Stages production.Imagery is courtesy of NASA, except where noted.00:00 Intro00:51 NASA Exploration directorate head is next one out02:15 House Science subcommittee hearing on Artemis02:52 Representatives focused on China and the Moon, questions about skipping the Moon and going directly to Mars06:00 Dr. Pace recommends SLS phase out, but not immediate termination09:25 Questions about whether Starship can land astronauts on the Moon by 203012:50 Artemis II Orion prepared for solar array installs15:51 SpaceX publishes preview for Starship flight test 818:23 Musk reveals that Starship prop transfer delayed until 202619:53 Other news and notes, starting with more Gateway PPE footage20:30 A short SLS Stages production update from Boeing21:48 Thanks for watching!
We should all be very skeptical of Dumbacher’s claim that a small lander could beat China back to the Moon in 2030 from where we are today.
Please carefully re-read the @TheRadicalModerate reply. There is evidence that the HLS effort may be late. There is also evidence that the other elements may be late. We will not know (i.e., no evidence) which element was on the critical path until the mission launches. Because you are an SLS/Orion enthusiast, you are optimistic that SLS/Orion issues will be solved without affecting the schedule even if you are more realistic about other elements. Because I am a Starship enthusiast, I am optimistic that SpaceX will solve its issues without affecting the schedule even if I am more realistic about SLS/Orion issues.
Quote from: VSECOTSPE on 03/02/2025 01:34 amWe should all be very skeptical of Dumbacher’s claim that a small lander could beat China back to the Moon in 2030 from where we are today.Yeah the fastest backup in case of Starship delays is probably the Blue Origin HLS program that's already under contract and scheduled to fly in Artemis V in 2030.
Quote from: DanClemmensen on 03/02/2025 01:44 pmPlease carefully re-read the @TheRadicalModerate reply. There is evidence that the HLS effort may be late. There is also evidence that the other elements may be late. We will not know (i.e., no evidence) which element was on the critical path until the mission launches. Because you are an SLS/Orion enthusiast, you are optimistic that SLS/Orion issues will be solved without affecting the schedule even if you are more realistic about other elements. Because I am a Starship enthusiast, I am optimistic that SpaceX will solve its issues without affecting the schedule even if I am more realistic about SLS/Orion issues.The problem is that the pending milestones for the HLS Starship are an order of magnitude greater than the problems that the SLS and Orion may present, although I recognize that perhaps the heat shield is an unknown.Honestly, I think the suits are a minor problem. Since there are no realistic expectations for an early landing date, it is not as if there is much of a rush with the suits.We just saw in the video above that Musk confirmed a couple of days ago that the orbital refueling test will happen, at the earliest, next year. As I have commented on previous occasions, I firmly believe that a premature cancellation of the SLS and Orion, without having first carried out that test, is suicide for NASA's lunar program (and therefore for the Western one). In my opinion, everything should continue as it is at least until that test, if it occurs in 2026.
The problem is that the pending milestones for the HLS Starship are an order of magnitude greater than the problems that the SLS and Orion may present, although I recognize that perhaps the heat shield is an unknown.Honestly, I think the suits are a minor problem. Since there are no realistic expectations for an early landing date, it is not as if there is much of a rush with the suits.
As I have commented on previous occasions, I firmly believe that a premature cancellation of the SLS and Orion, without having first carried out that test, is suicide for NASA's lunar program (and therefore for the Western one). In my opinion, everything should continue as it is at least until that test, if it occurs in 2026.