That is similar to sevenperforce's idea near the top of the thread. This seems very natural to me.* pretty simple requirements and also Elon has mentioned some expendable versions for deep space robotic missions that are probably not that different from this.* Surely this makes sense in the further future if we develop enough infrastructure, eg the ability to service and replace engines without returning to earth. Unlike earth, there will not be any wear of the thermal protection. The hull should last for ages.* It could possibly solve some problems for initial unmanned missions landing on unprepared surfaces, eg to deploy the initial landing pads for later manned missions.
It also presents challenges for cargo delivery. You would have to transport your cargo out of the standard Starship and into the lunar Starship in LLO, in zero gravity. It's doable, for sure, but it's not easy. There's a big advantage in being able to design and implement a cargo deployment apporach on Earth that you lose if you are doing in-space cargo transfers.
The other trouble is the very problem with Gateway, because LLO is simply not a good place for staging due to mascons
Earth return timing
and the desire for polar access.
Operations in LLO doesn't preclude any kind of access to the surface. This is only an issue with a lunar station like the Gateway, as it will necessarily have a specific orbit. A lunar Starship could go into a different LLO every time it leaves the surface, depending on the mission.
Quote from: Yggdrasill on 10/01/2019 01:28 pmOperations in LLO doesn't preclude any kind of access to the surface. This is only an issue with a lunar station like the Gateway, as it will necessarily have a specific orbit. A lunar Starship could go into a different LLO every time it leaves the surface, depending on the mission.A base ship/depot is of most benefit in LLO if you are reusing it without changing the orbit. Removing and replacing reduces the benefit. Trying to take SS and a low mass descent stage all the way back to earth hurts - changing inclination through L1 is less painful, at ~1km/s.Abort windows to a polar LLO are ~once every 14 days for sites not at the poles, equatorial LLO every hour or so, but only to a narrow band of the surface.I hope that a lot of this yak shaving is eliminated by accepting fuel is cheap. We will learn in the next six months hopefully if ~20 launches is of a meaningfully different cost to (say) 10 and a new vehicle development. If it's not - then optimising with special vehicles for tasks may be a whole lot less pointfull.
Quote from: speedevil on 10/01/2019 02:30 pmQuote from: Yggdrasill on 10/01/2019 01:28 pmOperations in LLO doesn't preclude any kind of access to the surface. This is only an issue with a lunar station like the Gateway, as it will necessarily have a specific orbit. A lunar Starship could go into a different LLO every time it leaves the surface, depending on the mission.A base ship/depot is of most benefit in LLO if you are reusing it without changing the orbit. Removing and replacing reduces the benefit. Trying to take SS and a low mass descent stage all the way back to earth hurts - changing inclination through L1 is less painful, at ~1km/s.Abort windows to a polar LLO are ~once every 14 days for sites not at the poles, equatorial LLO every hour or so, but only to a narrow band of the surface.I hope that a lot of this yak shaving is eliminated by accepting fuel is cheap. We will learn in the next six months hopefully if ~20 launches is of a meaningfully different cost to (say) 10 and a new vehicle development. If it's not - then optimising with special vehicles for tasks may be a whole lot less pointfull.Why do you need a depot? Might be nice to support a base, but then you know exactly what orbit to put it in around the moon. To support general operations on the moon, marrying a SS up with a lunar surface transfer vehicle seems better.
An expendable SS for the beginnings of a moon base could be a relatively inexpensive when compared to other options. Might even be able to bury it.Edit: makes me wonder if having windows preinstalled in the tank part would be feasible if it was going to be used as habitable space later.
Not when you can easily cut the window out and weld in a prefab pane. 301 stainless baby!
Also, does the refuel need to use Earth-based resources?--- Tony
If they can produce just oxygen on the moon it would greatly reduce refueling requirements in space. There have been test setups to produce oxygen from SiO2 which is available everywhere on the Moon. Melt the SiO2 with a solar furnace and split it using electrolysis. The remaining Si may one day in the future be useful for solar arrays.
Quote from: guckyfan on 10/02/2019 08:49 amIf they can produce just oxygen on the moon it would greatly reduce refueling requirements in space. There have been test setups to produce oxygen from SiO2 which is available everywhere on the Moon. Melt the SiO2 with a solar furnace and split it using electrolysis. The remaining Si may one day in the future be useful for solar arrays.Indeed!My question is really whether it is cheaper. To use lunar O2, you need to transfer it back to LEO, which requires a lot of capital intensive equipment to set up a system. Which may ultimately be cheaper, but possibly isn't in the near term.--- Tony
I think of oxygen only for the return flight. I am confident to say that refueling in LEO will always be cheaper than bringing the fuel from the Moon.
I came at this from the opposite direction: assume you want to send a lot of stuff to the moon with SS, what would a system look like? You want to send max payload on a regular interval.
You can also look at this the other way round. If all your O2 is a byproduct of the solar panel plant you will not launch many spaceships.This is a minor optimization barely worth mentioning, not an example of an integrated manufacturing system using every part of the pig but the squeal.
Some comments from Dr. Zubrin below. I'm not too concerned about ejecta as I'm assuming they'll eventually have prepared landing pads by the time a base exists. And with on-orbit refueling, SpaceShip should be able to get back to Earth without lunar ISRU.https://twitter.com/robert_zubrin/status/1178786132127039488