Ed Kyle's sitehttp://spacelaunchreport.com/
I know the Delta II and Titan vehicles are no longer flying - presumably no payloads therefore too costly for customers. I want to see if the same applies to the remaining major US players.
Titan IV never carried commercial spacecraft.
I know the Delta II ... vehicles are no longer flying
1. I understand that the ULA was created to gain efficiencies in cost and delivery. Seems to have failed it's objectives if it was mean't to create a viable commercial US launch service!2. So it appears that the only viable US commercial launch service available as at now is SpaceX - assuming they continue to launch successfully and also that they remain profitable. It would appear that their customers certainly believe so anyway.
Excessively simplistic market analysis in general. SpaceX has a long way to go in demonstrating its ability to meet government requirements. If you can't prove you have a good rocket on paper, unique, exquisite government payloads won't ride.
So far as the customer base goes, SpaceX has pretty close to 50% of it's manifest as non-government therefore my statement regarding customer belief in the company stands.
Besides, it seems only NASA and government are interested in paper rockets, SpaceX has hardware that flys and in the end, that's what will count, not slideshows.
.So far as the customer base goes, SpaceX has pretty close to 50% of it's manifest as non-government therefore my statement regarding customer belief in the company stands.Falcon 1e Inaugural Test Flight 2011 Falcon 1e Kwajalein ORBCOMM - Multiple flights 2011-2014 Falcon 1e KwajaleinMDA Corp. (Canada) 2011 Falcon 9 Cape Canaveral DragonLab Mission 1 2012 F9/Dragon Cape CanaveralCONAE (Argentina) 2012 Falcon 9 Vandenberg**Spacecom (Israel) 2012 Falcon 9 Cape Canaveral**DragonLab Mission 2 2013 F9/Dragon Cape CanaveralCONAE (Argentina) 2013 Falcon 9 Vandenberg**NSPO (Taiwan) 2013 Falcon 1e KwajaleinSpace Systems/Loral 2014 Falcon 9 Cape Canaveral**Astrium (Europe) 2014 Falcon 1e KwajaleinBigelow Aerospace 2014 Falcon 9 Cape Canaveral Iridium 2015-2017 Falcon 9 Vandenberg
Ok I give up. Open question:Is there any way in which a comparison of the US commercial players launch manifests can be made? Does anyone have enough real data to be able to say whether or not US launch providers have priced themselves out of the commercial market.That's what I'm really interested in. Is there a launch provider in the US that can (or can reasonably state based on verifiable evidence that they can) survive without resort to government contracts of any sort?My interest is that I've seen it stated that the US launch providers are commercially non-competitive meaning they all require government contracts to maintain the launch service business, without which they would close up shop. This includes any government business - DoD, NASA, etc.Hopefully that's clear enough now.Cheers,
Quote from: beancounter on 07/23/2010 03:57 amOk I give up. Open question:Is there any way in which a comparison of the US commercial players launch manifests can be made? Does anyone have enough real data to be able to say whether or not US launch providers have priced themselves out of the commercial market.That's what I'm really interested in. Is there a launch provider in the US that can (or can reasonably state based on verifiable evidence that they can) survive without resort to government contracts of any sort?My interest is that I've seen it stated that the US launch providers are commercially non-competitive meaning they all require government contracts to maintain the launch service business, without which they would close up shop. This includes any government business - DoD, NASA, etc.Hopefully that's clear enough now.Cheers, Numerically / quantitatively - never. Apples and oranges. Figures will never add up or be meaningful.Subjectively ... suggest you look at overhead/head count on launch services for specific launches. They are moving to become more competitive with each other.