And, Elon Musk was obviously addressing an air-breathing, vertical ascent rocket stage in his talk, not SKYLON. I doubt he even has read anything about REL. He didn't even understand the tradeoff between gravity losses and a winged vehicle. Apparently, he's too busy to keep abreast of what the competition is doing. His argument against an air-breathing rocket falls flat on its face when you realize he's reasoning from a viewpoint of ignorance.It just shows that even a genius like Musk can be wrong based upon ignorance.
It just shows that even a genius like Musk can be wrong based upon ignorance.
Quote from: BobCarver on 12/04/2012 03:36 pmIt just shows that even a genius like Musk can be wrong based upon ignorance.There is nothing that proves him wrong. Skylon is not a reality.
Skylon is not a reality.
It is, at least in computer simulations. And those simulations represent reality pretty much as well as our physical laws do.Otherwise you deny the very pertinence of mathematics as an abstract yet effective representation of reality. I'm not sure such a denial is compatible with modern epistemology.
PS. A rocket capable of going into orbit, re-entering the atmosphere and landing vertically on his feet is not a reality either.
Quote from: grondilu on 12/04/2012 05:04 pmIt is, at least in computer simulations. And those simulations represent reality pretty much as well as our physical laws do.Otherwise you deny the very pertinence of mathematics as an abstract yet effective representation of reality. I'm not sure such a denial is compatible with modern epistemology.Wrong. computer simulations can not accurately predict whether Skylon will be viable system
People have accepted computer simulations as representing reality since the days of analog computers. Sure, the math is accurately represented but typically the coefficients are not known well enough. The details (math and data) are where the devil hides and there be demons!
Skylon is a very big and complex vehicle with a very large development cost that will only provide marginal cost improvements over his own proposed TSTO RLV and will be more limited in terms of scaling it up to larger payloads, etc.
Sure, the math is accurately represented but typically the coefficients are not known well enough.
Skylon... will only provide marginal cost improvements over his own proposed TSTO RLV
There's no way that Falcon could compete in the intercontinental travel market, which is where the real money is for REL in the nearer term, before Skylon. Unless of course Musk feels that his hyperloop can span between continents.Heck, if the Sabre engine can just be used for rapid intercontinental travel then it will have fulfilled most of its promise. After that, the money for follow-on development into Skylong would probably be easy to come by.
Also, for reasons we knew very shortly after this, Stratolaunch was at the front of his mind right then and he might have suspected people had heard something...
You can't say that. Neither of them is anywhere near reality right now. SpaceX in particular don't seem likely to have a particularly good handle on the operational details; they're still experimenting with the basic concept. REL have been planning their system for far longer, and have just now cleared the biggest single technical hurdle, but even they could encounter unexpected difficulties.
There's no way that Falcon could compete in the intercontinental travel market, which is where the real money is for REL in the nearer term, before Skylon.
Not according to Alan Bond in The Three Rocketeers: