One vibe I get from Gwynne Shotwell's talks is that she has a much more feet-on-the-ground and business-related focus, in contrast to Musk who mostly talks about the loftier "uplifting humanity" stuff. Sure, she does make token mention of her CEO's goals, in deference to his guiding influence on the company, but mainly she seems to focus on the more conventional operational and market-related topics. I wonder how much input she has on the strategic direction of SpaceX.
I thought that SpaceX only submitted F9v1.1 for certification with the USAF, but the article seems to state that the air force would have the option to fly F9v1.0 if they so choose. Have they also submitted v1.0 for certification?From the original interview with Gwynne, the only quote I can find related to this is "The Air Force will have the option of flying the previous version, or flying the upgraded version". The context seems to indicate that she is referring to the "previous version" as the certified frozen configuration (of v1.1) and the "upgraded version" as the latest configuration of the rocket including all of the upgrades for reliability they have implemented since the last certified version, rather than to v1.0 and v1.1 respectively.
...So maybe they are going to warehouse a copy or three of the current version before they apply upgrades? But that too is dangerous and hard. Why build stuff with known issues? Most serial production moves forward from one version to the next and never looks back.
Aiming at capturing 50% or more of the world launch market for payloads in the Falcon range is a lofty goal. But it won't be long before SpaceX is hard up against foreign government subsidized launches, as in China and Russia. Did anyone ask her about that?
Aiming at capturing 50% or more of the world launch market for payloads in the Falcon range is a lofty goal. But it won't be long before SpaceX is hard up against foreign government subsidized launches, as in China and Russia.
Quote from: clongton on 06/09/2014 11:14 amAiming at capturing 50% or more of the world launch market for payloads in the Falcon range is a lofty goal. But it won't be long before SpaceX is hard up against foreign government subsidized launches, as in China and Russia. already discounted; Ariane is what she is talking about.can't wait to get the popcorn out when SpaceX pushes the WTO on subsidized launches. (mark this one down) I called it first
Quote from: Prober on 06/09/2014 01:47 pmQuote from: clongton on 06/09/2014 11:14 amAiming at capturing 50% or more of the world launch market for payloads in the Falcon range is a lofty goal. But it won't be long before SpaceX is hard up against foreign government subsidized launches, as in China and Russia. already discounted; Ariane is what she is talking about.can't wait to get the popcorn out when SpaceX pushes the WTO on subsidized launches. (mark this one down) I called it first They would have to start paying market rates on their launch site rentals first.
Quote from: JBF on 06/09/2014 01:49 pmThey would have to start paying market rates on their launch site rentals first. If commercial launches are from Boca Chica, what rental?
They would have to start paying market rates on their launch site rentals first.
Define "market rate". Last I heard, it was the price that results from a negotiation between a buyer and a seller. When there aren't many buyers, or the seller really wants to sell, price goes down, whatever the intrinsic worth of the item being sold.