Quote:
Another reason why the selection may be hard is the shortfall in funding for HLS. NASA received $850 million for the program for fiscal year 2021, only about one-fourth of its original request. That's forced NASA to revise its plans to the program, and is a key reason why the previous goal of a 2024 human landing is now widely considered out of reach.
"We got a lot of money from Congress this year," Kirasich said, while acknowledging it fell short of original plans. "We're looking at that very closely."
Both he and Kathy Lueders, NASA associate administrator for human exploration and operations, emphasized that maintaining competition is a key part of the program. "Competition having multiple suppliers for us is an extremely important principle. It's on our minds," he said.
Lueders noted that the Option A awards are for development of landers through an initial demonstration only. A separate procurement will follow for landing services "over the next year," she said, analogous to how the initial Commercial Orbital Transportation Services awards to support development of commercial cargo vehicles for the International Space Station were followed by separate Commercial Resupply Services contracts for cargo transportation services.
"People mix those two up," she said, confusing the Option A awards with later contracts for lander services. "This initial award is just for us investing in a demonstration for a lander."
"Our big challenge is, how do we continue to make sure that we have competition for when we're doing our services awards for the landers?" she said. "Competition is very important."
He's not wrong, frankly.Mathguy64 said:
So that guy spent 43 minutes saying the first option was ridiculously expensive, a poor design that looked exactly like a MS paint picture in the bid specs, that takes by far the longest timeline to achieve and overall grades as a failure (according to his criteria) and yet they are the hands down favorite to win the bid because it slow schedule takes 0 risk and that's what NASA does nowadays. Take no risk at all.
We have heard this story before. If that's what they end up choosing it won't be 2032 in his timeline. It will be 2040-never.
Not a lot of doubt in my mind that NASA will pick that option. Keep in mind that it's not just BO, but also Lockheed and Northrup Grumman (who made the LM for Apollo). So you have a lot of "tradition" and politics going that direction as well.Mathguy64 said:
So that guy spent 43 minutes saying the first option was ridiculously expensive, a poor design that looked exactly like a MS paint picture in the bid specs, that takes by far the longest timeline to achieve and overall grades as a failure (according to his criteria) and yet they are the hands down favorite to win the bid because it slow schedule takes 0 risk and that's what NASA does nowadays. Take no risk at all.
We have heard this story before. If that's what they end up choosing it won't be 2032 in his timeline. It will be 2040-never.
nortex97 said:
Unlikely, hopefully it clears.
Once again, this is why they need to prioritize moving to sea launches asap. The FAA/US airspace/road/trailer home (Boca Chica) restrictions are absolutely costing them at least a month's worth of launches per year, maybe even 90 days.Maximus_Meridius said:
Aaaaand we're scrubbed for the day. The reason? FAA inspector can't make it to Starbase today...
I **** you not...
Maximus_Meridius said:
Aaaaand we're scrubbed for the day. The reason? FAA inspector can't make it to Starbase today...
I **** you not...
That would be....?Quote:
This is the agency that gave a man back his pilots license after nearly taking out a plane full of passengers because he greased the right palms,
Funny thing about that analogy; oil and gas have found it worthwhile to invest hundreds of billions into ever deeper offshore platforms/rigs over many decades, partly to get away from the regulations and limits of drilling on dry land. Every time one was built it was deemed "wow, this is too far/expensive" by some. I don't think they'll take over Perdido next year but I think it is realistic to say there are similar values to scale.TriAg2010 said:Maximus_Meridius said:
Aaaaand we're scrubbed for the day. The reason? FAA inspector can't make it to Starbase today...
I **** you not...
Y'all are seriously that indignant SpaceX doesn't get to just fly their experimental rockets any time they want? The things you find to get upset about. In my day, we waited years between test flights and we liked it.
In all seriousness, while I think SpaceX has shown they can safely operate their vehicles at Boca Chica, this still experimental and there is still a public use issue. Any time SpaceX flies, they are getting exclusive use of airspace and seas that are otherwise freely available for us all to use. That means there is some paperwork and oversight involved.
I think you'll also find - as oil & gas knows - that it is extraordinarily expensive and logistically challenging to operate offshore. That probably isn't going to be a net gain over waiting for the FAA guy to show up.