aTmAg said:What is this supposed to prove? Ford loves their customers too. Just like every other company out there.TXTransplant said:aTmAg said:Yet it didn't. Almost only counts with nukes and horseshoes.TXTransplant said:aTmAg said:Falcon 1 was developed with private money (with government and private customers buying launches of their payloads). After they made it into orbit, they signed their big contract with NASA. And a contract is not a subsidy. It's earned business.TXTransplant said:aTmAg said:So this is laughable. Are you trying to imply that Space X is using NASA as some sort of crutch? That they couldn't do what they are doing without "using NASA money"?TXTransplant said:TexAgs91 said:Unless this government gets more authoritarian (which I'm certainly not saying won't happen), SpaceX is a private company and doesn't have to wait for NASA. The US did not claim the moon in 1969.TXTransplant said:
I guess there is a point to be made that maybe if left to do this all on their own, SpaceX could do it faster and cheaper, but again, the idea that NASA would turn all of this over to a private company just seems like science fiction.
Well, right now, SpaceX is using NASA money and launchpads. See my post above…when SpaceX is able to put people in lunar orbit without using any NASA resources, then it's a different kind of space race.
Get your head out of the sand.
It's well know that Michael Griffin awarded NASA contracts that kept SpaceX out of bankruptcy.
SpaceX got $386 million from him before they ever flew a rocket. NASA just recently gave them a $1.4 billion contract to cover 5 more astronaut missions.
SpaceX and Boeing have collectively been awarded a total of $5 billion to develop the Dragon and Starliner crew capsules.
So, yes…at this point, SpaceX is using NASA money to develop their technology. At a high level, it's no different than Lockheed's contract to develop Orion.
The idea that they are some self-supporting, government funding independent competitor of NASA is nonsense.
Space X is making fools of NASA. To pretend otherwise is a joke.
And it nearly bankrupted the company. They didn't have a successful launch until the fourth attempt in Sept 2008.They were SELECTED. Again, Falcon 1 was completely self funded.Quote:
Griffin gave them their first contract for $396 million in 2005.They EARNED. It was a contract of money in exchange for services provided. It wasn't a giftwrapped present. History is full of many highly successful companies that were near (or in) bankruptcy at some point. Nobody claims they were "saved" or "subsidized" by customers when they turned it around.Quote:
They got another contract for $1.6 billion from Griffin in 2008, and Elon Musk credited this as saving the company from bankruptcy because of the Falcon failures.
And your point about NASA providing them "using NASA launchpads" is hilarious. NASA basically provided a patch of concrete. Space X built the launchpad on top. NASA can't even do that right anymore. They screwed up the SLS pad so bad that they may have to do it over again for future blocks. Meanwhile, SpaceX built their own in Boca Chica in only about a year.
Not to mention, the entire reason NASA was looking for COTS solutions was because they have proven to be inept at doing it themselves. The shuttle set back space exploration by decades.
Did you even read the link I posted?
Quote from Elon himself…
"NASA called and told us we won a $1.5 billion contract," Musk says in the interview. "I couldn't even hold the phone. I just blurted out, 'I love you guys!'"Just like Marvel Entertainment's customers save them from literal bankruptcy? Yeah, when companies turn themselves around with improved sales they are thankful. Every company would go into bankruptcy if they had no customers. Customers literally save them every week.Quote:
"They saved you," Pelley suggests.
"Yeah, they did."Just like every company owes their success to their customers. Again, this was not a subsidy, it was a customer/supplier relationship.Quote:
A lot (not all) of their success has been due to financial partnerships with NASA.It's called a sales pitch. They happen every day. He convinced Griffin he could do what he is doing and Griffin believed him and awarded him a contract. Good thing, that he could recognize talent.Quote:
And if you go back to the very beginning, Griffin was Musk's contact to even get into the industry in the first place. Griffin accompanied Musk to Russia in the early 2000s because Musk was trying to acquire a launch vehicle. Griffin was head of the CIA's venture capital arm at the time.
Musk convinced Griffin he could significantly reduce costs, and the first $396 million contract was awarded before SpaceX had ever flown a rocket. Reading the history, it's pretty clear Griffin had personal interests in supporting Musk, and I have no doubt this alliance made Mike Griffin a very wealthy man.NASA LAUGHED at SpaceX when they put landing legs on their rockets. SpaceX has been developing starship using their own money. NASA later awarded Space X the lander contract, but it had no effect on Space X's development. Hell, even when Bezos sued everybody and halted the contract, Space X continued with their development like nothing happened. The Raptor is the most advanced engine in world history. All of this on their own. Regardless of NASA contracts. That is absolutely independent.Quote:
I will give SpaceX credit for doing some things better and cheaper and faster than NASA, but to suggest or imply that they are doing so independent of NASA is laughable.Starship will nearly double the thrust of SLS and will be 100% reusable. NASA guys made fun of Falcon Heavy calling it vaporware while SLS was "real". Yet Space X developed and launched Falcon heavy 4 times since then. And that is including the delay for them to perfect landing rockets first. Space X is absolutely making a mockery of NASA. They aren't even in the same ballpark.Quote:
SpaceX isn't making a fool of NASA. NASA just launched the biggest rocket ever with 8.8 million lbs of thrust. No one, including SpaceX, has ever done that before. Falcon Heavy is 5 million lbs of thrust.It's not the first time NASA has done something incredibly stupid.Quote:
Arguably, NASA could have let SpaceX develop an equivalent of SLS, but that's not what happened. And it's not like SpaceX went out and did it on their own.
Lots of "wills" in that post.
What it came down to is NASA needed a rocket. SpaceX's rocket isn't ready. Whether or not the rocket development should have been outsourced to SpaceX in the first place is moot because it wasn't done.
At its core, the launch today is still a test flight. In my mind, moving forward with a rocket we have was the right call in the short term to keep the program moving forward (can't say on schedule because the schedule has already been blown).
To say the program is a bust and should be cancelled because the "best" rocket option isn't being used is short-sighted, IMO.