That isna terrible name for a rocket.
BudFox7 said:
How do you value a company who's upside is controlling another planet?
Premium said:
Speaking of Blue Origin, it looks like they are trying to copy the fully landing thing, have they been successful?
They also say the New Glenn has 2x the capacity of any existing rocket.
https://www.blueorigin.com/new-glenn/
And in that nearly 2700 days they've... Per Wikipedia,Malachi Constant said:
December 21st 2015 was the first time SpaceX landed the F9 booster successfully.
Nearly 2700 days have gone by since then and no one has replicated it. That's a lot longer than most expected 7.5 years ago.
I suspect it will be a full decade before anyone else can do it.
Quote:
Falcon 9 first-stage boosters landed successfully in 186 of 197 attempts (94.4%), with 158 out of 163 (96.9%) for the Falcon 9 Block 5 version. A total of 161 re-flights of first stage boosters have all successfully launched their payloads.
ThisBudFox7 said:
How do you value a company who's upside is controlling another planet?
Nope. Starship is now an existing rocketPremium said:
Speaking of Blue Origin, it looks like they are trying to copy the fully landing thing, have they been successful?
They also say the New Glenn has 2x the capacity of any existing rocket.
https://www.blueorigin.com/new-glenn/
The nearest analogy were the European outfits like British East India co., Dutch East India Co. (VOC) etc.TexAgs91 said:ThisBudFox7 said:
How do you value a company who's upside is controlling another planet?
TexAgs91 said:
If SpaceX reaches Mars, I wonder how control of their activities on Mars will play out. SpaceX/Elon Musk would be 100% responsible for making that happen.
NASA would probably contribute in some minor way like they are with the moon landing when it's very evident that SpaceX doesn't need them and NASA just wants to be able to say it's their project.
But I'd really like to see SpaceX/Elon Musk in the driver's seat with how Mars is developed.
Sounds like squatter's rights.Premium said:TexAgs91 said:
If SpaceX reaches Mars, I wonder how control of their activities on Mars will play out. SpaceX/Elon Musk would be 100% responsible for making that happen.
NASA would probably contribute in some minor way like they are with the moon landing when it's very evident that SpaceX doesn't need them and NASA just wants to be able to say it's their project.
But I'd really like to see SpaceX/Elon Musk in the driver's seat with how Mars is developed.
Who owns and controls land sales, mineral rights?
bthotugigem05 said:
SpaceX will need NASA's expertise on habitats to make any colony realistic.
Premium said:TexAgs91 said:
If SpaceX reaches Mars, I wonder how control of their activities on Mars will play out. SpaceX/Elon Musk would be 100% responsible for making that happen.
NASA would probably contribute in some minor way like they are with the moon landing when it's very evident that SpaceX doesn't need them and NASA just wants to be able to say it's their project.
But I'd really like to see SpaceX/Elon Musk in the driver's seat with how Mars is developed.
Who owns and controls land sales, mineral rights?
Premium said:
Who owns and controls land sales, mineral rights?
SD CARD FOUND BY JACK
— Michael Baylor (@nextspaceflight) April 22, 2023
Launch of Starship! @NASASpaceflight pic.twitter.com/EaHBKA1Vga
— Michael Baylor (@nextspaceflight) April 22, 2023
Malachi Constant said:
December 21st 2015 was the first time SpaceX landed the F9 booster successfully.
Nearly 2700 days have gone by since then and no one has replicated it. That's a lot longer than most expected 7.5 years ago.
I suspect it will be a full decade before anyone else can do it.
Maximus_Meridius said:
You're seriously going to equate landing that (barely) suborbital rocket on flat west Texas land with landing an orbital class booster on a barge in the Atlantic Ocean?
Still early in analysis, but the force of the engines when they throttled up may have shattered the concrete, rather than simply eroding it. The engines were only at half thrust for the static fire test.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 22, 2023
bmks270 said:Maximus_Meridius said:
You're seriously going to equate landing that (barely) suborbital rocket on flat west Texas land with landing an orbital class booster on a barge in the Atlantic Ocean?
It's relanding and reusing a launch vehicle is it not? Everyone is quick to minimize Blue Origina accomplishments. They move slow, but they have equally advanced technology and have taken more people to space than SpaceX. Yeah, not orbit, but you make it sound like getting to space is easy and anyone can do it. No, that is hard. New Shepard has been quite reliable, and I expect New Glenn will as well.
Blue Origin isn't burning out is workforce like SpaceX. There has been a drain of senior engineering talent from SpaceX in the last year, and they're having trouble replacing them.
fka ftc said:
I struggle with why they went with the pad setup the way they did. Is it possible part of the purpose is to see how it did without out the water deluge and other diversion methods?
May have already been discussed. From the Dodge Caravan, I assume that was a piece of the launch pad.
Interesting.