Thread has fallen down the list too far.
Starlink Falcon 9 launch tomorrow at 3:00
Starlink Falcon 9 launch tomorrow at 3:00
FCC filings made by #SpaceX for the #USSF52 mission confirm that the #FalconHeavy side boosters will be recovered via dual RTLS landings, with the center core being expended.
— Tyler Gray 🚀 (@TylerG1998) May 10, 2023
The mission is due to launch from historic LC-39A NET July 7.https://t.co/v1XOhyR2fE pic.twitter.com/KuEBtdmf5c
If the upside of the initial investment is that you get a planet, how much would you be willing to invest assuming you have the money? And being 1-2 generations beyond any other launch provider in the world, they will have the money.Mr President Elect said:
If / when SpaceX starts doing missions to Mars, do they have a monetization strategy? I get that it is bigger than being about the money, but seems like it will be extremely expensive to just be a straight money drain.
As the cost of production comes down (which is one of Elon Musk's superpowers) it will become doable. I haven't seen any numbers on what they project it will cost to build a Starship/Booster, but their targeting about $2 million per launch. A thousand launches would "only" be a $billion.Mr President Elect said:
Yeah, I get all that. I just keep forgetting that the initial go to Mars plan (maybe outside of a test or two) is to do so with about 1000 starships during optimal orbits, that is going to be extremely expensive
This is why Starlink exists.Mr President Elect said:
If / when SpaceX starts doing missions to Mars, do they have a monetization strategy? I get that it is bigger than being about the money, but seems like it will be extremely expensive to just be a straight money drain.
I get that about starlink, but at the same time it is like whoa we made this very profitable company, now let's blow it all going to Mars with no return (not really saying that is the case, but that is the discussion).lb3 said:This is why Starlink exists.Mr President Elect said:
If / when SpaceX starts doing missions to Mars, do they have a monetization strategy? I get that it is bigger than being about the money, but seems like it will be extremely expensive to just be a straight money drain.
If Starlink can achieve 100m global customers at ~$100/mo, that equates to $120B in annual revenue. That is basically 5x NASA's annual budget.
I've only seen single landings out here at the AFWTR but can concur, it's a really cool experience, to include the accompanying sonic booms.bthotugigem05 said:
It's truly incredible seeing the dual RTLS, highly recommend going!
Mr President Elect said:
If / when SpaceX starts doing missions to Mars, do they have a monetization strategy? I get that it is bigger than being about the money, but seems like it will be extremely expensive to just be a straight money drain.
Just watched it from the roof at work. Nice clear day, watching rockets never gets old.YellowPot_97 said:
Thread has fallen down the list too far.
Starlink Falcon 9 launch tomorrow at 3:00
The analogy I've seen draws to things like the Dutch East Indies/British overseas trading companies.CharlieBrown17 said:
The initial venture to Mars was going to be pretty low ROI no matter who it was.
The rest of SpaceX gives Musk the capital to try. If Mars works out and is anyway scalable for either research or eventually habitation it would be a huge windfall.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-01441-yQuote:
"It was doing what it should have done, which is descending vertically with its engines keeping it to the low velocity," says Lionel Wilson, a geophysicist at Lancaster University, UK. But for the last few hundred metres, "it was in freefall", he adds. "It just dropped like a stone."
"In the final touch down phase the telemetry showed that it was at zero altitude ... the lander thought it was on the lunar surface, but in reality it wasn't," says Ryo Ujiie, ispace's chief technology officer. "The lander kept descending and then it ran out of propellant. After that, we observed some really unstable behaviour and an increase in velocity."
"We are still investigating what caused the gap between the estimated altitude and the actual altitude. This was the main cause of the freefall," Ujiie adds. "We had a sensor that measured the distance between the lander and the ground. That measurement might have been wrong. The software might have been wrong. We still don't know."
Quote:
I edited this a few years ago when I worked as a NASA Videographer. We, at the Marshall Space Flight Center, spent years converting the original 16mm, 35mm and 70mm films to digital. As a side project, I decided to make the ultimate Saturn V launch and I spent weeks picking the best shots. I know it launches slower than in real life but I wanted you all to be able to lovingly relish each amazing angle. After it was done, I sent it to a friend of mine in Hollywood who is a re-recording audio engineer who has worked on almost 150 films and he added the awesome audio to the silent original films. I am thrilled you all like it as much as I do!
Next launch is going to be crazy. #SpaceX pic.twitter.com/rtcGcLLKmB https://t.co/vR4NpiaMDD
— Teslaconomics (@Teslaconomics) May 13, 2023
Raptor chamber wall might have the highest heat flux of anything ever made
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) May 13, 2023
lol sorryfka ftc said:
I cannot make any sense of the scale without the EPCOT ball and monorail.
nortex97 said:
You are probably right. Relativity has a lot of contacts/relationships through the VC world though. I don't think they will be allowed to 'fail' before 2030.
I am waiting though for the commentariat to explain/extrapolate/speculate what this might mean for various possible permutations of Starship/super heavy.
Primarily (to me), they've said/confirmed an intent to stretch the upper stage (haven't confirmed how much to add fuel vs. cargo), and it was already borderline capable of orbit with no payload so I am really pretty curious if a 'basic' single stage to orbit configuration could be created (perhaps even a manned version to LEO).
That would, I would think, save some of the risks/complications in that spin to stage separation maneuver etc. But ISP/calculations on all of that stuff are beyond my humble abilities.
He may be bizarre and a bit on the spectrum, but he's not shown a tendency to "thoughtlessly" take a piss, much less make changes to a rocket ship because of a rando on YouTube if thats the insensuation.bmks270 said:
Lol, the reason they must perform a "spin to stage separation" maneuver…? Because Elon thoughtlessly axed the hot gas thrusters because of a YouTuber.