NASA almost never misses an opportunity to fly additional cargo. It's possible that since Axiom was paying for the ride, they didn't offer NASA the opportunity to defer their costs by selling cargo space to NASA, but I can't imagine why they would do that.Kenneth_2003 said:zwhag2010 said:RED AG 98 said:
Amazing how routine they have made this landing. Still incredible to watch.
What an amazing achievement the first stage landed at the launch site (vs a barge landing) for the first time in a crewed mission. I didn't think they had the fuel to return to the launch site. Wow! This is yet another milestone that is revolutionizing space travel from a cost perspective
Just a wild a__ guess... It's only going for 10 days. The NASA crew launches carry a lot of station cargo as well. New science, clothes, food, etc. It's not the full mission, but my guess is it's several months worth. The added weight may be why the other crew missions don't RTLS.
My uninformed speculation is that without crew rotation or other constraints, SpaceX was able to pick a launch window with an efficient trajectory and could offer Axiom a reduced number of docking attempts compared to what NASA requires.