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It's possible to do better. You can do it cheaper than $70 million per seat.
Can we?
It's possible to do better. You can do it cheaper than $70 million per seat.
And after all we have a man-rated economical launcher... The R-7. Now that we have the launchpad in Kourou, it's a matter of buying a TMA and painting it white with some European stickers![]()
It's possible to do better. You can do it cheaper than $70 million per seat.
I don't say such a rocket has to be done by one country. It could be a European conglomeration, for instance supported by the EU.
We're clearly not going to agree on SpaceX. On my side of the argument, Orbital Sciences also cut the cost of launchers by 80% to 90% by the commercial space approach.
Bob Clark
But, are the launch costs also so high because most parts are build in Europa, but need to be transported to South America (French Guiana) ? :shrug:
SpaceX builds their rockets in Los Angeles and transports them by truck, it seems, to the launch site, which is much more expensive for almost the same distance from LA to KSC.
PS I prefer Rail, I'm a railfan.
I am an ocean-faring guy there. :lol: Nothing against railways, but ships feel special.
All pictures I had found so far had been SpaceX transporting stages by truck, so maybe I missed the super guppy. But a ship transport was not yet observed, LA to KSC by ship might be quite a distance, AFAIR the only way to get from Pacific to Caribbean is by panama channel.
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But, if you ask, then the best would be a company like Orbital science. There are a company who known how to make profit, how to commercialism spaceflight in a realistic way, and don't spend almost everything towards non-profit missions.
But, why you think development and launch costs of a commercial spaceflight company is always cheaper? On what for fact you got that argument?
http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/orbital-sciences-development-costs-increase-371291/Documents filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) reveal that Orbital Sciences' development costs for the Antares rocket are estimated at $472 million.
"Under the COTS agreement, as amended, as of March 31, 2012, NASA has agreed to pay us $288 million in cash milestone payments, partially funding our program costs which are currently estimated to be approximately $472 million," reads the 10-Q. "We expect to complete this program in the second half of 2012."
As mentioned in the article under the usual fully government financed approach, such a launcher might cost in the billions that had to be paid by the government.
Commercial space is finally what will make space flight routine.
Wrong actually. The article cites NASA studies comparing commercial approaches with fixed cost contracts with the old classic cost plus contracts, that are traditionally used.
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Also, the most expensive task in the Antares development had been paid by NASA already... the Aerojet engine tests and modifications.
Actually every launch system this size or larger costs in the billion of dollars before the commercial space program.
Commercial space is what will make space flight to appear routine.
There is nothing routine (particularly when you talk of sending humans into space) about sending our brothers, sisters, sons and daughters into what is one of the harshest environments in which we could ever expose ourselves.
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No. Commercial is not magic. Quite contrary. It is only "letting other people pay it and hide my true costs".
The European VEGA rocket did cost 710 million Euro, including many technological firsts, that SpaceX or Orbital Sciences have avoided (VEGA is the first european launcher with large graphite filament-wound SRM cases). If you would do it "the commercial way", VEGA would have cost around 200 million Euro for Arianespace and 500 million for ESA to develop the technology before Arianespace even reacts.
Any industrialized country could afford to pay a few hundred million dollars to develop their own orbital launch system under the cost sharing of the commercial space approach.
Commercial space is finally what will make space flight routine.
Bob Clark
It's not magic, simply cheaper. Even in your example, as you describe it, it's still less that has to be paid by the ESA.
In actuality, the point of the matter is the total cost would also be less under the commercial space approach.
That is what makes me pretty disappointed with commercial spaceflight: It is only commercial by the name now. The risks and losses are socialized, the gains kept private.
Spaceflight is already a routine. And look already how the Soyuz-rocket family shows how a good mix between quality and quantity, with a high success rate. What I mean is that you don't need a commercial spaceflight company for making good, cheap rockets.
By routine I mean every industrialized nation in the world can afford to have their own, independent manned spaceflight program by following the commercial space approach.
Bob Clark
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That's the same what makes my disappointed. The gains stays in the company, but the non-grains become for the government.
Just like every industrialized nation can build aircraft...hey wait a minute... looks like a few more conditions are to be fullfilled there.