Created this thread to open up some healthy space discussion regarding the possibility of a lunar SpaceX mission before the end of the decade, I wanted to hear the possibilities that could play out such as the fiscal possibility and the technical probability.
More and more we have been seeing the rise of commercial spaceflight, and of course most noticeably Elon Musk and SpaceX. With the upcoming Dragon flight out of KSC, the increasing contracts with the Falcon 9 for commercial and now NASA payloads such as the Jason-3 in a few years, we have been seeing SpaceX become more bold and more accomplished and now the Falcon Heavy is in development and target for a flight in 2013 (though realistically this is more likely to take place in mid-2014). This is rather impressive progress for a company that doesn't get billions upon billions of money every fiscal year.
Recently as we all are aware, SpaceX, along with Boeing and SNC won the CCIAP award for funding to develop manned capsules to take to the Space Station. I'm starting to wonder though now that SpaceX has a heavy lift launch vehicle in development, do they have bigger and more medium range plans to go beyond the Space Station, even before NASA does?
An old article, from 2008, says that Musk claimed he could send a circumlunar Dragon to the moon with only 80 million dollars.
I think that SpaceX could easily, and cost efficiently send a manned Dragon to the moon by several steps.
1) Have a cargo variant of the Dragon launched aboard a Falcon Heavy and sent into a high, elliptical orbit around the Earth and have it re-enter the Earth's atmosphere to test if the Dragon really can withstand a lunar re-entry. While as I have mentioned SpaceX has claimed it could withstand it, on-orbit testing is always a good thing just to make sure.
2) A year later or so, launch another unmanned Dragon aboard a Falcon Heavy. This time, send it around the moon in a Zond style mission and return it safely to Earth.
3) A few months after that, launch a repeat mission but this time, use a manned Dragon in a circumlunar flight in a similar fashion to Zond and Apollo 13.
*Could* it work? It would certainly be a huge, huge boost in at least the American people's eyes for SpaceX if it managed to send a man around the moon in this decade even if there is no landing or no way to even enter orbit. Would NASA allow SpaceX to upstage them? If a private company could send a man to the moon where it takes NASA billions of dollars to end up even with a dummy rocket (Ares I-X) and no results.
Would NASA allow SpaceX to launch Dragons to the moon if SpaceX were footing the bill? I wouldn't think the demand for cargo and crew would be that great that NASA wouldn't allow SpaceX to launch a few Dragons to the moon, especially that Cygnus, CST-100, DreamChaser, and possibly even Liberty's ATK will be launching to the ISS taking up a large portion of the logistics to the space station.
It's time to get bold if we want to go back to the moon by the end of this decade. Also, I noticed that there are other threads for this idea but I wanted to open the possibility of the technical and fiscal feasibility of this idea. That and I value my fellow orbitnaut's opinions
More and more we have been seeing the rise of commercial spaceflight, and of course most noticeably Elon Musk and SpaceX. With the upcoming Dragon flight out of KSC, the increasing contracts with the Falcon 9 for commercial and now NASA payloads such as the Jason-3 in a few years, we have been seeing SpaceX become more bold and more accomplished and now the Falcon Heavy is in development and target for a flight in 2013 (though realistically this is more likely to take place in mid-2014). This is rather impressive progress for a company that doesn't get billions upon billions of money every fiscal year.
Recently as we all are aware, SpaceX, along with Boeing and SNC won the CCIAP award for funding to develop manned capsules to take to the Space Station. I'm starting to wonder though now that SpaceX has a heavy lift launch vehicle in development, do they have bigger and more medium range plans to go beyond the Space Station, even before NASA does?
An old article, from 2008, says that Musk claimed he could send a circumlunar Dragon to the moon with only 80 million dollars.
I think that SpaceX could easily, and cost efficiently send a manned Dragon to the moon by several steps.
1) Have a cargo variant of the Dragon launched aboard a Falcon Heavy and sent into a high, elliptical orbit around the Earth and have it re-enter the Earth's atmosphere to test if the Dragon really can withstand a lunar re-entry. While as I have mentioned SpaceX has claimed it could withstand it, on-orbit testing is always a good thing just to make sure.
2) A year later or so, launch another unmanned Dragon aboard a Falcon Heavy. This time, send it around the moon in a Zond style mission and return it safely to Earth.
3) A few months after that, launch a repeat mission but this time, use a manned Dragon in a circumlunar flight in a similar fashion to Zond and Apollo 13.
*Could* it work? It would certainly be a huge, huge boost in at least the American people's eyes for SpaceX if it managed to send a man around the moon in this decade even if there is no landing or no way to even enter orbit. Would NASA allow SpaceX to upstage them? If a private company could send a man to the moon where it takes NASA billions of dollars to end up even with a dummy rocket (Ares I-X) and no results.
Would NASA allow SpaceX to launch Dragons to the moon if SpaceX were footing the bill? I wouldn't think the demand for cargo and crew would be that great that NASA wouldn't allow SpaceX to launch a few Dragons to the moon, especially that Cygnus, CST-100, DreamChaser, and possibly even Liberty's ATK will be launching to the ISS taking up a large portion of the logistics to the space station.
It's time to get bold if we want to go back to the moon by the end of this decade. Also, I noticed that there are other threads for this idea but I wanted to open the possibility of the technical and fiscal feasibility of this idea. That and I value my fellow orbitnaut's opinions
Last edited:
