seanflyon
seanflyon t1_je8y4qk wrote
Reply to comment by JungleJones4124 in NASA delays flight of Boeing’s Starliner again, this time for parachutes by thawingSumTendies
They could go to the Moon without SLS. Here is a video describe some of the obvious options. Basically, it would be a lot cheaper to go to the Moon without SLS and it would take nearly zero development beyond what is already needed for the planed lunar landings.
seanflyon t1_je32vdb wrote
Reply to comment by lessthanabelian in German launch startup Isar secures €155M in Series C funding. The company has now raised more than €300M by AndrewParsonson
No, you just didn't quite read the comment you replied to.
I generally prefer to include engine development in vehicle development, but plenty of people disagree especially when the engine development happened before the development of a particular vehicle. Merlin was developed for Falcon 1, though there were continued improvements over time.
No one who read that source and understood the context would honestly say "Elon isn't being completely honest or more likely is miscategorizing costs somewhere". You were just confused.
seanflyon t1_je2m570 wrote
Reply to comment by lessthanabelian in German launch startup Isar secures €155M in Series C funding. The company has now raised more than €300M by AndrewParsonson
You should actually read that link. That $300 million figure is for Falcon vehicle 9 development. It does not include Dragon development, engine development, or building launch sites and factories.
You are thinking about the COTS contract that included developing Falcon 9, developing Dragon, and multiple launches.
seanflyon t1_je1aukj wrote
Reply to comment by lessthanabelian in German launch startup Isar secures €155M in Series C funding. The company has now raised more than €300M by AndrewParsonson
Rocket Lab got to orbit with less and SpaceX got to orbit with not too much more.
seanflyon t1_jdwrme1 wrote
Reply to comment by rocketsocks in Rocket Lab targets $50 million launch price for Neutron rocket to challenge SpaceX’s Falcon 9 by cnbc_official
Are you calling the DC-X a suborbital rocket? That seems like a stretch, it never made it to space or close. DC-XA got 3140 meters up. That is about a quarter as high as a normal commercial aircraft flights.
seanflyon t1_jdi3zn3 wrote
Reply to comment by kielu in NASA delays Boeing Starliner's debut crewed voyage by mustafar0111
Fortunately this is a fixed price contract, so Boeing only gets paid as they meet milestones.
seanflyon t1_jdb8nnh wrote
Second stage anomaly which I assume means a loss of the vehicle. First launches are hard and getting that far into the mission is significant.
seanflyon t1_jdagkhy wrote
Reply to comment by Riptide360 in Industry sees missed opportunity in deorbiting ISS by ye_olde_astronaut
It seems like you are not particularly interested in a discussion that involves dealing with reality.
seanflyon t1_jd927ww wrote
Reply to comment by Riptide360 in Industry sees missed opportunity in deorbiting ISS by ye_olde_astronaut
"Nope" what? Do you honestly think that maintaining the ISS is cheap? Did you get confused and reply to the wrong comment, or do you simply have no idea what you are talking about?
seanflyon t1_jd8z46u wrote
Reply to comment by Riptide360 in Industry sees missed opportunity in deorbiting ISS by ye_olde_astronaut
> cheap
Maintaining the ISS is not cheap.
seanflyon t1_jd3ztmy wrote
Reply to comment by Cycleguy57 in The SpaceX steamroller has shifted into a higher gear this year by returnofjuju
Did you mix me up with someone else?
seanflyon t1_jd3xvys wrote
Reply to comment by Cycleguy57 in The SpaceX steamroller has shifted into a higher gear this year by returnofjuju
You are being more than a little bit ridiculous here. Do you honestly believe that anyone in this thread claimed or implied that Musk is a god emperor? The comment you replied to said that Musk has contributed massively, which you now agree with. Does that mean that you too are "pretending that he’s a god emperor"? Obviously not. Try to be honest.
You started out with some false claims about Musk's contributions at SpaceX. Multiple people have given you calm and polite replies explaining why your claims are false. It is okay to admit that you were wrong. It is okay to acknowledge someone's contributions even if you dislike them.
seanflyon t1_jd03xf8 wrote
Reply to comment by GatMn in The SpaceX steamroller has shifted into a higher gear this year by returnofjuju
Their current competition is reusable Falcon 9 and the competition for their in-development rockets is Starship.
seanflyon t1_jczeju3 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in The SpaceX steamroller has shifted into a higher gear this year by returnofjuju
You might be surprised to learn that SpaceX was also doing very well before Musk bought Twitter.
seanflyon t1_jchadit wrote
Reply to comment by LegitimateGift1792 in Virgin Orbit pauses operations for a week, furloughs nearly entire staff as it seeks funding by Realistic-Cap6526
Bezos and Shatner went up on Blue Origin's New Shepard. They are a direct competitor to Virgin Galactic and have had much more success.
seanflyon t1_jcdx7h6 wrote
Reply to comment by LexusLand in Virgin Orbit pauses operations for a week, furloughs nearly entire staff as it seeks funding by Realistic-Cap6526
Stoke looks good to me, but of course they have not proven much so far. I also would not rule out Firefly.
seanflyon t1_jaz0nsn wrote
Reply to comment by SpearPointTech in Half of all active satellites are now from SpaceX. Here’s why that may be a problem by ye_olde_astronaut
They are SpaceX Starlink satellites.
seanflyon t1_jadmu15 wrote
Reply to comment by Bewaretheicespiders in Could the international space station be repurposed as an interplanetary vessel, a La For All Mankind? by -Major-Arcana-
It's an alternative history science fiction show. It starts with the Soviet Union being first to land on the moon and America increasing efforts on the Apollo program.
I really liked the first season. It is still clearly fiction, but they focused on making it as realistic as possible. After that they stopped caring about imagining an alternate history that makes sense and instead focused on personal drama.
seanflyon t1_j9ngkjp wrote
Reply to comment by ElSapio in Starship greenlit for launch after static fire test by DevilsRefugee
Starship will be the third super heavy lift launch vehicle currently operational, once it is operational.
seanflyon t1_j81hthp wrote
Reply to comment by decomposition_ in Blue Origin awarded NASA launch contract for Mars mission (Studying magnetic field) by kuroimakina
Peter Beck was not wealthy when he started Rocket Lab. Elon musk was a millionaire when he started SpaceX. Clearly it does not take a billionaire to start a successful space company.
seanflyon t1_j81h7ea wrote
Reply to comment by seanbrockest in Blue Origin awarded NASA launch contract for Mars mission (Studying magnetic field) by kuroimakina
They have test fired several of them. It is a hard problem and they have had their share of difficulties in development, but it looks like they have gotten it to work. Time will tell.
seanflyon t1_j0os7bs wrote
Reply to comment by ondono in SpaceX, Blue Origin Executives Tapped as US Space Council Advisers by Soupjoe5
Your own failure to understand is not a mark against Shotwell. It is incredibly obvious that there is not a "hard limit" on rocket reliability, unless by "hard limit" you are talking about asymptotically approaching 100%. Difficult problems are difficult, but that does not make them impossible. People said the same thing about air travel. People said the same thing about speedy ground travel.
When you have an idea that makes sense intuitively, try to think about it rationally and see if it makes sense logically as well.
seanflyon t1_j0ooyz9 wrote
Reply to comment by dilletaunty in SpaceX, Blue Origin Executives Tapped as US Space Council Advisers by Soupjoe5
Is there any source you would believe?
seanflyon t1_j0nrlac wrote
Reply to comment by ondono in SpaceX, Blue Origin Executives Tapped as US Space Council Advisers by Soupjoe5
Can you give an example of something she doesn't seem to understand, other than how to make a $400 million dollar rocket?
seanflyon t1_jeapo6b wrote
Reply to comment by thatRoland in A group of college students are sending a rover the size of a shoebox to the moon by speckz
I have a rover-sized shoebox. It is about the same size as the rover CMU is making. It isn't on the moon though.