Submitted by Apart_Shock t3_ya8bps in space
Comments
Col_H_Gentleman t1_itbd4y6 wrote
At this point I’m pretty certain there will be people working on this project who aren’t even born yet. Which is kind of a crazy thought.
Esquyvren t1_itcfnhi wrote
I think that’s pretty funny actually. The fact NASA will spend so much time and money on old technology, while the rest of the world flies by.
Col_H_Gentleman t1_itcgcpy wrote
But by God if it’s not going to tripple it’s estimated service life or fail spectacularly at launch. It’s like there is no in between.
[deleted] t1_itc2loq wrote
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SelfMadeSoul t1_itbncnz wrote
For those saying this was a wasteful purchase because of SLS issues, then my reply to that is that the purchases ARE the goal, not the launches.
Darwins_Dog t1_itcd2kq wrote
Yup. The congressional goal for the Artemis program is to bring jobs to swing states. Moon landings are secondary.
n108bg t1_itc7z8i wrote
so the goal is to create museum pieces?
SelfMadeSoul t1_itc8wwd wrote
The goal is to write checks from taxpayer money. If SLS never launches, that’s even better because NASA will need to spend more for ground support while it’s contractors have to accomplish even less.
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[deleted] t1_itc3xlg wrote
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bsr9090 t1_it9ti6o wrote
What for? They can't even complete a single launch. How many times was the launch delayed? 16? 17?
seanflyon t1_itacq6o wrote
The SLS was supposed to launch 6 years ago.
NeonLeach t1_it9yvn1 wrote
Maybe they’re optimistic?
rogerdanafox t1_itadlgo wrote
Hold a place in the museum
CosmicDave t1_itahmpd wrote
First time going to the Moon?
k_ironheart t1_ita2byw wrote
People are so damn impatient. The JWST was also delayed quite a bit, and now it's giving us mountains of new science and insights.
sumelar t1_itai2o7 wrote
JWST is cutting edge technology and doing a mission nothing else does.
SLS was obsolete before it was even built, and is going to do a job other vehicles can already do better.
Absolute BULLSHIT comparison.
TrippedBreaker t1_itbttnl wrote
What other vehicles?
TimeTravelingChris t1_itbztk9 wrote
Falcon Heavy can lift 80% the payload at something like 1/8 the cost. Is it crew rated? No. But it could be. Falcon Heavy first flew and landed over 4 years ago.
seanflyon t1_itd7xa3 wrote
Falcon Heavy is a lot less than 1/8th the cost of an SLS launch. The number you hear most for SLS launch cost is $4.1 billion, but that includes Orion. SLS without a payload costs $2.8 billion to launch. Falcon Heavy is listed as $150 million for a fully expendable launch and that is an old number so it could have gone up since then.
Comparing those number (even if we assume a higher price for FH) looks bad enough for SLS, but remember that SLS launch cost does not include development costs. Development costs are tens of billions and counting, paid separately. Falcon Heavy was developed with private money, the launch price includes both the actual cost to launch and a operating profit so that they can recoup development costs. If you include a portion of development costs in the price of an SLS launch it would be billions more.
We don't know how big a portion of development costs to include in the price of each launch, but it is safe to say that SLS costs at least 20 times as much as FH.
TrippedBreaker t1_itc7saj wrote
So there is nothing currently flying that could replace SLS. Until Falcon Heavy is man rated or Starship shows it can do the deed, SLS is the only game in town, assuming that it can fly.
AmishRocket t1_itc9krg wrote
“This spaceship can do everything but fly” is not a huge selling point.
TrippedBreaker t1_itcf381 wrote
I'm not trying to sell it. It is what it is. Currently nothing is man rated for the Moon. Even SLS. I'll take whoever can get there and call it good. SpaceX, Boeing or whoever. I'm agnostic as to who. I want to see us go back.
I don't see this as a zero sum game where to succeed SLS must fail.
[deleted] t1_itchn8d wrote
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Darwins_Dog t1_itcdgtj wrote
There's no game in town at all. SLS has yet to move under it's own power.
sumelar t1_itchi1w wrote
SLS is not in town yet.
Falcon Heavy could do the job tomorrow if it came down to it. SLS would get put on the pad, hydrogen would cause another leak, and it wouldn't go anywhere.
TrippedBreaker t1_itcl89z wrote
Well that's one way of looking at it. Like most races we'll see who crosses the finish line first.
TimeTravelingChris t1_itcu0cb wrote
Falcon Heavy flew and landed over 4 years ago. Nasa chose to save shuttle contractors.
TrippedBreaker t1_itcy172 wrote
Since Elon Musk decided to not man rate it the point is moot.
TimeTravelingChris t1_itd5ehh wrote
Why would he? Nasa didn't pursue it. Stop making excuses for SLS.
TimeTravelingChris t1_itcc2lh wrote
Do you work for the SLS contractors or something? Holy shit stop.
[deleted] t1_itcfmz2 wrote
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Nickolicious t1_itabzz4 wrote
The SLS is completely different. The tech was ALREADY available, half the parts were already available, launch site already done, infrastructure already mostly done. JWST had to be developed from scratch with tech that didn't exist yet.
Bad analogy.
bsr9090 t1_ita43dg wrote
The JWST is a masterpiece of human engineering. While the SLS is a money swallowing behemoth piece of average technology...
ListenThroughTheWall t1_itaelnn wrote
What kind of bozo calls RS-25s average?
WranglerOfTheTards27 t1_ita7w3e wrote
"average technology" you do it then
bsr9090 t1_itberh4 wrote
Me? SLS was developed by a huge team, not by one man. You must be fun at parties.
[deleted] t1_ita76ts wrote
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[deleted] t1_itaan8t wrote
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atjones111 t1_itbig4u wrote
Dang this just made me remember SLS still hasn’t launched, how about they get that off the ground first before ordering more capsules for it
Decronym t1_itbj2si wrote
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I've seen in this thread:
|Fewer Letters|More Letters| |-------|---------|---| |JWST|James Webb infra-red Space Telescope| |LEO|Low Earth Orbit (180-2000km)| | |Law Enforcement Officer (most often mentioned during transport operations)| |SLS|Space Launch System heavy-lift| |SSME|Space Shuttle Main Engine|
^(4 acronyms in this thread; )^(the most compressed thread commented on today)^( has 18 acronyms.)
^([Thread #8177 for this sub, first seen 22nd Oct 2022, 11:29])
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WarOnTheShore t1_itbj2o7 wrote
Can I skip in line? I just want a single cheeseburger.
TheOldGuy59 t1_itcovwx wrote
Here you go, Lockheed! Another big shovel full of sweet sweet taxpayer dollars!! Enjoy!
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Have these things even put a person in LEO yet?? I can't find where they've done anything but ONE (count 'em, ONE) test launch and re-entry. And yet here you go, Lockheed - here's some more billions of dollars invested in something we're not sure will even work. Seventeen years and counting since the initial project started, and for at least $23.7 Billion dollars we've gotten 1 test flight, a capsule that's supposed to be ready for another test flight, and... nope, that's it. Oh sure they're honking on about development but if you go back 17 years they claim they're building on info they already had - so why does it cost so much to just update Apollo era stuff?
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We've gotten far more out of SpaceX for less money in that time. I really wish Uncle Sam could stop feeding Boeing and Lockheed obscene amounts of money.
Dapper_Expression914 t1_itbpoc0 wrote
Why when they haven’t even lunched sls yet. I hate Boeing and all the government cost plus contractors.
[deleted] t1_itmcpsk wrote
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skexzies t1_itbtv77 wrote
If it were me, I'd probably verify that they worked as advertised before ordering more. But tax payer money isn't going to spend itself!
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Lordkingthe1 t1_itd5eqe wrote
The current Artemis hasn’t even taken off yet even after years of planning.
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pyrophoenix14 t1_itb59ar wrote
NASA is like that spoiled kid at McDonald that wants 4 Happy meal instead of eating his first one and go for a second one if he's still hungry...
Launch one so we know what can be improved then add more...
ReddBert t1_itb8882 wrote
I’d say you’re right but it would only work if they would move at SpaceX speed. Otherwise it could take another decade for NASA to receive the second one, not to mention the third and fourth one.
Illustrious-Soup4080 t1_itc64np wrote
That’s not good , sounds like they are expecting 3 catastrophic failures , would hate to be the first 3 crews, going to end up like those guys on the space shuttle challenger.
AmeriToast t1_itcb0nu wrote
Or they plan to go to the moon more often in the future and need more capsules to achieve that.....
Illustrious-Soup4080 t1_itccctv wrote
My moneys on the first attempt results in a catastrophic failure and a crash and burn, it’s good to set realistic and low expectations in the rare case they successfully pull of a moon trip first try, that way it will feel that much more special if it happens. The chances are looking slim , if I where them I’d send a chimp first. Just look at ham the Astro chimp, monkeys love space.
mango-vitc t1_ita2tp3 wrote
The good news is the people building the capsules can take their own sweet time.