| >SpaceX's failure rate is in line with industry norms. SpaceX's 93% launch success rate is still below average for ALL launches (94-95%), and has a higher incident rate than its "competitors" in any form. That's what was asked. You don't need to apologize for SpaceX. Some of the rockets in your "thorough" have radically different missions, specifications, and costs than the type of rockets we're discussing. Let's talk about what we're actually comparing. Orbital launch rockets actually beat "industry" averages by a signification margin. And let's talk about failures, unrecoverable ones. * Altas V (actually built by Lockheed Martin, not ULA): 98% successful launch rate. * Delta (entire family): 99% success rate across the ENTIRE family. * H-IIA: 98% success rate * Araine 5: 98% success rate. * Long March (entire family): 98-99% success rate. See a pattern? All of the above families have mission histories of 100+ launches. >the author here attributes nonconformities at all three EELV contractors — including ULA and Aerojet Rocketdyne — to SpaceX No they didn't. Are you just purposefully misreading the article? >The first is an evaluation of quality controls among launch-vehicle suppliers to the military space program.
>at contractor sites. Beyond reading comprehension differences, I am not interested in willfully misrepresenting basic facts as some sort of intellectual jerk off exercise. SpaceX is below the industry average and way below the launch success average for the type of work they're doing. That's what the OP asked. |
Then why is spaceX at 93%? 2 unrecoverable failures in 59 campaigns equals 96.6% success.
All the competitors you listed have roots in government space programs going back many decades. Rockets tend to have a lot of "infant mortality" that those programs are way past.
Also, some of your claims are value/wrong: the Delta and Long March families are very large and very old and if you count the earliest attempts of governments to build ICBMs you get reliability figures worse than SpaceX.
Conversely the H-IIA, Delta 4, Atlas 5, Ariane 5 have fewer than 100 launches each.
Good data can be found here: http://www.spacelaunchreport.com/logsum.html