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by kiba
1894 days ago
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People often cite the extraordinary cost per launch of missions such as this, and how SpaceX can reduce that cost (allegedly) via reusability, etc. I just don't think saving a few bucks on a mission of this importance is worth-while. I'd, personally, much rather return to the moon first, and then figure out if reusability even makes sense later on (if we are to continue going to the moon with any sort of regularity). A reusable rocket must be more robust to do what it do while also being much more difficult to accomplish. It's also how we increase safety, which will happen with rapid reusuability. A reusuable rocket cannot afford to cut corner like an expendable rocket. Just because a rocket is more expensive doesn't mean it's safer. The fact that SpaceX is launching more rockets than everyone else means it will be a safer vehicle due to rapid increase in flight experience. More flights mean we iron out more flight. They're not cutting corners here. |
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> A reusuable rocket cannot afford to cut corner like an expendable rocket.
I don't buy this logic, and seems rather hand-wavy. Soyuz and it's launch vehicle are not reusable, for instance, and still holds the safety record for launch vehicles.
> Just because a rocket is more expensive doesn't mean it's safer.
Of course not. But a pressure to drive the per-launch cost downwards will indeed lead to shortcuts being taken. We won't actually know how safe the vehicle is until it's launched successfully a great number of times.
> The fact that SpaceX is launching more rockets than everyone else
That's just factually incorrect.
> it will be a safer vehicle due to rapid increase in flight experience
I'm not so sure that's how this works. Starship was never considered as a lunar-bound vehicle - and whatever lander module they're going to build will be a brand new design, designed by folks who've never built a lander before (pretty much all space agencies/corps are in this boat right now). There's no way launching satellites into LEO or even visiting the ISS (also in LEO) builds any sort of experience for landing on the moon.
> They're not cutting corners here.
NASA certainly is, by having a single design. We'll have no idea if it's even a good design - with no reference for an alternative.
One thing is for sure though... the lander will look like it's out of Star Wars and will have some silly name.