Absurd. Until BO develops a reusable upper stage, they will have a hard time keeping up with Starship launch rates. But the bigger worry for BO, I suspect, will be price. A fully reusable Starship will probably cost less per flight than NG (in any configuration).LFG!
If we expect 400 starships to blast off each year then this will be no problem for Blue!
SpaceX already build 170+ second stages per year; what exactly is stopping Blue Origin building only 100 second stages per year? The second stage is bigger, but Blue Origin has plenty of room on the factory floor.Absurd. Until BO develops a reusable upper stage, they will have a hard time keeping up with Starship launch rates. But the bigger worry for BO, I suspect, will be price. A fully reusable Starship will probably cost less per flight than NG (in any configuration).
Of course, SpaceX will have to prove Starship is cheap and reusable. We'll see what happens.
SpaceX didn't launch 100 time per year until 2024. That's the 14th year from their first launch of a Falcon 9. What's stopping Blue from achieving 100 launches per year is the dozen years they're going to need to ramp to that pace. Even if they do it in half the time - that's still 2032. Because Blue Origin is known for being a fast mover...SpaceX already build 170+ second stages per year; what exactly is stopping Blue Origin building only 100 second stages per year? The second stage is bigger, but Blue Origin has plenty of room on the factory floor.
BO is also milling their tanks. They would need either a complete redesign or a lot more milling machines.SpaceX already build 170+ second stages per year; what exactly is stopping Blue Origin building only 100 second stages per year? The second stage is bigger, but Blue Origin has plenty of room on the factory floor.
Were I to offer an observer's opinion, I'd say the answer to your question is "reality". Alternatively "time" also works.SpaceX already build 170+ second stages per year; what exactly is stopping Blue Origin building only 100 second stages per year? The second stage is bigger, but Blue Origin has plenty of room on the factory floor.
Falcon 9 has a disposable upper stage and launches more than 100x per year. Sure, it's a smaller, simpler stage than the New Glenn upper, but it's not impossible. Just very, very ambitious.Absurd. Until BO develops a reusable upper stage, they will have a hard time keeping up with Starship launch rates. But the bigger worry for BO, I suspect, will be price. A fully reusable Starship will probably cost less per flight than NG (in any configuration).
Of course, SpaceX will have to prove Starship is cheap and reusable. We'll see what happens.
What's the lead time look like on milling machines that big? Is it less than 3 years?BO is also milling their tanks. They would need either a complete redesign or a lot more milling machines.
I suspect the marketing/investor management department has a hand in some of these job descriptions. They can describe aggressively optimistic goals knowing some space geek will post it to Reddit where the press gets ahold and runs with it.Were I to offer an observer's opinion, I'd say the answer to your question is "reality". Alternatively "time" also works.
It's not that it can't be done. It's that they won't be able to do for several more years, if at all.
Certainly not by next year.
While like a stock, past performance doesn't indicate future performance in any rocket company, they have a shitton of checkboxes to mark off before they'll get within hailing distance of that mark. 20 per year is fucking aspirational and I don't think they have the ability to do that now. A hell of a lot of things they haven't yet done have to be done routinely and reliably before they'll hit 100/year.
And so far, "routinely and reliably" have not had a good track record with them for all of those checkboxes.
Every for profit company (or at least one that wants to make enough to wean itself off of Bezos' fortune backing it) will tout lofty goals, knowing that investors will stick with them if there's still some hope involved. And since Bezos can keep that game going all by himself for a lot longer, the rah-rah nature of this kind of announcement would be for the other (howsoever many there are) investors to stay in the game.
It's already well established that VC funding doesn't seem to give a shit about performance anymore (look at AI for example) and that hype sells while results don't seem to matter as much as they did in the past.
So I just see this as a corporate prep rally for people with skin in the game. Everyone else has a functional sense of reality. They CAN do it, if given enough time, money and effort, I expect. I just think they're being grotesquely optimistic about time frames.
As usual.
Absurd. Until BO develops a reusable upper stage, they will have a hard time keeping up with Starship launch rates. But the bigger worry for BO, I suspect, will be price. A fully reusable Starship will probably cost less per flight than NG (in any configuration).
Of course, SpaceX will have to prove Starship is cheap and reusable. We'll see what happens.
For the time being, Blue Origin is still studying whether to pursue a reusable upper stage for New Glenn, so each launch of the vehicle requires a new upper stage.
Were I to offer an observer's opinion, I'd say the answer to your question is "reality". Alternatively "time" also works.
It's not that it can't be done. It's that they won't be able to do for several more years, if at all.
Certainly not by next year.
While like a stock, past performance doesn't indicate future performance in any rocket company, they have a shitton of checkboxes to mark off before they'll get within hailing distance of that mark. 20 per year is fucking aspirational and I don't think they have the ability to do that now. A hell of a lot of things they haven't yet done have to be done routinely and reliably before they'll hit 100/year.
Doesn't a reusable second stage need a completely different rocket? Or can they just buy Stoke Space and bolt one of their reusable stages onto the first stage of a New Glen?
I think it is needs to be endlessly brought up that COST is not PRICE. SpaceX internal COST for a F9 has likely fallen by around 80% since the first launch. Their public PRICE has increased 50% and based on few hard data points launches go for a lot more than that quoted $74M.
We have no idea when Starship will have a lower COST than Falcon 9 but even on that day entirely possible the public PRICE is $200M+. Stalink makes far more than launches do especially if you exclude the uncommon but very high price NASA/DOD contracts. Low launch PRICES allow third parties to compete better with Starlink the real money maker.
And my memory is that F9 started at $63M so current $70M is only a 10% increase. Either way its price increases are below inflation over the last 15 years.
Gwynne said years ago that their F9 contracts allow swapping to Starship, so that strongly implies it’s going to start at same price.
Falcon 9 has a disposable upper stage and launches more than 100x per year. Sure, it's a smaller, simpler stage than the New Glenn upper, but it's not impossible. Just very, very ambitious.
I’d say closer to impractical if not impossible. New Glenn’s uppers have to cost several times more to build than F9s, not just because of size and required milling but also because its hydrolox requiring extreme cryogenic cooling. Also BE-3s being low production volume making their cost per unit high.
A BE-3u is roughly 1/10th the thrust of a BE-4. If they really want to switch the upper to 4 of them they should consider instead building a Methalox upper using a single BE-4. ISP would drop significantly but dry mass for a denser propellant likely would too and costs should be far lower. Plus you increase BE-4 production, reducing its cost per unit for both stages. And the much higher thrust might reduce gravity losses to offset the lower ISP.
No reason for them to lower their prices when they're already the cheapest option on the market and are doing more launches than everyone else combined. I think we'd see prices come down if they had some real competition.Your memory is wrong. Falcon 9 public prices began at $49.9M and it is $74M today which is 48.2% increase. Although as said not sure anyone has actually paid as little as that $74M number. That is the equivalent of the base model on the car lot.
Inflation isn't some magic thing that is unavoidable. Prices do often go down for non-commodity products. Computers, phones, internet service, HDTVs, etc. SpaceX COSTS have almost certainly decreased in spite of material price inflation. If they haven't that would mean reuse was stupid and a waste of time. SpaceX certainly could be selling launches for less probably <$30M but they don't. Now to be clear that is fine, SpaceX can price launches at whatever the price it wants. The point though remains SpaceX's COSTS going down through reuse and other optimizations has not resulted in PRICES to customers going down.
Given how much launch costs provide a moat for the real money maker at SpaceX, which is Starlink it is reasonable to assume the same will be true of Starship. From a profit and revenue standpoint, SpaceX is largely a telecommunication company (with dreams of AI nonsense) that also happens to launch rockets for external customers on the side.
It implies no such thing at all.
Your memory is wrong. Falcon 9 public prices began at $49.9M and it is $74M today which is 48.2% increase. Although as said not sure anyone has actually paid as little as that $74M number. That is the equivalent of the base model on the car lot.
At the time of the Falcon 9's maiden flight in 2010, the advertised price for commercial satellite launches using the v1.0 version was $49.9–56 million.[4]Over the years, the price increased, keeping pace with inflation. By 2012, it rose to $54–59.5 million,[167] followed by $56.5 million for the v1.1 version in 2013,[168] $61.2 million in 2014,[169] $62 million for the Full Thrust version in 2016,[170] and $74 million for the Block 5 version in 2026.[1]
Inflation isn't some magic thing that is unavoidable. Prices do often go down for non-commodity products. Computers, phones, internet service, HDTVs, etc. SpaceX COSTS have almost certainly decreased in spite of material price inflation. SpaceX certainly could be selling launches for less probably <$30M but they don't. Now to be clear that is fine, SpaceX can price launches at whatever the price it wants. The point though remains SpaceX's COSTS going down has not resulted in PRICES going down.
Given how much launch costs provide a moat for the real money maker at SpaceX which is Starlink it is reasonable to assume the same will be true of Starship. From a profit and revenue standpoint, SpaceX is largely a telecommunication company (with dreams of AI nonsense) that also happens to launch rockets on the side.
It implies no such thing at all.
No reason for them to lower their prices when they're already the cheapest option on the market and are doing more launches than everyone else combined. I think we'd see prices come down if they had some real competition.
They don't have the lowest launch prices "by far". Those days are long long gone. Depending on the datapoint F9 is slightly cheaper to slightly more expensive. Certainly not to the point where F9 was a no brainer like it was a decade ago. They could have substantially lower prices than anyone else as they almost certainly have the highest profit margin. They have chosen to not do that.I don’t disagree with any of this. Clearly SpaceX has lots of pricing leeway given their (by far) lowest costs in launch. They have little motivation to lower prices and are better off booking more profits in the current market with lack of any viable competition.
Cryogenic cooling does not add extreme cost. BE-3 are in low production today. However arguing they are expensive due to low production as a reason they can't be used at a rate of 400+ per year is circular logic.
Gravity losses are to first order of approximation based on the TWR of the booster. Lower TWR uppers have an impact but it is small compared to the booster certainly not enough to throw away the higher isp of hydrolox.
Moving to methalox upper stage would make all their in orbit refueling plans dead. While you think they should have Methalox upper (because SpaceX did that and everything SpaceX does is right and everything SpaceX doesn't do is stupid) I am sure no matter what happens NG 9x4 will have a hydrolox upper. Hydrolox is what makes their crew lander not require 14+ tanker launches just to get to the moon.
Even if they are wrong Blue clearly sees the isp value of hydrolox for cislunar and deep space missions and if you need hydrolox in orbit then your upper stage likely needs to be hydrolox.
They don't have the lowest launch prices "by far". Those days are long long gone.
They have real competition. Ariane 64 is roughly the same price (after subsidies).
New Glenn is lower when you consider it lifts twice as much as F9.
How does SpaceX do it, then?BO is also milling their tanks
SpaceX do skin-and-stringers. The metal sheets come in to the forming process already at their final thickness, and then reinforcing stringers are welded to the insides (as opposed to milling down a thicker sheet).How does SpaceX do it, then?
Methalox isn't the reason why starship may require 14+ launches, it's because starship is huge. Much too big for near term missions, probably (you've argued as much many times). Blue Moon is smaller relative to the rocket it is launching on than HLS is to starship, that's as big a reason why it take fewer flights as the choice of hydrolox.Moving to methalox upper stage would make all their in orbit refueling plans dead. While you think they should have Methalox upper (because SpaceX did that and everything SpaceX does is right and everything SpaceX doesn't do is stupid) I am sure no matter what happens NG 9x4 will have a hydrolox upper. Hydrolox is what makes their crew lander not require 14+ tanker launches just to get to the moon.
Even if they are wrong Blue clearly sees the isp value of hydrolox for cislunar and deep space missions and if you need hydrolox in orbit then your upper stage likely needs to be hydrolox.
Your last sentence contradicts your first.Absurd. Until BO develops a reusable upper stage, they will have a hard time keeping up with Starship launch rates. But the bigger worry for BO, I suspect, will be price. A fully reusable Starship will probably cost less per flight than NG (in any configuration).
Of course, SpaceX will have to prove Starship is cheap and reusable. We'll see what happens.
Methalox isn't the reason why starship may require 14+ launches, it's because starship is huge. Much too big for near term missions, probably (you've argued as much many times).
This is last generation thinking. The payload can be its own high performance third stage now that cryogenic payloads are being fueled on the pad. I don't know if people realize this but NG 7x2 doesn't send the Blue Moon 1 lander to the moon. It just lifts it into LEO. The BM1 "lander" is departure stage, insertion stage, and lander all in one. Scaling BM1 up would allow NG 9x4 to send 10 tons to the lunar surface with zero refueling. With refueling a bm-2 based expendable lander can put 30 tons of the surface with just 3 NG 9x4 launches.For high energy work they would have had a hydrolox third stage, which would be much more performant than the compromise hydrolox second stage. Likewise they could fitted a methalox second stage (expendable or reusable) with a hydrogen tank onboard to serve as a tanker, and they would be able to have the lunar architecture they want without compromising the rocket for the majority of its flights.
Blue Origin have already said they are pursuing a lower-cost monocoque tank design. This flight rate probably doesn't depend on milled tanks.BO is also milling their tanks. They would need either a complete redesign or a lot more milling machines.
And upgraded versions of starship and optimizing prop transfer will do the same. It's strange to me to treat Blue Origin's ambitions as fait accompli given their track record, while minimizing what SpaceX can accomplish given theirs. I get that musk is a huge dick that is enshittifying SpaceX, but Bezos isn't much better (he's maybe quieter, but that's it).That is one reason but not the only reason. Hydrolox also reduces the number of fueling flights. 9x4 would reduce it further.
Last generation thinking, really? So in your analysis working their tails off to build as many expendable upper stages as possible is not? I get it that for anyone that is not SpaceX that would be a huge improvement, but there still is some wisdom in skating to where the puck is gonna be and not where it is. Or did we all decide that full reusability is not the next generation?This is last generation thinking. The payload can be its own high performance third stage now that cryogenic payloads are being fueled on the pad. I don't know if people realize this but NG 7x2 doesn't send the Blue Moon 1 lander to the moon. It just lifts it into LEO. The BM1 "lander" is departure stage, insertion stage, and lander all in one. Scaling BM1 up would allow NG 9x4 to send 10 tons to the moon with zero refueling.
Also the idea that a hydrolox upper stage is compromised is simply wrong. If you simulate the numbers hydrolox upper stages hold their own. Hydrolox boosters and sustainer core yeah those are terrible ideas better left in the trash bin of history.
And upgraded versions of starship and optimizing prop transfer will do the same. It's strange to me to treat Blue Origin's ambitions as fait accompli given their track record, while minimizing what SpaceX can accomplish given theirs. I get that musk is a huge dick that is enshittifying SpaceX, but Bezos isn't much better (he's maybe quieter, but that's it).
Come on man, you started this by saying:I did nothing of the sort. Entirely possible Blue will fail. I never said otherwise. Never said Bezos was better or the long list of strawmen you created.
In response to someone that had the gall to argue for a configuration that sounded kinda like a falcon 9 or that used methane in the upper stage like starship (but was exactly the original concept of New Glenn). The tone of your posts with regards to SpaceX have gotten extremely negative, but the same thing isn't true for blue origin. I don't think it's a straw man to point out the hypocrisy in that, especially not with you throwing out Elon fanboi ad hominems left and right. They are both terrible people and you can either separate that from your love of space or you can't, but I don't like being called a fanboi because I chose to try and discuss rockets without letting Elon live rent free in my head.because SpaceX did that and everything SpaceX does is right and everything SpaceX doesn't do is stupid
Sigh, at least this is better than the original post you edited, but this is still pretty trollish. It's a shame because I know you're capable of being very knowledgeable and insightful, but this isn't that.You win though. SpaceX is the bestest evah. Nobody else should try anything different. No need to discuss anything just talk about how bestest SpaceX will be forever.
If 9x4 launches for the first time in 2030, the word "only" isn't the appropriate word to describe flying 30 launches in 2032. The correct word would be "miraculous."I think most people will agree Blue will miss all those numbers and dates. However it is pretty clear they are thinking big, very big. That alone is cool.
If 9x4 doesn't launch until 2030 and "only" flies 30 times in 2032 that is still impressive compared to the entire rest of the world excluding SpaceX. It is worth noting that 9x4 is comparable to payload capabilities of SLS.
What on earth does being hydrolox have anything to do with the number of launches needed for propellant for lunar missions? SpaceX requires a large number simply because their departure vehicle / lander is 100 tonnes dry. So long as Blue Origin doesn't try to send 100 structural tonnes to the moon, they won't need so many launches.Cryogenic cooling does not add extreme cost. BE-3 are in low production today. However arguing they are expensive due to low production as a reason they can't be used at a rate of 400+ per year is circular logic.
Gravity losses are to first order of approximation based on the TWR of the booster. Lower TWR uppers have an impact but it is small compared to the booster certainly not enough to throw away the higher isp of hydrolox.
Moving to methalox upper stage would make all their in orbit refueling plans dead. While you think they should have Methalox upper (because SpaceX did that and everything SpaceX does is right and everything SpaceX doesn't do is stupid) I am sure no matter what happens NG 9x4 will have a hydrolox upper. Hydrolox is what makes their crew lander not require 14+ tanker launches just to get to the moon.
Even if they are wrong Blue clearly sees the isp value of hydrolox for cislunar and deep space missions and if you need hydrolox in orbit then your upper stage likely needs to be hydrolox.