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Space Science

Elon Musk's SpaceX Offers Low-Cost Rockets 221

HobbySpacer writes "The cover article of the latest issue of Aviation Week looks at SpaceX and how its Falcon line of rockets threatens to shake up the space launch industry. Founded by Elon Musk, who also started PayPal, SpaceX is developing the Falcon I (first flight this summer) and Falcon V (first flight in 2005) that will cost as little as 20-30% of what competitors like Orbital Sciences and Boeing charge for comparable vehicles."
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Elon Musk's SpaceX Offers Low-Cost Rockets

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  • Cool (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:46PM (#8706601)
    Ive always wanted to rocket into space at an affordable price and parachute down.

    I cant see any problems with this plan.
  • by jwthompson2 ( 749521 ) * on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:47PM (#8706616) Homepage
    SpaceX wants to fly up to three Falcon I missions in 2004 at a $5.9-million list price per flight...

    If I max out my credit I will be 3/5900ths of the way to my own launch...woo hoo! Yay for the people who need this stuff though.

  • Well (Score:3, Funny)

    by odano ( 735445 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:48PM (#8706621)
    Now the real question is: Where the hell are you going to go?
    • by kippy ( 416183 )
      The time may not be now but there will come a time (hopefully) when settlement of Mars becomes a possibility. Once NASA or whoever does a proof of concept mission, settlement will occur if the price is right for private citizens. Even if it's a million dollars for a one way trip, I bet the population would go from 0 to thousands in a few years.
    • Now the real question is: Where the hell are you going to go?

      It doesn't have a toilet?

    • Where the hell are you going to go?

      Where do you want to go today?

    • Didn't Microsoft already take us there with their Where do you want to go today? campain? I would have thought we had gotten there already. Maybe they'll get us there with the next SP or Longhorn.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:48PM (#8706626)
    You can send two up and still probably get it done with the 50% failure rate.
    • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @05:26PM (#8708334)
      What's cool, the larger model can supposedly make orbit even with 60% failed engines.
      Unlike other current U.S. boosters, the Falcon V with five SpaceX Merlin engines will have an engine-out capability much like the Wernher von Braun Saturn vehicles of the 1960s. That means even with up to three engine failures, the vehicle's remaining powerplants can achieve velocity and altitude targets to make orbit.
      Wow, here it is 2004 and we've almost caught up with Wernher von Braun... either he was really cool then or we're pretty pathetic now, or both.
      • by DerekLyons ( 302214 ) <fairwater.gmail@com> on Tuesday March 30, 2004 @12:43AM (#8711387) Homepage
        Wow, here it is 2004 and we've almost caught up with Wernher von Braun... either he was really cool then or we're pretty pathetic now, or both.
        No, it means Mr Musk has taken a step backwards. The other current boosters don't have engine out capacity, because they don't need it. Engine reliability is high enough that adding extra engines does nothing but increase cost and actually decreases reliability by adding more failure points. If his engine reliability is low enough that he actually needs engine-out capability, thats one thing. I rather suspect though that he is engaging in market hype.
  • by andy666 ( 666062 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:48PM (#8706629)
    Is the instability that a lot of people found when testing the falcon. I am surprised how positive this article is.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:48PM (#8706630)
    'cause then.. we can have the ultimate motivation for human endeavour.. profit!
    • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:13PM (#8706920) Journal
      'cause then.. we can have the ultimate motivation for human endeavour.. profit!
      I thought the ultimate motivator was sex? Just look at what kind of companies were among the first to profitably sell a service on the Internet. Hmm.... perhaps 'step 2' is selling weightless sex trips?

      But seriously... this is good news; having private enterprise undertake missions to space. It'll be good to see the price of launches drop even further.
      • by MachDelta ( 704883 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @05:46PM (#8708544)
        Hmm.... perhaps 'step 2' is selling weightless sex trips?
        Pfft. Only chicks would need an expensive and exotic item (like a rocket) to get off. All guys need is a 747 on one of them parabolic flight paths. 30 seconds of weightlessness? Thats plenty of time!
    • It already has... (Score:4, Informative)

      by DoorFrame ( 22108 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:14PM (#8706933) Homepage
      It already is cheap enough for tourists... just not cheap enough for tourists like you. Dennis Tito went into space with the Russians in 2001, and Mark Shuttleworth went in 2002. Of course, this cost them tens of millions of dollars, but they were tourists none the less. In addition, there's another tourist, an American, scheduled to fly later this year [spacetoday.net].

      Now, admittedly these have all been based on national programs taking on a "charity" case now and again either for a few bucks, or for the attention that it gives them, but I'd say it's only a matter of time before a private company starts really marketing these trips to the extremely wealthy. If you can bring the price down to a million dollars a trip, you'll have your self a line of people out the door ready and willing to go. This is the ultimate in conspicuous consumption, Thorsten Veblen would be proud.
      • Also consider that the National Geographic society invests quite a lot of money sending photographers to strange and beautiful places on earth and in the ocean. I've often wondered if the solution to space exploration is merely making it easier for folks like them to launch space missions.
    • I think original AC poster probably meant this as an ironic comment, but I'd wager that capitalism and self-interest have propelled more development and improved the lives of more people in total than all the government programs in history put together.

      I'm all for deregulating spaceflight and allowing private ownership of property and property rights in space. Its a far quicker ticket for humanity ad astra than to wait for some congress to appropriate $$ for it over the incessant public whining for "more
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:51PM (#8706660)
    Considering the high cost of most payloads, do you think most companies will jump on board with them having no proven launch record in the hopes of saving some cash? Even with insurance, the considerable delays caused by losing a payload would likely outweigh any savings made by using one of their launch vehicles. That's not to say that they won't produce some great hardware, but it may be an awfully slow start for them.
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:59PM (#8706771)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by mrright ( 301778 ) <rudi&lambda-computing,com> on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:10PM (#8706894) Homepage
      For the payloads of today, you are right. But first of all, falcon I and especially falcon V is designed to be extremely reliable. Simple technology has a tendency to just work once it is debugged. Just ask the russians.

      And second, the main reason satellites are so expensive is that they have to use very exotic materials and low margins to save mass. If you have a cheaper launcher you can build your satellite heavier, cheaper and more rugged.
    • Considering the high cost of most payloads, do you think most companies will jump on board with them having no proven launch record in the hopes of saving some cash? Even with insurance, the considerable delays caused by losing a payload would likely outweigh any savings made by using one of their launch vehicles. That's not to say that they won't produce some great hardware, but it may be an awfully slow start for them.

      I agree. The payloads tend to be *very* expensive. However, I would bet that many p
    • by tenchiken ( 22661 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @04:13PM (#8707583)
      That's the brilliance of the scheme. They already have a first customer to get them thru the first couple of launches.. Ladies and Gentlement, I give you dadadum.......

      The United States Navy (who, if I am not mistaken is already funding this program).

      USN is used to makign really risky (as in, people die if they don't get it right) investments in Technology. Compared with the decision to buy F-35's or F/A-18s, this is a simple matter. Cheap, check. Will it fly without blowing up? We will find out soon.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:51PM (#8706664)
    With Boeing in its sights, SpaceX ironically wanted to validate its own Falcon I calculations against high-quality Boeing Delta hardware and found a Boeing-discarded Delta II interstage section in a Hollywood, Calif., junkyard on which to make those calculations.

    Nice to know they leave this stuff lying around...
  • by HarveyBirdman ( 627248 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:55PM (#8706723) Journal
    I splash on a little Elon Musk every morning after shaving.

    It makes me smell sweet and alluring.

  • I wonder if I launch "questionable goods", whether or not my Paypal account will be suspended and funds held indefinitely.... ;-)

    -psy
  • It is reusable (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mrright ( 301778 ) <rudi&lambda-computing,com> on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:57PM (#8706748) Homepage
    The falcon first stage, which represents the bulk of the mass of the vehicle, is designed to be reusable. It will deploy a parachute, land in the ocean and be recovered. The only expendable part in the first stage is the nozzle.

    They have also developed their own turbopump and reusable engine with quite impressive performance.

    And all that for less than 100 million $. For that kind of money, NASA could probably produce a really nice paper study, but nothing that gets off the ground.
  • by haggar ( 72771 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:58PM (#8706754) Homepage Journal
    From the article:
    Starting with the first flight this summer, the vehicle's first stage will be reusable.

    After propelling the second stage and payload to 56 mi. and Mach 9, a 75-ft. parachute will be blasted out of the first stage nose by a 10,000-lb.-thrust mortar. The chute will lower the vehicle to a splashdown 500 mi. off Baja California, where it will be recovered for $50,000 by the crew of the salvage tug Aahu.


    So, they're not just copycats, they introduce innovative technologies to keep the costs down.

    So, there'll probably be some fierce competition in the space delivery business before the scramjet tech becomes viable. After that point it's anybody's guess which companies will come on top.
    • You assume that a scramjet will ever be viable enough to be worth bothering with. Remember, any hypersonic air-breathing engine needs to be lighter than the equivelent amount of oxydizer that an equivelent non-air-breathing hypersonic engine needs. And you will need some rocket power to manuver in space.
      • Yes, that's my assumption. You are correct that it may turn out that the air-breathing engine adds more overhead than the oxygen otherwise necessary. I think the odds for that are slim, but yeah, my original post was written in an over-optimistic tone.
  • by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:58PM (#8706755) Homepage Journal
    It's just a matter of time before we have ads like this on the toob:

    Save! Save! Save!

    Save 20% to 50% off other leading brands of rockets at SpaceX Rocket-O-Rama! Come on down and bring the whole family, first 25 in the door get a free gift pack of Sunscreen, SpaceX Sunhat and Binoculars. Be the first on your block to put a mouse, dog, rabbit, chicken or chimpanzee into orbit! (Children not recommended) Why settle for mini-cams around your house, when you can monitor security from space, or watch your neighbor's house or the whole town! Always know where your spouse or kids are! Act now, launch windows are going fast!

    it's going to be just like the Jetsons...

  • reliability? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by SoupGuru ( 723634 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @02:58PM (#8706760)
    I am not terribly educated on cost and reliability figures for sending payloads into orbit, but it would seem to me that a satellite can't be cheap. When you're looking for options on how to get the bugger into orbit, would you rather choose the status quo for a twice to three times the cost or the upstarts? I guess there will need to be people willing to take the risk and send up a few satellites to show reliability.

    But I'm all for it. Competition is a good thing, right?
    • Re:reliability? (Score:4, Informative)

      by cmowire ( 254489 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:08PM (#8706870) Homepage
      Actually, it's a bunch of equations in a Linear Programming problem.

      Part of the reasons why satellites are so expensive is because the cost per pound is so high. Reduce the cost per pound, you need to spend less time and money making it so lightweight, which means you can spend time and money making it last longer, cheaper, more functional, etc.

      Reliability for unmanned launches ends up being such that, currently, 98% launch reliability is "good enough" because going beyond that ends up being far too expensive.
    • Re:reliability? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by JohnsonWax ( 195390 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:38PM (#8707199)
      Well, the cost decision is a feedback loop.

      If it costs $30M to get into orbit, you don't waste that on a $1M satellite. You use it for a $30M+ satellite. NASA should be safe for high-cost payloads provided that they have the reliability record (only time will tell).

      If it costs $6M to get into orbit, then a whole pile of people can get into the game that weren't previously there, and some design decisions may change. Plans like GPS look much more attractive provided the satellites are cheap. Consider launching 50 $2M satellites:

      With NASA, that costs you $1.5B (launch) + $100M (hardware).
      With SpaceX, that costs you $300M (launch) + $100M (hardware).

      SpaceX is an attractive option provided they can launch very frequently, even if their reliability is terrible. Simply build 100 satellites and if half fail, you're still way ahead of the NASA budget.

      Remember, what often makes launch failures so catastrophic is not the $30M lost on the launch, but the $1B lost on hardware at the tip of that rocket.

      SpaceX will cause people to design cheaper, less-advanced satellites. Unfortunately, it will also further clutter our orbital spaces. I really have to think that with the advent of private launches, that the world govts need to coordinate and essentially tax each launch to cover debris tracking and ultimately debris cleanup.
      • Launching lunch (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Latent Heat ( 558884 )
        While there are some things that you launch because they are high value, some things only become valuable because you put them in orbit. For example, lunch is only a couple of bucks worth of food, but at current rates it costs $5000-$15,000 per meal to bring it to the Space Station. This thing promises to bring lunch down to about $1000.

        Now supposes lunch blows up on the pad. Well, the seagulls are going to have to fight over some hamburger fried in rocket fuel. I am thinking a low-reliable low-cost l

    • As a previous poster pointed out, a lot of the cost of a satellite is a direct result of the cost of the launch ("if I'm paying that much to get the damn up there then it better bloody well work").

      From what I have seen, there are any number of customers eager to fly on Falcon. In particular, the USAF has been fawning all over SpaceX. The current doctrine in USAF Space is based around so-called "Responsive Space", which means launching small satellites fast and cheap in response to the needs of a specific

    • Re:reliability? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by NanoGator ( 522640 )
      I saw a Dilbert cartoon where they pushed a Satellite into orbit using a laser + a really big sail of some sort. This is a cartoon, I know, but is there any basis in reality for that sort of launch?
      • Re:reliability? (Score:3, Informative)

        by mikeee ( 137160 )
        In theory it can be done with a laser and a very small sail. Essentially you build a rocket with no real fuel - maybe just some reaction mass - and shine a BFL up the tailpipe.

        Very nice in theory, very hard in practice.

        I *think* NASA had demonstrated this technology to get a 1-pound 'rocket' to a height of about 10 feet, but that's the state-of-the-art for ground-based laser launch.
    • Communications satellites do the same job as
      cell phone towers - they receive and send
      radio signals, usually on multiple channels.

      When you design a comm sat, you want to maximize
      earnings, which comes from maximizing number
      of channels (transmitter/receivers) you have
      and lifetime of the satellite. For each of
      the component parts of the satellite, you
      usually have a choice of cheaper, heavier
      parts, such as aluminum structure and single
      junction solar cells, vs more expensive, lighter
      parts: graphite structure and
  • Intense Specs (Score:5, Interesting)

    by millahtime ( 710421 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:00PM (#8706786) Homepage Journal
    Will these hold up to the intense specs NASA has? That is one reason things are so expensive. Previously mentoned on /. about how some gears were in backwards yet never broke is an example of how tough the specs are. Then there is all the testing that needs to be done which is expensive. Will these meet all the NASA and other space agence requirements to use??? Will they meet Military specs to be used by the miliraty?? They may only be able to be used by comercial industry if they aren't up to spec.
    • Re:Intense Specs (Score:5, Interesting)

      by mrright ( 301778 ) <rudi&lambda-computing,com> on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:06PM (#8706847) Homepage
      Nasa has a habit of having so much paperwork and specification stuff that only the big launch companies (boeing and lockmart) need apply. They also have a habit of being heavily biased against new companies.

      The DOD on the other hand seems to be really interested in cheap, reliable and fast launch. They want to be able to put up a sattelite on short notice, and none of the incumbent companies are able to provide this.

      That is why the DOD has bought the first launch of the Falcon I and will buy many launches on Falcon V. Of course the high value payloads will go up on Atlas V for the forseeable future, but there will be a lot of pressure on boeing and lockmart if falcon is successful.

      Isn't competition great?
      • Re:Intense Specs (Score:3, Informative)

        by millahtime ( 710421 )
        "The DOD on the other hand seems to be really interested in cheap, reliable and fast launch."

        The DoD wants more than inexpensive, reliable and fast to launch. They have to consider many more things that cost a lot of money. When it gets to the mil specs and the requirements they put on a subcontractor, well you can see why a happer costs $100. There is a lot you don't see until you work in the industry. And it's all about what the military expects and there is almost always a good reason for it. And
    • NASA might not use it but this is a good precedent. If private industry can come up with space travel for prices like these, it would open Mars to private settlement when that time comes. It will still cost a bundle but it wasn't unheard of back in the colonial days of the Americas for people to cash in their life savings for a start in the New World. If I can get to Mars when I'm 50 or 60 by cashing in all my chips, I'd be there like a shot.
    • Re:Intense Specs (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Kaa ( 21510 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:12PM (#8706905) Homepage
      Previously mentoned on /. about how some gears were in backwards yet never broke is an example of how tough the specs are.

      Mmm... no. That's not about specs, it's an example of how NOT to design mechanical parts.

      These gears could be put in two ways, the right way was non-obvious, and when put in the wrong way, the gears more-or-less work (so the problem doesn't show up during testing) until the time of unusual stress.

      This really should be a textbook case of how not to do things.
    • It's probably the case that, if Falcon I and Falcon V do well, NASA's going to end up dealing with SpaceX anyway. It'll make for some great congressional hearings if they don't. ;)
  • by amigoro ( 761348 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:00PM (#8706788) Homepage Journal
    So a Rocket Scientist created paypal, huh?

    That explains a lot.

    Moderate this comment
    Negative: Offtopic [mithuro.com] Flamebait [mithuro.com] Troll [mithuro.com] Redundant [mithuro.com]
    Positive: Insightful [mithuro.com] Interesting [mithuro.com] Informative [mithuro.com] Funny [mithuro.com]

    • So a Rocket Scientist created paypal, huh?

      Not exactly... as I understand it, he got rich from PayPal (originally at this cool URL [x.com]), *then* started SpaceX.

      So in effect, PayPal created a Rocket Scientist!

      What's next? Google Labs creating a Brain Surgeon?
  • by hattig ( 47930 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:05PM (#8706837) Journal
    http://www.spacetoday.net/Summary/267 ::
    "That competition is caused by an oversupply of launch vehicles in a soft market according to a recent report by Booz-Allen and Hamilton mentioned in Spacelift Washington. That report notes that the "excess capacity" in the launch vehicle market is currently at 35 percent of the market and growing, creating a downward pressure on prices. That excess capacity may not deter new entrants into the launch vehicle market, such as Japan's H-2A and India's GSLV, but it will prevent them from gaining more than a small piece of the overall market."

    It will have to go up against a lot of established players, most notably Ariane with their 12,000 tonne payload launch system, Ariane 5. I don't know what a launch on Ariane 5 costs at the moment though.
    • Hmm, if you have a small device to launch, an Ariane-4 ASAP looks to be the best option. If I am reading http://centaur.sstl.co.uk/SSHP/launcher/launch_as a p.html correctly, you can put a 50kg object into orbit for $1.2m (actually up to 4 50kg objects into orbit). Looks like excess capacity in scheduled launches is utilised.

      An Ariane 5 launch will be expensive though ... they have to recoup $8b in development costs, although the rocket is powerful enough to launch space planes (The Hermes, cancelled). I d
    • As prices for launching stuff into space start to come down the question now becomes reliability vs. cost.

      Yeah it costs ALOT to have a Delta 4 put a satellite into orbit. However, they've been highly successful at doing so, so is the extra cost worth it?

      Or would you rather put the money you were going to spend launching the satellite into increasing the satellite capacities but now your launching on a less proven quasi reliable launch system (aka Ariane)

      So, if these guys can prove to the market place th
    • by GileadGreene ( 539584 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:50PM (#8707348) Homepage
      Falcon is not competing against Ariane - they are in completely different markets (at least for now). Falcon is competing against the likes of OSC's Pegasus, and they are significantly cheaper than Pegasus (~1/4 of the cost).

      The only potential clash with Ariane is, as another poster has pointed out, the ASAP ring that Ariane uses to launch small payloads. Falcon is more expensive than an ASAP launch. However, Falcon has a larger payload capacity than an ASAP slot. More importantly, a Falcon payload launches as the primary, rather than as a secondary. That means launching when you want, and to the orbit that you want. For many payloads that makes it worth paying a little more than an ASAP launch.

  • by Spoing ( 152917 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:06PM (#8706843) Homepage
    "You see, it's our patented water compressor unit over there...well, that, and of course the 10,000 kids used to push the plunger."
  • Now when can I get a "Launch It Now" button for my website?
  • So now that we've found out how cheap their launch vehicles are and Boeing is trembling from fear of being made completely irrelevant all SpaceX need to do is have a successful launch. Minor detail.
  • by aepervius ( 535155 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:11PM (#8706900)
    I always thougth that most of the space treaty are so worded that only governement or governement allowed company can launch anything in space, and that if you really want to launch anything you have got to ask 10000's of autorisation to all kind of agency everywhere.
    • From the article:

      The Falcon I development is funded in part by the Defense Dept.'s Office of Force Transformation because the Pentagon believes if SpaceX is successful, it could have a major "transformational effect" on how military space operations are launched.

      This is definately being santioned by the government.
  • by apsmith ( 17989 ) * on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:14PM (#8706927) Homepage
    Cheaper access to orbit is one of four major technical milestones [aps.org] we need to reach to enable utility scale solar power via Solar Power Satellites [spacedaily.com] - Musk's company is promising a factor of 3-5 cost reduction now, and, if they succeed, will surely be just the start of continuing cost improvements in space launch. If we can just get some money invested in solar cell design and production for space use, wireless power transmission, and light-weight space construction, we'll be there.


    At least all those other technical areas have had even less money invested in them than space launch - so there's good reason to hope all the needed breakthroughs can be made soon - with some R&D money.

    • Falcon I and Falcon V would be a bit too small to be useful for SPS. But the long term planning of Elon Musk is to build a real heavy lifter (Saturn V class). That would make it possible to build solar power satellites and really open up the space frontier.

      Lets just hope the first launch goes according to plan. That would be really good for attracting outside investors.
    • Or instead of investing in 4 things that each need to be accomplished in order for cheap space solar power, we could just sink our money into fusion research, and probably accomplish the same thing alot sooner. (and more efficiently). Current fusion technology has reached breakeven in terms of power generation, and has been increasing power generated by fusion reactions by an order of magnitude a decade at least.
  • by G4from128k ( 686170 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:15PM (#8706945)
    The key to lowering the cost of launches is mass production and that means emphasizing manufacturing design, rather than rocket design. Yes, you must build something that will fly. But if you don't do a good job building the systems (the factory) that build the systems (the rockets), you will be stuck forever in a high-cost hell of precision, one-off, hand-assembled, hand-tweaked machines. This means using standaridzed parts, designing custom parts that can be mass-produced at low cost, and design easy-to-assemble, easy-to-lauch rockets.

    It also means having enough volume that you can afford to invest in factory. This is the real chicken-and-egg problem. Without a high volume of launches, you can't justify the invetsment in a multi-billion dollar rocket factory and streamlined launch process. And without the rocket factory, you can't get the launch price low enough to create the launch volume. I do hope that some of the remaining wealthy internet entrepeneurs invest their collective billions in this endevour.
    • The key to lowering the cost of launches is mass production and that means emphasizing manufacturing design, rather than rocket design.

      That might be one approach -- but the Lockheed Martin (then Martin Marietta) factory south of Denver, when it was built in the early 1960s, was capable of rolling out a Titan II every week (actually the peak was closer to 6/month). Back then, aside from their role in the Gemini program, they were also our ICBM of choice.

      You're still left with the problem of guaranteeing
    • Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.

      You, my friend, have never driven in Pittsburgh.
  • by amigoro ( 761348 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:18PM (#8706968) Homepage Journal
    Quick overview of his old companies: Zip2, Paypal

    Zip2 - print-media-to-web software, clients included KnightRidder, etc, sold for $300,000,000 in cash to Compaq

    PayPal - started as idea for one web site for all a person's financial needs. Email-money-to-someone feature was a quicky add-on feature, took one day of initial development, "classic viral marketting", 1 million customers at start of 2nd year of operations, went public in 2002, sold in june to Ebay for 4.5 billion in stocks, now worth 3billion.

    Was doing background space research in '01-02, why did we stumble after Apollo? Computing analogy, mainframes filling rooms in 1970s, etc.

    The idea he settled into would generate public interest, advance both science and engineering and be privately funded. It was a $10-20million Mars lander. The lander would carry seeds and nutrients, a miniature greenhouse, it would attempt to grow plants, the furthest life would have travelled. Went to Moscow looking for rockets, "We don't buy Russian cars, kitchen appliances or computers. Why can the Russians build such reliable, low cost launch vehicles?"

    friends with group of aero-engineers from Mercury onward, put together a feasibility study. This happened at the same time he was selling PayPal, at this point he settled on "doing space" as his next business enterprise.

    Space now - US govt. spaceflight in bad shape, quick recap of Shuttle status, losses, expenses, dangerous.

    Slide - problems of Shuttle - kind of standard complaints.

    Slide - OSP/Orbital Space Plane - "Pretty Darn Expensive" -
    $300-400million/flight, Delta-IV Heavy is $200mil alone.

    Between NASA and the industrial partners, things have traditionally not been under budget and under time.

    Soyuz has a good (safety) record, and only costs about $60mil/flight.

    Russian economy is size of Belgian economy.

    China's program is only current effort that could spur any new government space programs, be it NASA, ESA, etc

    Slide - dawn of a new era of space exploration like DARPA, NASA could support entrepreneurs. Burt Rutan, Scaled, Jeff Bezos, SpaceX could all benefit from NASA as enabling customer.

    Slide - Armadillo Aerospace

    Slide - Bezos' Blue Origin

    Slide - SpaceX -

    Falcon is a 2-stage orbital rocket, initial target is satelite launch business small commsats- revenue base long-term aim is human spaceflight super-heavy lift, Apollo-class rocket for Moon, Mars, SpaceX "Holy Grail"

    Video - Merlin main engine test
    Video - Upper stage engine test

    First flight will be from SpaceX's pad at Vandenburg AFB, aiming for March 2004, a Navy satelite


    QA -
    comparison of Zip2, PayPal

    PP had 30 fulltime engineers, both were made of small teams, software-based products flat hierarchy, best idea wins, everyone in each company was an equity stakeholder on development, pick a path, do it instead of vacilating on design decisions both companies were very product focused.

    q- biggest stumbling blocks for space entrepreneurs?

    a - stifling regulation, jumping through regulator's hoops. Rockets are still munitions, lack of regulations on software encouraged development, Silicon Valley as "Libertarian Paradise"

    Falcon has been the fastest development time ever for an orbital vehicle.

    (basic rocket/space questions)

    Rocket development, "What makes space expensive?" - Low launch rates, 2/% of rocket's mass to orbit low cost launch suffers from chicken-and-egg problem, need cheaper flights to get a bigger volume of flights, need volume for cheaper flights. (he doesn't say this, but Internet entrepreneurs like him
    have the resources to solve the chicken-egg problem)

    Compares Falcon to Pegasus, costs of $6 vs $25 million/flight

    Q - XPrize - will it succeed in brining CATS, How did SpaceX get Navy contract?

    A- likes the XPrize, compares Carmac, etc, a very good thing. Mentions that
    • by J05H ( 5625 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @05:45PM (#8708534)
      Dude! How about some attribution on that file? You copied my notes!! Obviously, putting them on sci.space.policy puts them in the public domain, but how about a shout-out for a couple hour's worth of transcription and editting?

      Jon Goff pointed me toward the lecture video a couple months ago. I saw your notes and gosh do they look familiar:

      My sci.space.policy lecture notes, posted 14.12.2003 titled Elon Musk Lecture notes, Stanford 10/08/03 [google.com]

      That said, Elon rocks! Falcon will be cheap enough that new businesses beyond comm sats may become viable. Entrpreneurs have postulated a "sweet spot" in pricing where widely available tourism, water mining, maybe Space Solar Power become viable. Russian Dnepr rockets almost hit that spot (offered @ $700/lb in late 90s), but we Americans have to pay significantly more for them, a rule to keep home-grown rocket companies "competitive". Yeah, free market and all. Anyway, the Falcon looks to be about to completely shake up the launch market. Imagine Falcon flying from the SeaLaunch [sealaunch.com] platform?

      Now, can you please give me a little credit, Amigoro? And you forgot to include my intro paragraph.

      Josh

  • by greywar ( 640908 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:20PM (#8706990) Journal
    "The SpaceX Falcon rocket project will specifically target Boeing..." BAD Idea Boeing is actually well armed.
  • Cost (Score:3, Insightful)

    by tsotha ( 720379 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:37PM (#8707178)
    What a lot of people are missing here is the "virtuous spiral" of the cost.

    When launch costs are lower you don't need satellites that last 15 years and tested to the nines. If I use the shuttle to launch it costs half a billion dollars to get my bird up (although a lot of that is picked up by the taxpayers), so I need something that's guarenteed to work. That means lots of expensive parts, and lots of expensive testing.

    If I can launch cheaply I can afford to make cheaper satellites, since the cost of failure is lower. So now I need one less decimal place in my reliability, which means one less decimal place in the price. And I don't need the darned thing to work forever - a five year life might make more sense if I can replace it cheaply.

    This makes the number of launches go up. Which makes the cost of the launch go down. Which makes the price of satellites go down. Take this loop a couple of times and you'll get closer to the actual production cost of the rocket, which is very low, in the grand scheme of things.

    • Re:Cost (Score:4, Insightful)

      by DerekLyons ( 302214 ) <fairwater.gmail@com> on Tuesday March 30, 2004 @12:37AM (#8711355) Homepage
      What a lot of people are missing here is the "virtuous spiral" of the cost.
      When launch costs are lower you don't need satellites that last 15 years and tested to the nines. If I use the shuttle to launch it costs half a billion dollars to get my bird up (although a lot of that is picked up by the taxpayers), so I need something that's guarenteed to work. That means lots of expensive parts, and lots of expensive testing.
      No. Satellites are expensive because they are almost always mission critical hardware for their function. That dicates the extensive testing, expensive parts, etc. The repeaters on undersea cables cost almost three times a pound as much as current satellites, even though the cost of placing them is far lower per pound. Why? Because the loss of a repeater means the loss of millions of dollars in revenue until it can be raised and replaced or repaired.

      The cost of launching a GEO bird could drop to $10/lb next Monday, and a commsat would still cost tens or hundreds of millions of dollars, because the cost of an outage because of a failed bird remains the same. And it would still take weeks to months to replace the bird. They aren't built on an assembly line and never will be, there simply isn't a need for that many, nor is their space in GEO for them.

  • Layers (Score:2, Interesting)

    by blogboy ( 638908 )
    I can totally see this working. Start a company from scratch, instead of using the contracting behemoths. Contracting costs are largely sheer bloat and bureaucracy (hmm...70-80% of the total cost?) A new company (SpaceX) could be lean mean rocket-making machine.
  • Pressure fed systems (Score:4, Informative)

    by amightywind ( 691887 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @03:59PM (#8707457) Journal

    The most interesting thing about the Falcon X second stage is that it is pressure fed. This simplifies the rocket design at the expense of increasing its size. Check out this old but interesting article [rocketryonline.com] which discusses many ideas which the folks at FalconX seemed to have taken to heart.

    • by mrright ( 301778 ) <rudi&lambda-computing,com> on Monday March 29, 2004 @04:06PM (#8707518) Homepage
      The second stage is quite cool in other aspects too:

      -It does not use liquid hydrogen, so the propellants can be stored for a few weeks.

      -It uses heated helium for propellant settling and gimballing and dual redundant torch igniters for ignition, so it can be restarted basically indefinitely as long as there is some propellant left.

      -As a pressure fed stage it is extremely rugged, so the empty stage could be reused as the hull of a space station. That would make most sense for the falcon V, since the falcon I upper stage is not big enough.
  • Launch info (Score:3, Informative)

    by Rorschach1 ( 174480 ) on Monday March 29, 2004 @04:15PM (#8707605) Homepage
    I've been following SpaceX for awhile. Whenever they do get around to launching, I plan to go climb up on the roof and watch. The pad's a few miles from here.

    The Vandenberg AFB launch schedule [af.mil] currently shows the launch as 'indefinite'. Until it's got a scheduled launch date it'll stay down at the bottom of the page.

    Yeah, I know there aren't any exact dates listed for the launches. Hopefully Public Affairs will let me change that soon... it's been that way since 9/11. Until then, Google is your friend.

  • Competition in the private space market, this can only be good. Will prices go down more than ever, now? And also consider the X-prize. It's going to be a very interesting near future.

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