SpaceX Announces Bigger Rocket 86
bullitB writes "SpaceX, a commercial developer of rocket systems, has announced a new Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) class rocket. Dubbed the Falcon 9, the rocket will be able to launch nearly 25 metric tons into low earth orbit for a mere $78 million. It looks like they have already signed up Bigelow Aerospace for a launch in 2008."
Estes rocket? (Score:3, Funny)
(For the often-clueless mods, Estes is a model rocket company. Look it up and laugh if you can. It was a joke.)
Re:Estes rocket? (Score:1)
Re:it had to happen.. (Score:2, Funny)
May? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:May? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:May? (Score:5, Interesting)
I certainly hope they have a successful launch this year, otherwise I wonder for how long they can keep bleeding money like this.
We're gonna need a traffic cop (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:We're gonna need a traffic cop (Score:5, Informative)
Re:We're gonna need a traffic cop (Score:1)
Wonderful! (Score:4, Interesting)
A company can start selling a package like:
What the world would have been like if this had happened when NASA promised it in the 70s... :-(
(And, yes, we have to start thinking seriously on junk in orbit.)
Re:Wonderful! (Score:2)
My university lauchnes their first mircosat soon (ie a few weeks).
Only a small cubesat, but still....
Re:Wonderful! (Score:3, Interesting)
I wrote department. If most every research group can launch what they need, then it is a different situation. It is a quality change, not a quantity.
Re:We're gonna need a traffic cop (Score:2)
Re:We're gonna need a traffic cop (Score:2)
NASA does not equal space, as Elon, Burt and Mr. Bigelow are also proving.
Josh
I think SpaceX must be compensating for something. (Score:2)
"According to the company statement, SpaceX has sold Falcon 9 to a U.S. government customer. SpaceX still plans to make Falcon 5 available in late 2007."
If nothing else, SpaceX is having a problem keeping it up when people talk about them (it?), in a slashing manner.
Re:I think SpaceX must be compensating for somethi (Score:1)
That's why they've signed up Bigelow Aerospace
Re:I think SpaceX must be compensating for somethi (Score:5, Interesting)
I will hold my breath until they have a successful Falcon I launch however.
Long Haul Trucking Perhaps (Score:1)
SpaceX is An Exciting Company (Score:5, Interesting)
While not grabbing the headlines the way the X-Prize and specifically, Burt Rutan and later Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic did (and do), SpaceX has started to very quietly put togehter what looks like the first credible competition to the entrenched commercial space industry as it now stands.
Even though they have suffered setbacks of late and therefore, haven't launched a rocket to space yet, it looks like they've got all the technology there to do so. They've also got Pentagon contracts, which means that they've got the backing to cut through the red tape.
If SpaceX is successful, it will force Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Arienespace (and to an extent, Russian rocket mfgs) to really rethink their development and pricing strategy.
"So what, they're not manned?" I get your point. But if they can REALLY LAUNCH 25,000kg to space for $78m dollars by the end of the decade, it will mean that suddenly, we'll have a price-competitive launch industry. I'm talking companies undercutting each other price wise, speeding up development of better, bigger rockets, and actually, maybe, being innovative with rocket and satellite development. It could even spark the kind of rapid progress we saw in aviation in the 1910's.
Suddenly, there's competition in space for the first time since the US and Russia in the 1960's.
Don't get me wrong, I'm all for passenger spaceflight, but SpaceX is putting together interesting technology at good prices that could spark the kind of 'rapid evolution' that the industry needs, filling an existing market with a much cheaper product. It'll be exciting to see where they go with this new design, and if they can actually pull it off in just a couple years.
Tim
Re:SpaceX is An Exciting Company (Score:2, Interesting)
Manned flight an option. (Score:4, Informative)
Of course, there's no capsule designed, but I guess he doesn't (currently) see that as HIS job, he's just aiming towards cheap launchers for commercial market, and the $$$ are to be found in the satellite business, not in manned flights (yet)
But if a third party decides that, yes, lauching paying customers is a viable business-model, all that could change quickly.
20mil being the current price for spacetourists, compared to a rocket that can haul 25000kg to LEO... You can build a BIG manned capsule with that weight budget, so prices would go down markedly.
Re:SpaceX is An Exciting Company (Score:2)
Exactly. These guys approach the problem from the right angle:
Build a commercially viable rocket with good payload, and more applications will follow.
I hope they will not be delayed by bureaucracy too much. Because the Falcon 9 will make NASA look rather bad, transporting almost as much as the shuttle at a fraction of the price. I would not put it beyond politicians to try a
Good for them. (Score:5, Interesting)
Capitalism isn't the answer to everything, but I'm hoping SpaceX, Scaled Composites, and the rest are right that it's the answer to getting a real space development industry going.
Re:Good for them. (Score:1)
No, or Comunism is the answer.
Re:Good for them. (Score:2)
I was referring to the ability, once a small (mostly automate
Re:Good for them. (Score:2)
We'll most likely never see the society of "belters" that Larry Niven wrote about. Why? Because it'll take something like 50-100 years to develop that society, and we'll pass through the singularity in 20-30 years, negating the importance of belt mining.
Re:getting more crowded (Score:1)
Re:Good for them. (Score:2)
However, we don't have any crowding problem, really. People who think that spend too much time in cities. The vast amount of land that has absolutely nobody on it is staggering too. Cities are too cr
Garbage Disposal (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Garbage Disposal (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Garbage Disposal (Score:1)
Re:Garbage Disposal (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Garbage Disposal (Score:2)
No.
1) The delta-vee needed to get to the sun is orders of magnitude higher than that needed for reaching LEO.
2) The amount of garbage generated in order to lift 25 tonnes just into LEO far exceeds 25 tonnes. IOW, it would be a net garbage-generating operation, so why bother?
Re:Garbage Disposal (Score:1)
Launching into the Sun is energetically wasteful; the needed delta-v is about 30 km/s, as opposed to 16 km/s or so for the Solar escape trajectory, i.e., leaving the Solar system forever. There are even less demanding and arguably better destinations, see this discussion [yarchive.net] for the list of possibilites.
(The assumed "garbage" is concentrated, long-lived radioactive waste; the feasibility of launching other typ
This has been Elon Musk's goal all along (Score:5, Informative)
Air launching has many advantages: lower atmospheric pressure improves the efficiency of engines, reduces air drag losses, greatly reduces dynamic loads, allowing the use of lighter structures. Perhaps most importantly, air launching can be done over the ocean without expensive range fees - and range delays like SpaceX is currently experiencing.
But air launch does not easily scale to large sizes. For really large rockets you have to launch from the ground.
Elon eventually plans to build a Saturn-V class launcher for for manned missions to Mars. It may seem premature when they haven't launched Falcon 1 yet, but so far they seem to be doing the right things.
Re:This has been Elon Musk's goal all along (Score:2)
OK, I have a question. Probably a very stupid question, but in that case please tell me why.
Why not air-launch from hydrogen/helium balloons? You can make those as big as you like cheaply can't you?
Rich.
Re:This has been Elon Musk's goal all along (Score:3, Informative)
Balloons are pretty much at the mercy of the wind. You can't choose your launch spot for range safety and precise orbital insertion. For large rockets ground handling and launching of such huge balloons is difficult, dangerous and very sensitive to weather. Landing back after a scrubbed launch is virtually impossible.
Re:This has been Elon Musk's goal all along (Score:2)
Re:This has been Elon Musk's goal all along (Score:2)
The Wife (Score:3, Funny)
Article text (Score:2, Informative)
By Leonard David
Senior Space Writer
posted: 08 September 2005
04:25 pm ET
Space Exploration Technologies Corporation (SpaceX) announced today that it will develop a Falcon 9 booster - an Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) class vehicle.
A key goal of SpaceX is developing a family of launch vehicles intended to increase the reliability and probably reduce the cost of access to space by a factor of twenty percent.
SpaceX, headquartered in El Segundo,
Not so big (Score:1)
hmmm... (Score:3, Funny)
don't forget the ton of other stuff (Score:2)
Re:hmmm... (Score:2)
Very impressed... (Score:2)
Units people... (Score:2)
Press releases are cheap. (Score:2, Funny)
78 mil, let's see (Score:1, Insightful)
resasons for no-show (Score:3, Informative)
spacex have done their development right. they are using intelligent designs. they have done an awful lot of testing and simulation. they look to have a chance.
it may seem odd to actually put a commercial payload on an untested rocket, but given that nearly every launch is on virgin equipment it makes sense (discounting ariane 501, for which parts of the payload were dug out of a rainforest and displayed - some instruments were nearly reusable)
milli Newtons? (Score:1)
Thrust on liftoff: 2.85 mN (765 klbf)
Yay! (Score:2)
Too easy... (Score:4, Funny)
Beavis: "Yeah, yeah. Uh... what?"
Butthead: "I'd like to announce a bigger rocket."
Beavis: "Hehheh ehehhehee BOI-OI-OI-OING!"
Hubble... (Score:1)
Using the specs from hubblesite.org, the falcon 9-S5 could lift a hubble sized telescope into orbit for $51, rather then sending another shuttle up to fix hubble, why not see what telescope they could build for say $100m, assuming a 5 year life rather then hubbles 20 should help cut the cost, and 15 years of technical development