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floating-io | 4 months ago

Complexity vs. Tedium. There's a difference.

The SpaceX approach requires a lot of launches, but they're already proven experts at that. They've launched something like 130 rockets this year alone. That's one every couple of days.

High launch cadence is not complexity for SpaceX. It's normal for them. After the first half dozen or so refuels, it will be second nature, just like delivering satellites with Falcon is.

And they are, in essence, developing a single craft for it, just with a few variations.

Blue's architecture requires three distinct vehicles. Each one has to be developed separately. Then we get to the launch; last I saw, here is the comparison:

SpaceX:

* Launch the Depot

* Launch N tankers to fill the depot (this is the tedium I mentioned).

* Launch the HLS to LEO

* Refill the HLS in LEO

* Send the HLS to NRHO

* Rendevous with Orion in NRHO and transfer people

* Land on and then return from the moon

* Rendevous with Orion in NRHO and transfer people back.

That's a fairly complex architecture, but let's compare that against the last I saw of Blue's [1]:

* Launch the Transporter to LEO

* Launch tankers and refill the Transporter

* Launch the Lander to LEO "dry"

* Fill the Lander from the Transporter

* Send Lander to NRHO

* Launch tankers and refill the Transporter

* Raise Transporter to "stairstep" orbit

* Launch tankers and refill the Transporter again

* Send the Transporter to NRHO

* Refill the Lander again in NRHO

* Rendezvous with Orion and transfer people

* Land on moon and return with people

* Rendezvous with Orion and transfer people back

That is far more complex than what SpaceX is proposing.

The number of tanker launches is really quite irrelevant for both in this context. It's less risky for SpaceX due to their extensive ops experience, but both will be fine there I think. That's just tedium for both of them.

The complexity comes in with the number of operations and precisely where BO is doing the refueling. I'm not terribly worried about the LEO ops; they'll manage those. The NRHO refuelling though? That one strikes me much riskier if only due to comms lag.

And the sheer number of steps in Blue's architecture seems crazy to me.

So no, I can't agree that Blue's architecture is in any way simpler. Quite the opposite, in fact.

[1] https://ntrs.nasa.gov/api/citations/20250008728/downloads/25... :: the last slide in the set.

(edit: formatting)

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cubefox|4 months ago

I think the main problem for Starship is that they need to do a large number of tanker launches (about 20 I believe) in a timeframe in which the propellant in the LEO depot doesn't boil off. I assume they need to develop some good sun shielding for that. 20 launches could take quite a long time (multiple months? a year?) since it will probably take quite a few years till Starship, especially the upper stage, is rapidly reusable. They can't wait that long with Artemis 3, with Sean Duffy adding pressure.

floating-io|4 months ago

On launches, it's conceivable that they can do the launches in 20 days if they do one a day. I ignore reusability, because I don't see it as required to meet the need.

They're known for moving fast, and they're building multiple pads. They're also building enormous mass manufacturing facilities in the background of all this (Gigabay and whatever). Not sure how many ships they'll be able to produce per month once the design is nailed down, but I'll bet it will surprise everyone.

SH Boosters are already effectively reusable for the purposes of this discussion; a couple of them have already re-flown. That's half the battle right there.

Boiloff prevention is presumably one of the main modifications needed for the depot. I think it's supposed to be easier with methalox than with hydrolox (which BO is using), but I have no idea the particulars of what they'll have to do there to achieve effectiveness. That said, I wouldn't be surprised if they try to cut that corner at least once; should be interesting.

The big risk that I see is neither launch nor boiloff, but rather simple fuel availability. Can they get that much methane and LOX shipped around the country that fast? I have no idea, but it seems concerning to me. Logistics...

Thing about the deadline, though, is who's going to do it faster? Blue has worse issues with their current crewed lander proposal. Nobody else has even started on one AFAIK.

My prediction is that nobody can build and fully qualify a safe moon lander with a more or less clean-sheet design in three years.

On the other hand, I can easily see Starship succeeding in a moon landing in three or four years if things go well with V3 and the refuelling research. It's a stretch -- things aren't likely to go completely smoothly -- but it's conceivable.