We experienced an anomaly during today's hotfire test.
"... but the good news is that we didn't blow up ANY OTHER pads!"
We experienced an anomaly during today's hotfire test.
That's putting all of your eggs into one basket
Plus they have their own large rocket however their budget is always being used as a political football
And if the SLS blew up people would be saying that NASA should give up having their own rockets.The NASA basket seems to be the smallest, but doing fine.
The other two are on fire.
And if the SLS blew up people would be saying that NASA should give up having their own rockets.
Maybe profit was never the reason, but the same schedule pressure was certainly there. Apollo 1, STS-51L and STS-107, they all had serious schedule pressure pushing them. Apollo 1 had the political pressure of beating the Soviets and landing on the Moon before the end of the decade. STS-51L was just plain commercial pressure (shuttle was used as a public delivery vehicle for 100% commercial payloads). And STS-107 was once again political pressure to meet an arbitrary deadline of February 2004 to get the ISS assembly to a certain milestone(US Core Complete, ISS10A, Node 2 installation).NASA has had rockets blow up and it's lost crews. But there was never a profit motive behind it. It's easier to trust the safety process in such an organization than it is in a for-profit organization.
In the last 30 years, there was a great push to "make spaceflight private". We now have the results of that. The companies chasing profit have sacrificed reliability and safety in favor of moving quickly and breaking things.
NASA has had rockets blow up and it's lost crews. But there was never a profit motive behind it. It's easier to trust the safety process in such an organization than it is in a for-profit organization.
Every time a SpaceX or Blue Origin rocket blows up they have to do the exact same procedures NASA would do as mandated by the FAA and other government agencies.
Also when was the last major failure of a Falcon 9?
Or Rocket Labs Electron?
APDAF said:It's not a simple as "Hurr-durr corpos cutting costs made the rocket go boom!" because the industry is as regulated as Airliner production if not even more so because of ITAR and other things.
No?That's just it. Those rockets use technology NASA developed a long time ago. And don't ignore Falcon 1. It was just as much a learning curve for SpaceX as Electron is for Rocket lab.
Plenty of those ideas through out the 80's and 90's. Only real success was McDonnell Douglas's DC-X:No?
No-one before had even thought of trying to landing a rocket under it's own power before