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There you are, the Saturn could have gone on for longer, maybe using less "budget intensive" launches like two a year instead of six to match the Space Shuttle.
Sorry, but you are arguing with blind faith, not with facts. Like your LEM is like a ISS module stuff - if things would be that easy to do, we would already fly to the center of the galaxy to tap our energy off it.
In reality, things have costs, schedules and requirements.
Do you know why the VAB has four high bays? Not because this adds symmetry. The Saturn V simply needed so long for assembly and integration tests, that using only one high bay would have meant much lower flight rates than it already had.
Also, have you ever bothered to look at the old videos how work was like back then? The Saturn V required hundreds of people working at the pad for getting ready for launch. People that also cost a lot of money, since you can't just lay them off between launches. The many different connections and systems at the launch pad, everything had to be operated and checked manually. Automated tests like the Shuttle has had not been possible with Saturn, only for later updates, automatic testing environments got researched - which the Shuttle received already early in its design process. Any Saturn V update (the Saturn V was essentially done by 1962 technology) would have required more and more workarounds that increase workload - only a real clean sheet redesign like the Shuttle had a chance at all to incorporate also the many tiny details for cheaper processes on the ground (yes, as funny as it sounds), that made it cheaper than the Saturn V.
Take for example something as trivial as loading the payload while the shuttle is already on the pad. The Saturn V was unable to do so, it needed the payloads to be installed on the pad. Idiots like to say that the RSS was just an air force requirement to installed payloads secretly, but that is wrong: Any good economic launcher today is like the Shuttle, designed to accept the payload as late as possible and permit work on the payload until late into the launch countdown. The shuttle has the advantage that the payload hangs way lower on it and can be accessed with simpler processes - which save time and money.
Also, the space shuttle made good use of Apollo technology anyway, do you really think it was "everything new, forget Apollo"? The Space Shuttle took the best of Apollo for it. And added stuff that no update could have added.
Really: Stop treating Apollo like it was the holy grail of spaceflight. They only landed on the moon. Not more, not less. Even Apollo astronauts envied the Shuttle astronauts because they got a spacecraft that permitted them to do much more in space, as it was possible with the Apollo program.
If you care about the economics and technology, Apollo was even way more primitive than Gemini. Simply because Apollos design was frozen already before Gemini was even started.
---------- Post added at 08:41 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:39 PM ----------
Yes, that is actually what I am actually trying to point out. The Space Shuttle needs crews, the Saturn does not.
Yes, and? The crew is the primary payload. How many spacecraft in the world can currently carry a crew of seven astronauts?
Without manned missions around it, the Saturn V would have been completely not affordable.