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So Bezos did what NASA and the Soviets did 70 years ago? /golfclap
Privatized space travel doesn't work. Communist collectivized farming also does not work. The ideologues need to accept this and get out of the way.
It's not meant to go into the orbit...it's only tourists who want to enjoy 4 mins of zero gravity!!! Current design is not feasible for orbital flight!!It is indeed an achievement, but just an incremental step. The game changer will be propulsive landing from orbit, and reusing the vehicle.
So far all the hubbub is coming from American based companies, Are there any commercial space companies working on reusable rockets outside the US?
I'm seeing what looks like a potential renaissance of private spaceflight, but only hear about it coming from over here.
Congrats to Bezos all the same, it will be a great day when we get competition in the ring of reusable rockets.
Nothing historic about it....space had done it with their grasshopper...it tested it six times!The Blue Origin rocket traveled 62 miles into space and returned to Earth upright!
Technically -- no.So Bezos did what NASA and the Soviets did 70 years ago?
What they said about aviation a loooooong time ago...Privatized space travel doesn't work.
What they said about aviation a loooooong time ago...
Not with a reusable rocket they didn't.
ok, economically viable reusable rocket.A better analogy would be lighter-than-air flight.
The Soviet Energia and Space Shuttle were both reusable. And far more capable. And it was discovered in the process that reusable craft are mostly not worthwhile because of the very high rate of attrition and enormous refit costs inherent in the industry.
ok, economically viable reusable rocket.
Lighter than air flight was not a fad but rather was replaced by a better mutation of a competing "technology" that ended up being more efficient over time. In this case, there is nothing out there so far to replace it that is more efficient in doing what it does.. so that analogy is fairly misplaced.A better analogy would be lighter-than-air flight..
Lighter than air flight was not a fad but rather was replaced by a better mutation of a competing "technology" that ended up being more efficient over time. In this case, there is nothing out there so far to replace it that is more efficient in doing what it does.. so that analogy is fairly misplaced.
Both. Orbital launches may find themselves replaced much much later on.. and privatized spaceflight may reduce itself to a single or two competing conglomerates much as today we have reduced to three major defence giants from the many of the heydays of the 60's.Are you referring to orbital launches or privatized spaceflight?
Both. Orbital launches may find themselves replaced much much later on.. and privatized spaceflight may reduce itself to a single or two competing conglomerates much as today we have reduced to three major defence giants from the many of the heydays of the 60's. But neither are going away like lighter than air travel.
But so far, there is little to motivate the development of the supergun or other holy grails of spaceflight otherwise. And again, these holy grail's are based on your perception and opinion. Opinions and perceptions based on your life experiences and education and not necessarily the accurate ones.The status quo is driven by political economy and nothing else. The Gerard Bull Supergun, or something based on the idea, could render launches obsolete in a few years of marginal R&D. The basic problem is that government agencies are disempowered by the general identity crisis of governments today and power grabs by international investment firms, who are rapidly and quite literally getting more wealth than they know what to do with. They look for quick returns and that doesn't mean spaceflight. Since inefficient orbital launches and stupid space IPOs are good enough for them, they are not interested in anything better, even if the technological or economic fundamentals indicate otherwise.