"Jensen described an iterative process of flight and ground tests. “That will wind up determining how many missions we need,” she said.

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson then stepped in. “The question was, how many fuel transfers?”

“I will say it will roughly be ten-ish,” Jensen responded. “It could be lower, depending on how well the first flight tests go, or it could be a little bit higher.”"

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Soooo what brings you to the SpaceX community? Lol.

    I’m glad that NASA, who has much more information than the public, invested in such an ambitious program. I’ve enjoyed following the development and demo flights. I’m looking forward to upcoming tests and hopeful that they’ll be successful. Sometimes it’s fun to just be a spaceflight fan.

    The Artemis program as a whole is pretty cursed with weird political motivations and slow contractors. SLS and Orion were Congressionally mandated to fly in 2016, but took until 2022. NASA didn’t award the first HLS development contracts until 2020. I’m disappointed that Starship HLS is behind schedule, but it’s more ambitious than everything else in the program, so I’m inclined to give it more leeway than the mobile launcher, EUS, spacesuits, etc.

    • @[email protected]
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      -11 year ago

      Popped up on my general feed. Nothing special in particular.

      Yep. Fun to be a spaceflight fan, especially when an ironically now Nazi free NASA is funding a company run by a fascist lunatic megalomaniac liar and conman who has underdelivered on basically everything he has promised to everyone in the past 5 years that it should be obvious to everyone right now and built a cult of personality around himself that is impervious to seeing the obvious.

      Yep, Artemis has been fucked too.

      But it like actually works and is following basically well understood general rocket and spacecraft design principles instead of spending a decade plus telling absolutely ludicrous impossible lies about what theyre going to do.

      Also relatively important is that the Artemis program is not likely to be cancelled, whereas SpaceX is highly likely to go bankrupt.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        “SLS and Orion are boring, normal, and work” (and expensive) are actually a big reason why I could see Artemis getting cancelled. Nobody outside of huge nerds or people in the industry knows or cares about Artemis. “Didn’t we already do that?” The program needs something exciting and new to get any public interest.

        Could you give sources on SpaceX potential bankruptcy? People have been saying that for years, but the company seems stronger than ever. Even Starlink, one of their craziest projects, has been toying with cash flow positivity.

        As far as the rest of the company, Falcon and Dragon are the darlings of the DoD and NASA. Falcon has helped change the game for commercial spaceflight.

        I’m not going to get into the Musk stuff here. He’s pretty awful. I wish he never got involved with Twitter or politics or anything. I look forward to Rocket Lab and Relativity getting their bigger rockets up and running to give them some competition.