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"Flight proven" is the new "Certified Pre-Owned"
It would seem that "flight proven" is now "officially" to used rockets
what "certified pre-owned" is to used cars: http://www.marke****ch.com/story/spa...ets-2016-08-30 Doesn't get into terms though. rick jones -- oxymoron n, Hummer H2 with California Save Our Coasts and Oceans plates these opinions are mine, all mine; HPE might not want them anyway... feel free to post, OR email to rick.jones2 in hpe.com but NOT BOTH... |
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"Flight proven" is the new "Certified Pre-Owned"
On 8/30/2016 3:01 PM, Rick Jones wrote:
It would seem that "flight proven" is now "officially" to used rockets what "certified pre-owned" is to used cars: I noticed that little turn of phrase, and I totally approve. You don't see Boeing and Airbus loading freight and passengers into unproven aircraft. Instead, they flight test new aircraft for however long it takes to work out the inevitable kinks before delivering them to customers. Very soon, "flight proven" rockets will be seen as less risky (and therefore more valuable) than straight-from-the-factory hardware. |
#3
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"Flight proven" is the new "Certified Pre-Owned"
Vaughn Simon wrote:
On 8/30/2016 3:01 PM, Rick Jones wrote: It would seem that "flight proven" is now "officially" to used rockets what "certified pre-owned" is to used cars: I noticed that little turn of phrase, and I totally approve. You don't see Boeing and Airbus loading freight and passengers into unproven aircraft. Instead, they flight test new aircraft for however long it takes to work out the inevitable kinks before delivering them to customers. I wonder just how much testing that happens to be at this point. I suppose it depends on the maturity of the aircraft design. https://www.quora.com/How-many-round...to-the-clients seems to get into the matter, though there may be some conflating of testing there between pre-delivery and initial test aircraft testing. My take from all that though is that the plane will fly once in the hands of Boeing, and then presumably once in the hands of the customer - whether the customer's test flight is simply the flight from the factory to the customer's base isn't really discussed though. In the case of the pre-delivery flights of an aircraft, I suppose that is a good chunk of a "real" flight, but I rather doubt each new 787/whatnot does a full-endurance flight before delivery. So it is a lot like a pre-flown stage, but not completely - at least to my peanut gallery point of view. rick jones -- It is not a question of half full or empty - the glass has a leak. The real question is "Can it be patched?" these opinions are mine, all mine; HPE might not want them anyway... feel free to post, OR email to rick.jones2 in hpe.com but NOT BOTH... |
#4
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"Flight proven" is the new "Certified Pre-Owned"
On Wednesday, August 31, 2016 at 8:48:39 AM UTC+12, Vaughn Simon wrote:
On 8/30/2016 3:01 PM, Rick Jones wrote: It would seem that "flight proven" is now "officially" to used rockets what "certified pre-owned" is to used cars: I noticed that little turn of phrase, and I totally approve. You don't see Boeing and Airbus loading freight and passengers into unproven aircraft. Instead, they flight test new aircraft for however long it takes to work out the inevitable kinks before delivering them to customers. Very soon, "flight proven" rockets will be seen as less risky (and therefore more valuable) than straight-from-the-factory hardware. This is absolutely correct, and given the margins involved in the present market, will totally transform the fortunes of SpaceX. Expendable $61 million $55 million - construction $ 5 million - gross margin $ 1 million - propellant & launch costs Flight Proven (150 uses) $62 million $60 million - gross margin $ 2 million - maintenance, propellant and launch cost They can expand their fleet by a rocket with each rocket they sell. In six months they can have a fleet of eight rockets, two at each launch center, and fly one rocket a day if need be. Ideally they can then take their profit and acquire a satellite builder down on their luck, in part for 'free' launches, which basically cover the out of pocket costs and transfer large chunks of ownership in the satellite provider to SpaceX; http://spacenews.com/permira-puts-fl...s-up-for-sale/ SpaceX then announces a plan to ring the world with wireless hotspots in space, and http://spacenews.com/spacex-opening-...nd-satellites/ http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/El...ernet_999.html The internet communication satellites are expected to be in the smallsat-class 500 kg (1,100 lb)-mass. 108 of them are launched per Falcon Heavy launch. 40 launches over 20 weeks put up 4,320 - with 320 spares in 40 orbital planes. All orbiting at an altitude in sun synchronous polar orbits of 1,100 kilometers (680 mi). The 4000 satellites cross-linked via open optical broadband. The number of satellites planned is more than twice the number of operational satellites today. The satellites would be mass-produced, at much lower cost per unit of capability than existing satellites. Musk said "We’re going to try and do for satellites what we’ve done for rockets." "In order to revolutionize space, we have to address both satellites and rockets." "Smaller satellites are crucial to lowering the cost of space-based Internet and communications." In February 2015, SpaceX asked the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to consider future innovative uses of the Ka-band spectrum before the FCC commits to 5G communications regulations that would create barriers to entry, since SpaceX is a new entrant to the satellite communications market.. The SpaceX non-geostationary orbit (NGSO) communications satellite constellation will operate in the high frequency bands above 24 GHz, "where steerable earth station transmit antennas would have a wider geographic impact and significantly lower satellite altitudes magnify the impact of aggregate interference from terrestrial transmissions." The system will not compete with Iridium satellite constellation, which is designed to link directly to handsets. Instead, it will be linked to flat user terminals the size of a pizza box, which will have phased array antennas and track the satellites. The terminals can be mounted anywhere, as long as they can see the sky. In July 2015, Musk said that the constellation is still in the early planning stages and that SpaceX is being careful not to overextend the company with the project. SpaceX hopes to launch a test satellite in 2016. http://www.extremetech.com/wp-conten...satellites.jpg http://www.ey.com/Publication/vwLUAssets/ey-global-telecommunications-study-navigating-the-road-to-2020/$FILE/ey-global-telecommunications-study-navigating-the-road-to-2020.pdf http://www.internetworldstats.com/te...unications.htm http://www.statista.com/statistics/2...005-by-region/ The potential market is $1.28 trillion per year! This is quite a revenue. If SpaceX can deliver a satellite of comparable quality at 1/20th the cost of a Hughes 702 SP, that means they will reduce the price from $85 million per satellite to $17 million per satellite. 4,000 satellites at a total cost of $68 billion! Alibaba Holdings Group (NYSE:BABA), a diversified online ecommerce company based in China, went public on September 18, 2014 at a whopping $21.8 billion. Four days later, underwriters exercised an option to sell more shares, bringing the total IPO to $25 billion. Although technology companies traditionally list on NASDAQ, Alibaba chose the New York Stock Exchange for its debut and used underwriting primarily from Credit Suisse. NTT DoCoMo (NYSECM), a Tokyo‑based telecommunications player, went to the public market on October 22, 1998, raising $18.099 billion. Underwritten by Goldman Sachs Asia, this IPO launched NTT to the third largest market cap for a Japanese company. Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) was one of the most-hyped IPOs in history. It listed on May 1, 2012 and raised $16.007 billion. This social media technology company's launch was riddled with trading issues and questionable information-sharing accusations. Nevertheless, it still became the largest technology IPO in U.S. history. Nippon Tel (NYSE:NTT) is a Tokyo-based telecommunication provider. This is the oldest IPO on this list. The company raised $15.301 billion on February 9, 1987. Asian players dominate this IPO market. They are also telecom based and internet services based. So, with the right partners, and the right preparation, I believe a $68 billion underwriting could take place for a big chunk of a $1.28 trillion market! http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/abo...n-intermediate SpaceX will generate in three years an annual revenue that is 20x larger than what the world spends on space exploration. At the same time it will cost costs to 1/20th the historical cost. It will then use the increased revenue, with the lowered cost to increase the AMOUNT OF SPACE BUSINESS BY FOUR HUNDRED TIMES! They will start with; (1) Power satellites beaming laser energy from space, (2) Mining satellites mining and purifying rare materials on earth crosssing asteroids in space, (3) Vastly expanded space tourism to the moon, (4) Settlement and development of Mars, (5) Settlement and development of the dwarf planets in the asteroid belt, (6) Construction of large space colonies in the asteroid belt, (7) Reduction of terrestrial population through emmigration to Mars and the Asteroids, This will likely include the acquisition and restructuring of major aerospace firms in light of these new capabilities. |
#5
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"Flight proven" is the new "Certified Pre-Owned"
On 31/08/2016 7:49 AM, Rick Jones wrote:
Vaughn Simon wrote: On 8/30/2016 3:01 PM, Rick Jones wrote: It would seem that "flight proven" is now "officially" to used rockets what "certified pre-owned" is to used cars: I noticed that little turn of phrase, and I totally approve. You don't see Boeing and Airbus loading freight and passengers into unproven aircraft. Instead, they flight test new aircraft for however long it takes to work out the inevitable kinks before delivering them to customers. I wonder just how much testing that happens to be at this point. I suppose it depends on the maturity of the aircraft design. https://www.quora.com/How-many-round...to-the-clients seems to get into the matter, though there may be some conflating of testing there between pre-delivery and initial test aircraft testing. My take from all that though is that the plane will fly once in the hands of Boeing, and then presumably once in the hands of the customer - whether the customer's test flight is simply the flight from the factory to the customer's base isn't really discussed though. In the case of the pre-delivery flights of an aircraft, I suppose that is a good chunk of a "real" flight, but I rather doubt each new 787/whatnot does a full-endurance flight before delivery. So it is a lot like a pre-flown stage, but not completely - at least to my peanut gallery point of view. rick jones They won't explore the full envelope, but they'll test all the systems, and the mere fact that it gets into the air proves that there are no systems gotchas that will prevent it from flying, which is more than can be said for a newly built rocket sitting on the launch pad. That said, you don't expect anything in an aircraft to break on the second flight, whereas a rocket launch is quite a violent affair, and things may just survive just long enough to be about to break on the second launch. So, dunno. We'll see how it works out in practice. Sylvia. |
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"Flight proven" is the new "Certified Pre-Owned"
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#8
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"Flight proven" is the new "Certified Pre-Owned"
On Wednesday, August 31, 2016 at 7:01:51 AM UTC+12, Rick Jones wrote:
It would seem that "flight proven" is now "officially" to used rockets what "certified pre-owned" is to used cars: http://www.marke****ch.com/story/spa...ets-2016-08-30 Doesn't get into terms though. rick jones -- oxymoron n, Hummer H2 with California Save Our Coasts and Oceans plates these opinions are mine, all mine; HPE might not want them anyway... feel free to post, OR email to rick.jones2 in hpe.com but NOT BOTH... This is absolutely correct, and given the margins involved in the present market, will totally transform the fortunes of SpaceX. Expendable $61 million $55 million - construction $ 5 million - gross margin $ 1 million - propellant & launch costs Flight Proven (150 uses) $62 million $60 million - gross margin $ 2 million - maintenance, propellant and launch cost They can expand their fleet by a rocket with each rocket they sell. In six months they can have a fleet of eight rockets, two at each launch center, and fly one rocket a day if need be. Ideally they can then take their profit and acquire a satellite builder down on their luck, in part for 'free' launches, which basically cover the out of pocket costs and transfer large chunks of ownership in the satellite provider to SpaceX; http://spacenews.com/permira-puts-fl...s-up-for-sale/ SpaceX then announces a plan to ring the world with wireless hotspots in space, and http://spacenews.com/spacex-opening-...nd-satellites/ http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/El...ernet_999.html The internet communication satellites are expected to be in the smallsat-class 500 kg (1,100 lb)-mass. 108 of them are launched per Falcon Heavy launch. 40 launches over 20 weeks put up 4,320 - with 320 spares in 40 orbital planes. All orbiting at an altitude in sun synchronous polar orbits of 1,100 kilometers (680 mi). The 4000 satellites cross-linked via open optical broadband. The number of satellites planned is more than twice the number of operational satellites today. The satellites would be mass-produced, at much lower cost per unit of capability than existing satellites. Musk said "We’re going to try and do for satellites what we’ve done for rockets." "In order to revolutionize space, we have to address both satellites and rockets." "Smaller satellites are crucial to lowering the cost of space-based Internet and communications." In February 2015, SpaceX asked the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to consider future innovative uses of the Ka-band spectrum before the FCC commits to 5G communications regulations that would create barriers to entry, since SpaceX is a new entrant to the satellite communications market.. The SpaceX non-geostationary orbit (NGSO) communications satellite constellation will operate in the high frequency bands above 24 GHz, "where steerable earth station transmit antennas would have a wider geographic impact and significantly lower satellite altitudes magnify the impact of aggregate interference from terrestrial transmissions." The system will not compete with Iridium satellite constellation, which is designed to link directly to handsets. Instead, it will be linked to flat user terminals the size of a pizza box, which will have phased array antennas and track the satellites. The terminals can be mounted anywhere, as long as they can see the sky. In July 2015, Musk said that the constellation is still in the early planning stages and that SpaceX is being careful not to overextend the company with the project. SpaceX hopes to launch a test satellite in 2016. http://www.extremetech.com/wp-conten...satellites.jpg http://www.ey.com/Publication/vwLUAssets/ey-global-telecommunications-study-navigating-the-road-to-2020/$FILE/ey-global-telecommunications-study-navigating-the-road-to-2020.pdf http://www.internetworldstats.com/te...unications.htm http://www.statista.com/statistics/2...005-by-region/ The potential market is $1.28 trillion per year! This is quite a revenue. If SpaceX can deliver a satellite of comparable quality at 1/20th the cost of a Hughes 702 SP, that means they will reduce the price from $85 million per satellite to $4.25 million per satellite. 4,000 satellites at a total cost of $17 billion! Alibaba Holdings Group (NYSE:BABA), a diversified online ecommerce company based in China, went public on September 18, 2014 at a whopping $21.8 billion. Four days later, underwriters exercised an option to sell more shares, bringing the total IPO to $25 billion. Although technology companies traditionally list on NASDAQ, Alibaba chose the New York Stock Exchange for its debut and used underwriting primarily from Credit Suisse. NTT DoCoMo (NYSECM), a Tokyo‑based telecommunications player, went to the public market on October 22, 1998, raising $18.099 billion. Underwritten by Goldman Sachs Asia, this IPO launched NTT to the third largest market cap for a Japanese company. Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) was one of the most-hyped IPOs in history. It listed on May 1, 2012 and raised $16.007 billion. This social media technology company's launch was riddled with trading issues and questionable information-sharing accusations. Nevertheless, it still became the largest technology IPO in U.S. history. Nippon Tel (NYSE:NTT) is a Tokyo-based telecommunication provider. This is the oldest IPO on this list. The company raised $15.301 billion on February 9, 1987. Asian players dominate this IPO market. They are also telecom based and internet services based. So, with the right partners, and the right preparation, I believe a $17 billion underwriting could take place for a big chunk of a $1.28 trillion market! http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/abo...n-intermediate SpaceX will generate in three years an annual revenue that is 20x larger than what the world spends on space exploration. At the same time it will cost costs to 1/20th the historical cost. It will then use the increased revenue, with the lowered cost to increase the AMOUNT OF SPACE BUSINESS BY FOUR HUNDRED TIMES! They will start with; (1) Power satellites beaming laser energy from space, (2) Mining satellites mining and purifying rare materials on earth crosssing asteroids in space, (3) Vastly expanded space tourism to the moon, (4) Settlement and development of Mars, (5) Settlement and development of the dwarf planets in the asteroid belt, (6) Construction of large space colonies in the asteroid belt, (7) Reduction of terrestrial population through emmigration to Mars and the Asteroids, This will likely include the acquisition and restructuring of major aerospace firms in light of these new capabilities. |
#9
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"Flight proven" is the new "Certified Pre-Owned"
Jeff Findley wrote:
The "violence" of a launch is largely a myth for liquid fueled launch vehicles. Myth or "history"? eg pogo/whatnot. rick jones -- The glass is neither half-empty nor half-full. The glass has a leak. The real question is "Can it be patched?" these opinions are mine, all mine; HPE might not want them anyway... feel free to post, OR email to rick.jones2 in hpe.com but NOT BOTH... |
#10
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"Flight proven" is the new "Certified Pre-Owned"
William Mook wrote:
On Wednesday, August 31, 2016 at 8:48:39 AM UTC+12, Vaughn Simon wrote: On 8/30/2016 3:01 PM, Rick Jones wrote: It would seem that "flight proven" is now "officially" to used rockets what "certified pre-owned" is to used cars: I noticed that little turn of phrase, and I totally approve. You don't see Boeing and Airbus loading freight and passengers into unproven aircraft. Instead, they flight test new aircraft for however long it takes to work out the inevitable kinks before delivering them to customers. Very soon, "flight proven" rockets will be seen as less risky (and therefore more valuable) than straight-from-the-factory hardware. This is absolutely correct, and given the margins involved in the present market, will totally transform the fortunes of SpaceX. Expendable $61 million $55 million - construction $ 5 million - gross margin $ 1 million - propellant & launch costs Your numbers are bull****, but that's no surprise. Your numbers are usually bull****. For a Falcon 9 launch, total cost to customer is $62 million. SpaceX gross margin on that launch (used to cover fixed costs and net profit) is 40% or around $24 million. The remainder is the cost of the rocket, fuel, and the launch campaign (vehicle processing and stacking, launch support, etc). Launch pad operational costs are around $10 million per year. OTA studies indicate that launch and mission operations can be as much as 45% of the total costs of a launch. I assume SpaceX does better and it's down around 10% or so, so call processing, launch, fuel (at $200k-$300k) at around $4 million or so. That leaves vehicle cost around $34 million. That puts first stage cost around $25 million. Flight Proven (150 uses) This number is an order of magnitude too high. Musk has said "dozens" (not 'hundreds'), their 3 sigma estimate is "at least 10", and when you figure that you're not going to get all of them back (a 75% recovery rate would be good), estimating somewhere between 15 and 24 reuses on average per core is probably close. Last professional estimate I saw done used 15. But that's all stuff done by engineers and cost accountants, not hucksters. $62 million You're going to charge a million dollars MORE for a used rocket? I know what my reaction as a customer would be to that. "Thanks, but I'll keep my million dollars and take a brand new rocket." $60 million - gross margin $ 2 million - maintenance, propellant and launch cost This is pure bull**** AND hucksterism. You can't stack, fuel, and launch for $2 million and that doesn't covered the cost of fixed assets like the pad. You don't get the whole vehicle back; they're only doing the first stages right now, so you still have to buy a new first stage every time. And the goal isn't to gouge prices, huckster, but to cut costs so that the market expands and you get a bigger chunk of it. Let's look at what actually gets saved here. New first stage costs around $25 million. So that's around what you save. If you assume a couple dozen reuses that gets you down to around $40 million or so per launch if you keep the same $24 million or so as gross margin. And now the huckster is going to hand us the magic pixie dust. They can expand their fleet by a rocket with each rocket they sell. In six months they can have a fleet of eight rockets, two at each launch center, and fly one rocket a day if need be. And presumably the used stages just magically teleport back from the landing barge to be instantaneously fueled and fully stacked on the launch pad, because that's the only way you're going to get a launch a day out of 8 rockets. Ideally they can then take their profit and acquire a satellite builder down on their luck, in part for 'free' launches, which basically cover the out of pocket costs and transfer large chunks of ownership in the satellite provider to SpaceX; Why the **** would they do something like that? Pure hucksterism. SpaceX then announces a plan to ring the world with wireless hotspots in space, and http://spacenews.com/spacex-opening-...nd-satellites/ http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/El...ernet_999.html I'll just note that they skipped your whole step of "acquiring a satellite builder down on their luck". MookHucksterism Munched -- "Ignorance is preferable to error, and he is less remote from the truth who believes nothing than he who believes what is wrong." -- Thomas Jefferson |
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