Another payload flight yesterday...
... this one with a new view!
... this one with a new view!
New Shepherd was an R&D program wrapped in a business model simply to recoup some of the cost. It's as developed as it is likely to get, and they got over the introductory learning curves of landing boosters and flying man-rated spacecraft using it. Now they are launching and recovering New Glenn successfully, there's no reason to continue it.Some people with an orange lunar rocket need a lander (like, 'for yesterday') ?
New Shepherd was an R&D program wrapped in a business model simply to recoup some of the cost.
I really wonder if there is any widespread public interest in spaceflight these days. Outside of the Orbiter community I really have never heard any interest in modern spaceflight expressed by anyone, and I work in engineering where one would expect more enthusiasm. Unless there is a fiery explosion that gets posted on TikTok no one seems to care.Also it was a pretty successful, but very expensive PR program for spaceflight. I won't talk the impact on how the general public perceives spaceflight and privately operated spaceflight small there.
New Shepherd could also give you pseudo-astronaut bragging rights for barely crossing the Kármán line. But in any event, the pool of potential customers for this sort of amusement ride was always going to be minuscule. The costs don't scale so well, so developing something where they could send masses up and down for costs comparable to say a first-class airline ticket simply isn't going to happen.But even with accepting high losses, the costs for one seat were much too high to find enough customers. Or offer something extraordinary for this price. A rather cramped cabin negates pretty much everything you can get from having 3 minutes of freefall instead of mere 20 seconds in a vomit comet.
I really don't think anyone is very interested in this sort of business model for its own sake. Even a more airliner-like infrastructure like Virgin Galactic couldn't make the economics work. The sad reality is that there is very little profit to be had trying to give less-than-excessively-wealthy people access to space. The customers are going to be governments, large corporations, and billionaires.I believe (don't shoot me!), that the next company to try this market needs a vastly improved propulsion technology, because the mass fraction is the limiting factor for how much mass you can devote to safety, comfort and amusement - And New Shepherd did a lot right there! Sorry SpaceX, but I don't see you getting there with your strengths and strategy.
I really don't think anyone is very interested in this sort of business model for its own sake. Even a more airliner-like infrastructure like Virgin Galactic couldn't make the economics work. The sad reality is that there is very little profit to be had trying to give less-than-excessively-wealthy people access to space. The customers are going to be governments, large corporations, and billionaires.
This would be a steal, and SpaceX would be losing massive amounts of money if this was the case.What if you could get from London to Australia in 90 minutes and it merely cost you three times the normal ticket costs, crosses the karman line and offers you 35 minutes of microgravity. How many people would take that offer? Enough for, lets say, a 40 pax cabin?
(And I would instantly do it like the pope and kiss the ground after I got out of this ride)
Let's take that $2 million number per mission as an order of magnitude estimate, and seat 100 passengers (indicated capacity of Starship if it carries passengers). For SpaceX to just break even would require a ticket cost of $20,000, twenty times our London to Sydney airline flight. And, knowing capitalism, they probably would like to have some profit on top of this.
Point-to-point InterContinental Ballistic Meatships aren't going to be a thing at this price point.