> Everytime I read news like this it just furthers the impression in my mind that Congress's SLS (and that rocket program is truly owned by Congress, not NASA) is an incredible waste of money that makes your average military recruitment contract red-faced with embarrassment.<p>Welcome to alt-space point of view of a few decades. Looking at NASA contracts - and Congress mandates for them - you can easily guess that the goal of them isn't space related, but something else - maybe politics related, when you have a fell-good agency, lots of work contracts distributed across many states and producing jobs for same old ways of doing things. If one would care about space exploration, one should definitely use modern opportunities for faster, better and cheaper technology. And even if, as in case of SpaceX, you have more mission failures for unmanned missions, you still have net savings and tremendous advantage in the speed of development.
It's great that we are seeing competition and the video is nice and all. But I wonder how will BE leapfrog the development steps to produce a vehicle almost as capable as Falcon Heavy (45t vs. 50t to LEO) with no prior experience with orbital vehicles ?<p>Development of Falcon 1 started more than a decade ago, SpaceX went through multiple design iterations, test vehicles (Grasshopper) and expensive failures and FH is still maybe a year away, despite being essentially a bundle of Falcons 9 (itself, a very smart strategy to move forward by leveraging their proven capabilities and minimize risk).<p>A large innovative rocket like Glenn might cost a billion dollars to design, build and launch. A billion dollars for an experiment that might fail on the first go. I want to believe Glenn will fly before 2030, but what I would like to see from Bezos is less ego and more roadmap details, a firm monetary commitment from himself or other financiers, etc.
Everytime I read news like this it just furthers the impression in my mind that Congress's SLS (and that rocket program is truly owned by Congress, not NASA) is an incredible waste of money that makes your average military recruitment contract red-faced with embarrassment.<p>The US needs to create a heavy lift variant of the commercial orbital transportation services contract (COTS) [1] and/or the Commercial Crew Development program (CCDev) [2] and scrap the SLS program or at least release it from it's stupid congressional requirement to use grandfathered space shuttle contractors.<p>Estimates for the true cost of each space shuttle launch, which NASA and Congress were always cagey about, range from 700 million to over one billion dollars ( $196B/133 flights [3] ). The cost of the entire COTS program that created "two new U.S. medium-class launch vehicles and two automated cargo spacecraft"[4] as a replacement for the shuttle's cargo services was <i>$800 million</i>, less than or equal to the cost of a <i>single</i> shuttle flight.<p>In light of that it's always frustrating that I see the US dinking around with the $10+ billion dollar Orion program [5] or talk about throwing good money after bad by adding astronauts to the EM-1 mission. I mean, come on! How tied to corporate kickback interests and tiny amounts of local jobs can you get? Can Congress really not see the big picture here and the idea that we could have more people and mass in space (and probably job on the ground too) for a fraction of the current program costs?<p>[1] <a href="https://www.nasa.gov/commercial-orbital-transportation-services-cots" rel="nofollow">https://www.nasa.gov/commercial-orbital-transportation-servi...</a><p>[2] <a href="https://www.nasa.gov/content/commercial-crew-program-the-essentials/" rel="nofollow">https://www.nasa.gov/content/commercial-crew-program-the-ess...</a><p>[3] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Shuttle_program" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Shuttle_program</a><p>[4] <a href="https://www.nasa.gov/content/nasa-releases-cots-final-report" rel="nofollow">https://www.nasa.gov/content/nasa-releases-cots-final-report</a><p>[5] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion_(spacecraft)" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion_(spacecraft)</a>