NASA Has A New Problem With The Moon Mission (Artemis)

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  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 850

  • @TheSpaceRaceYT
    @TheSpaceRaceYT  Месяц назад +12

    Sign up for the weekly Space Race newsletter here: www.thespacerace.news/subscribe

    • @GardaOrban
      @GardaOrban Месяц назад

      One step for the American man one giant leap for the Orbán!
      This is what we have always fought for
      We are not a mixed race and we do not want to become a mixed race
      We want to be like we became 1100 years ago here in the Carpathian Basin
      We will be able to maintain Hungary's biological future without migrants”

  • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
    @paulmichaelfreedman8334 Месяц назад +218

    One thing's for sure, Bechtel can stay a family company for the next 200 years with what they've raked in on this order.

    • @naughtiusmaximus830
      @naughtiusmaximus830 Месяц назад +11

      They must know where the bodies are buried to remain independent like that.

    • @PC160
      @PC160 Месяц назад +13

      They made "yuge" profits during the Gulf War, Iraq invasion, Afghanistan, etc. No-bid contracts have fed them well.

    • @TheVkaz
      @TheVkaz Месяц назад

      Knapp

    • @AbortYurfetuses
      @AbortYurfetuses 24 дня назад

      Like Elon's goose stepping family.

    • @PhoenixGrov
      @PhoenixGrov 10 дней назад

      This is pocket change for them...they do this kinds of things in all states of the US and many countries in the world. Something like this megaproject is how the war in Iraq started

  • @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958
    @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958 Месяц назад +284

    Giving a government contract to the lowest bidder on a cost-plus contract is hiring the biggest liar and paying him for every promise broken.

    • @ngamashaka4894
      @ngamashaka4894 Месяц назад +21

      Well, as a proud owner of a house, I can say it is the normal way of doing things in the construction business :(

    • @StillAliveAndKicking_
      @StillAliveAndKicking_ Месяц назад +6

      @@ngamashaka4894SLS is a bit more complex than even your house.

    • @ngamashaka4894
      @ngamashaka4894 Месяц назад +16

      @@StillAliveAndKicking_More complex, but in the end they make you pay extras once they've made holes in your walls and say they find complications that require you to pay right now or they'll leave you that way and leave... I've already been there, it's not that complex, it's just a scam...

    • @tbounds4812
      @tbounds4812 Месяц назад +4

      @@StillAliveAndKicking_we all know sls is more complex than a house why’d you say that

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Месяц назад

      @@tbounds4812 Best comment award here so far!! LOL

  • @gabrielgross6498
    @gabrielgross6498 Месяц назад +348

    Getting a NASA contract or any government contract is like hitting the lottery. You can do unsatisfactory work not meet a single deadline and still get paid 400x the quoted price lol.

    • @ginog5037
      @ginog5037 Месяц назад

      Wait until President Trump is in the WH, the game will end...

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Месяц назад +27

      Yes, perhaps today, but during the 60's it ensured your company would go down in history for as long as there is true history, like the Grumman aircraft company, which built all the Apollo lunar landers that performed flawlessly, including the one that saved the Apolo 13 astronauts!! :D

    • @marting1056
      @marting1056 Месяц назад +6

      Stop bashing spaceX! they are trying to do their best....😉

    • @mattzera1
      @mattzera1 Месяц назад

      Cost plus pricing is the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard of. It’s basically an open scam and probably a way for people to allow their buddies in the private sector to massively profit. There has to be corruption involved.

    • @Theaveragegamer_12
      @Theaveragegamer_12 Месяц назад +7

      Like Boeing and their failure of a capsule. In the unsatisfactory case specifically.

  • @JamesField
    @JamesField Месяц назад +72

    As a non-American, please forgive my ignorance, but how does a lunar rover (VIPER) get cancelled for going 30% over budget, despite being nearly complete, but a mobile launcher is allowed to go more than 500% over budget and still move forward?

    • @tombowen9861
      @tombowen9861 Месяц назад +26

      NASA and other US Federal projects depend heavily on congressional friends. My impression is that VIPER was too small to have big supporters. Projects like SLS and companies like Bechtel have old, powerful friends in many states that help keep projects from getting canceled despite their obvious insanity in the new world of reusable rockets.

    • @criticalevent
      @criticalevent Месяц назад

      Because cost-plus contracts are an infinite money glitch where as in house projects are doomed to be killed by congress so they can get cost-plus contracts for the companies they hold shares in.

    • @wolffang489
      @wolffang489 Месяц назад

      My understanding is that unfortunately government space projects are more of a money distribution scheme than actually goal oriented in the last few decades. Enough of congress doesn't actually care about the results that they'll just vote whatever promises their favored states the most money and jobs for the most years. A job that actually gets done below budget is the enemy of these kind of projects. The 30% over thing was likely just lip service so they don't look like fools for cancelling it.

    • @stevenobrien557
      @stevenobrien557 Месяц назад +2

      Because if that rover was going to screw up the entire Artemis program then you bet they would get the needed authorisation.

    • @JamesField
      @JamesField Месяц назад +4

      @@stevenobrien557 but my question is why? I heard it's a new rule that projects can't go more than 30% over budget, hence the VIPER cancellation, but why doesn't that rule apply to other projects? Either it's a rule or not. Either apply it to everything or rescind it altogether.

  • @BigHeadAvenger
    @BigHeadAvenger Месяц назад +138

    Cost Plus contracts are a way to fleece the govt. These companies do not care about the end result because they know they will get paid, regardless.

    • @jamesogden7756
      @jamesogden7756 Месяц назад +17

      Congressional mandates.
      Blame Congress. And NASA.

    • @junkyarddogFO4
      @junkyarddogFO4 Месяц назад

      They are not fleecing the govt. they are fleecing the tax payers. Which is why NASA was never capable of performing within a budget. Just as it is with anything the govt. participates in.

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Месяц назад +10

      @@jamesogden7756 yes, and congressional budget cuts of NASA, in the 70's, ensured that we would not be on Mars by the 80's or 90's! And Carter even let out first space station, Sky Lab, crash to earth!

    • @JFSmith-nb8hf
      @JFSmith-nb8hf Месяц назад +6

      Good'ol boy aerospace. Congressman bought and paid for.

    • @samus598
      @samus598 Месяц назад

      Yep.SpaceX and Elon claimed they would reduce cost to orbit by 90%. Instead they cost more than ever.
      But he got friendly w the administration and got a ridiculous contract.

  • @ConradSpoke
    @ConradSpoke Месяц назад +89

    Bechtel knew exactly how much the ML2 launcher would cost, every piece of metal, every weld. This is what they've done for over a century. Their cost hikes were planned from the beginning. It's corporate extortion, plain and simple.

    • @dustup2249
      @dustup2249 Месяц назад

      Agree. Every NASA contract is "cost plus" for the specific reason of back channel election campaign funding.
      Joe Biden appointed his Senator BFF Bill Nelson to make sure the DNC spice would flow no matter what the conditions were for project viability. Politics first, Moon and Mars second. Artemis is failing because Trump is so stubborn and will not die or drop out so more money has to come off the Artemis project to fight Trump.

    • @bobweiram6321
      @bobweiram6321 Месяц назад +9

      And they're not a public company. They're owned by one family. Give that a thought....

    • @stevenobrien557
      @stevenobrien557 Месяц назад +1

      What rubbish. No one can exactly predict the cost of materials and labour in the future. You can only make educated guesses then when you throw in pandemics, global conflicts etc...

    • @dustup2249
      @dustup2249 Месяц назад

      @@stevenobrien557 Gahahaha! Look everybody! Another taxpayer scamming cost plus contract writer.

    • @chancepayne3013
      @chancepayne3013 17 дней назад +2

      ​@stevenobrien557 you are correct, but I think you can get it pretty close at least, probably millions of contractors do it every day, ford essentially created a boom town around, one of their new plants amidist a material shortage and haven't really had much financial problems aside from one contractor that was known to be a shiester

  • @CanadianConservativeGuy
    @CanadianConservativeGuy Месяц назад +51

    The future of Boeing has never looked dimmer then right now you mean . 😂

    • @ruvanefriebus-cv6td
      @ruvanefriebus-cv6td Месяц назад +3

      Boeing is hoping Elon can get Dragon to fetch them 😂

    • @wolffang489
      @wolffang489 Месяц назад +1

      Boeing is a dying lightbulb flickering right now.

  • @richardloewen7177
    @richardloewen7177 Месяц назад +28

    When I was in engineering school in the late 70s, and in engineering in the 80s, Bechtel had a stellar reputation. SIGH!

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Месяц назад +3

      yup, long before today's "hiring practices". You actually had to know stuff for the job at hand!

    • @javaman7199
      @javaman7199 Месяц назад +3

      Back then, so did Boeing.

    • @edwarddesposito4476
      @edwarddesposito4476 Месяц назад +2

      What happens when kids take over the family business?

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Месяц назад +1

      @@edwarddesposito4476 party party party, and "WTF, oh sh*t now what"? ;D

    • @jantjarks7946
      @jantjarks7946 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@edwarddesposito4476 The first generation builds up the business, the second keeps intact the business and the third brings through the business.
      Not sure how many, not just family businesses went through that cycle.
      😉

  • @simonsnaplick895
    @simonsnaplick895 Месяц назад +138

    Meanwhile, SpaceX uses off-the-shelf technology to move the Starship.

    • @andrewdillon7837
      @andrewdillon7837 Месяц назад +24

      And built another tower from pre built levels ,,that crane was cool to see being assembled..

    • @neutrino78x
      @neutrino78x Месяц назад +29

      ok, but they're still building this huge rocket that isn't necessary....and NASA stupidly made the lunar program dependent on it. The contract should have said, "lander must fit on same stack as Orion, and be light enough that it can be launched on the same launch as Orion."

    • @chipblood
      @chipblood Месяц назад +13

      @@neutrino78x I'm hopeful that some of these newer rockets coming online will produce a better plan. Perhaps a revisit of the Dynetic HLS will be in order. I love StarShip and am a huge fan of the Mars project but I'm not a fan of the Starship Lunar program. It will eventually work but it's not optimal for NASA. I feel like no one involved ever thought we were really "going."

    • @battlebornsupermoto954
      @battlebornsupermoto954 Месяц назад

      ​@neutrino78x no no no no. Nasa stupidly made the SLS... Nasa needs to give up on rockets and just do payloads. Saving tax payers billions.

    • @JamesRobertSmith
      @JamesRobertSmith Месяц назад

      SpaceX sucks!

  • @OhShiitakeMushrooms
    @OhShiitakeMushrooms Месяц назад +98

    Artemis is a joke. Bring back the old 1960 Apollo rockets and astronauts out of retirement that knew how to fly them and land on the moon. It’s embarrassing that we basically have to re-teach ourselves what we accomplish 60 years ago.

    • @TheAmericanCatholic
      @TheAmericanCatholic Месяц назад +32

      Just scrap the artimis program at this point I’m sorry but it needs to go the spacex starship , new Glenn, falcon heavy ,falcon 9 are more practical vehicles

    • @high-captain-BaLrog
      @high-captain-BaLrog Месяц назад +17

      The 1400+ German gentlemen you mean. Hmmm

    • @haiscore2614
      @haiscore2614 Месяц назад +9

      They could do Saturn V again but that misses the point of a permanent base on the moon.

    • @haiscore2614
      @haiscore2614 Месяц назад +6

      @@high-captain-BaLrog And with 20x the budget of current NASA.

    • @conveyor2
      @conveyor2 Месяц назад +6

      Update:: they're dead.

  • @davebooth5608
    @davebooth5608 Месяц назад +15

    I love the outro’s on this channel! There’s no like and subscribe or join this or that! When the information stops, the video stops! I like it!

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Месяц назад +3

      Yes, agreed. I do like a channel I like, like this one, but I don't need to be asked to like what I instinctively know I'm likely to like!! :D

    • @davebooth5608
      @davebooth5608 Месяц назад +1

      @@ronschlorff7089 exactly

  • @jimplante8269
    @jimplante8269 Месяц назад +24

    300 million ..
    Now 2,7 Billion !!!
    FTS !!
    10 LAUNCHES FROM FALCON...
    HALF A BILLION ..
    with a few
    Falcon Heavies included

    • @skgamer-zs6en
      @skgamer-zs6en Месяц назад +2

      honestly at this point if the government started pouring taxpayer's money into spaceX instead of nasa's stupid contracts we would already have a moon base and mars landings.

    • @skgamer-zs6en
      @skgamer-zs6en Месяц назад +5

      litreally 2.7 billion to build essentially a mobile barebones steel platform with tracks attached to it.

    • @Domemilkyrayyy
      @Domemilkyrayyy Месяц назад

      ​@@skgamer-zs6en I can do a moon and Mars colony at the same time, with that kinda money.

    • @TheBehemyth-extras
      @TheBehemyth-extras 15 дней назад

      300mil-2,7
      That’s a good thing
      Million😳

    • @richarddavis2605
      @richarddavis2605 13 дней назад

      @@skgamer-zs6en ikr! pretty sure Caterpillar have something like this in a catalogue

  • @FerociousPancake888
    @FerociousPancake888 Месяц назад +38

    I just don’t understand why the government is still using 60s techniques and ideologies 85 years later.

    • @yourdeadhomieinmywood4175
      @yourdeadhomieinmywood4175 Месяц назад +1

      Makes yu think maybe we never really upgraded in technology

    • @vosechu
      @vosechu Месяц назад +7

      Because congress told them they had to. There were a bunch of companies in congressional districts that lobbied for the contracts and so congress required nasa to use outdated parts so the contractors could get them off their hands.

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Месяц назад +1

      yup, maybe, but the work force was much different then too. If you did not "cut it", for your job, you got fired. And of course there is a "big elephant" in the room, saying "don' t try to fix what ain't broken", regarding the moon, and then points, with its long trunk, to 6 "stellar" examples of what it means by that! ;D

    • @dave7038
      @dave7038 Месяц назад

      In less than 3 decades they'll be using '60s technology in the '50s!

    • @JasonRasmussen
      @JasonRasmussen Месяц назад

      Because it's the governed.

  • @SebastianWellsTL
    @SebastianWellsTL Месяц назад +87

    At this rate SpaceX will have a base on the moon before NASA does!

    • @amentco8445
      @amentco8445 Месяц назад +28

      spoiler: the Chinese do it first.

    • @filonin2
      @filonin2 Месяц назад +7

      SpaceX is launching NASA's moon base though so that doesn't make sense. SLS is only to launch the crew.

    • @haiscore2614
      @haiscore2614 Месяц назад +1

      @@amentco8445 China still hasn't built any of the required infrastructure to do it.

    • @SebastianWellsTL
      @SebastianWellsTL Месяц назад +10

      @@filonin2 My point is with the progress being made with Starship it could be able to support every aspect of the Artemis program without the need of launching a single SLS.
      You are right it would still be NASA but with all SpaceX technology. That was my point not that SpaceX would go off and build a moon base without NASA's support.

    • @SebastianWellsTL
      @SebastianWellsTL Месяц назад

      @@amentco8445 I highly doubt that.

  • @Jae-dw
    @Jae-dw Месяц назад +15

    Oh Damn,Bechtel? They did "The big dig" in boston. Guess they Haven't gotten any better since

    • @rootvalley2
      @rootvalley2 Месяц назад +1

      They built the largest electric power plant in Wisconsin

    • @richarddavis2605
      @richarddavis2605 13 дней назад

      @@rootvalley2 on time and on budget?

    • @richarddavis2605
      @richarddavis2605 13 дней назад +1

      like Boeing they are very good at extracting money for their owners. Engineering? They are mid. Project Management? Not great.

  • @1111earthangel
    @1111earthangel Месяц назад +37

    NASA needs to get there sh*t together and stop wasting money!

    • @vosechu
      @vosechu Месяц назад +8

      Congress requires nasa to spend in certain categories. The White House recommended that funding for sls and orion be cut dramatically, but congress raised them instead. Meanwhile they cut funding to basically all the other programs we love and care about. NASA isn’t the problem, lobbyists and congress people are.

    • @MrAlbertaSurfer
      @MrAlbertaSurfer Месяц назад

      They're wasting about .5% of your money compared to how much the military wastes. You think NASA burns cash in cost plus contracts? Look into a few military contracts if you want to be triggered about the govt wasting your money...

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Месяц назад

      @@vosechu True, every word! I just heard that a "certain candidate" has mentioned they will be getting Elon as a government program auditor to seek out and destroy gov't waste, fraud, and excessive spending. I imagine Mr. Musk might have some interest in certain agencies more than others. So, you all know what to do in a few months, if you like space! ;D LOL

    • @connorhale599
      @connorhale599 17 дней назад +2

      Its politicians jobs to waste it, something they're very very very good at.

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 17 дней назад

      @@connorhale599 certainly seems to be a job requirement!!

  • @jamskinner
    @jamskinner Месяц назад +28

    Artemis needs to be restructured even if it pushes things back. Dump SLS. Use a modified dragon to get astronauts to space. Rendezvous with starship. Cancel gateway.

    • @vosechu
      @vosechu Месяц назад +6

      If only it were allowed. Congress requires nasa to spend in certain categories. The White House recommended that funding for sls and orion be cut dramatically, but congress raised them instead. Meanwhile they cut funding to basically all the other programs we love and care about. NASA isn’t the problem, lobbyists and congress people are.

    • @eleventy-seven
      @eleventy-seven Месяц назад

      Go to mars.

    • @SpottedHares
      @SpottedHares Месяц назад +1

      SLS can reach the moon, dragon can only reach low orbit. Are you a dumbass or a dumb fuck?

    • @DanielGregory-h5x
      @DanielGregory-h5x Месяц назад

      A little bit of hardship and youre ready to give up. No wonder were not on the moon..

    • @WJV9
      @WJV9 16 дней назад

      @@eleventy-seven - Have to get to the moon first and learn from there.

  • @EricRobinsoncav3manb0b
    @EricRobinsoncav3manb0b Месяц назад +6

    I like how abruptly these videos end.

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Месяц назад +1

      yes, and I like how "abruptly" they come back again, in a few days!! ;D

  • @PMX
    @PMX Месяц назад +4

    11:27 could not stop replaying this 😅

  • @stink1701
    @stink1701 Месяц назад +7

    Should make Boeing pay for it. The way I see it they owe NASA some money.

  • @jackf.7415
    @jackf.7415 Месяц назад +3

    ML1 was only designed for the A1X. It was not designed to support the weight of the larger Constellation Program Rockets or SLS.

  • @Jimmysage3273
    @Jimmysage3273 Месяц назад +3

    Us military budget-841 billion
    NASA high end budget- requesting 2.1 billion
    Cost per launch of Apollo Aprox-400 million = 3.5 billion today. NASA is requesting 2.1b to complete everything and launch and that is less than one Apollo launch it’s crazy people should be more excited and 2.1 billion is nothing considering what it’s going towards

  • @ericblanchard5873
    @ericblanchard5873 Месяц назад +13

    I don't know why, but I can't stay tuned into this guys voice. I apologize, but I can listen to the original guy all day.

    • @bobdougmckenzie5755
      @bobdougmckenzie5755 Месяц назад +3

      Try speeding it up to 1.25 speed. i do that with other videos when the speaker seems to be dragging it longer than I'm willing to spend. Just a suggestion.

    • @elijah_9392
      @elijah_9392 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@bobdougmckenzie5755
      Good suggestion, thank you.

  • @edwarddesposito4476
    @edwarddesposito4476 Месяц назад +2

    A cost plus contract should have never been an option. They are not developing and inventing any technology from scratch. They are building essentially what has already been built with changes to the configuration and size.

  • @T1hitsTheHighestNote
    @T1hitsTheHighestNote Месяц назад +31

    And people are complaining that the Starship program is taking more time than first promissed.

    • @larry7124
      @larry7124 Месяц назад +2

      And some of that do to the FAA's bullshit

    • @samus598
      @samus598 Месяц назад +5

      Lol they blew though all theit money and still haven't successfuly made it to orbit with test cargo.

    • @thedarkcorrupter
      @thedarkcorrupter Месяц назад +3

      @@samus598probably because it’s a fully reusable vehicle. Their tests have been for reliability, including their orbital tests. The next one is going to attempt a landing, after that will be cargo and further refinement.
      So far it’s the most powerful rocket on earth and it’s cheaper than SLS.

    • @SpottedHares
      @SpottedHares Месяц назад +1

      @@thedarkcorrupteryet after 4 launches it can’t even pull off a successful Apollo 4 while the SlS is at Apollo 8.

    • @thedarkcorrupter
      @thedarkcorrupter Месяц назад +1

      @@SpottedHares that’s incredibly dumb. SLS has had a single launch after 20 years of development and in its current configuration it can’t land anyone on the moon. One vehicle is designed to be discarded after a single use and the other is designed to be fully reusable. Starships launches are just tests for the basics of what it will be doing. Which by the way SLS still needs starship to even land on the moon. There is no Apollo 11 without starship.

  • @cometochristtoday
    @cometochristtoday 19 дней назад +2

    Apollo Detectives on youtube has lots of video on NASA

  • @Greysquirrel98
    @Greysquirrel98 Месяц назад +6

    The second after China announces a launch date, we ll be on the moon in a week 😂

  • @chrisy2128
    @chrisy2128 28 дней назад +2

    SpaceX already has it's own suits that it tested on Polaris Dawn. It will likely fly Starship unmanned to the moon before Artemis III, and I wouldn't be surprised if it landed people on the moon independently before NASA is able to.

  • @Voltaire-b8p
    @Voltaire-b8p Месяц назад +1

    We totally landed on the moon 55 years ago

  • @NeonVisual
    @NeonVisual Месяц назад +6

    SpaceX make NASA look like it's stuck in the 80's, which of course they are.

  • @T_Mo271
    @T_Mo271 Месяц назад +1

    You nailed it in one phrase: "cost-plus contract".

  • @Right-Handed_Neutrino
    @Right-Handed_Neutrino Месяц назад +1

    Gotta love that Cost Plus Plus Plus Plus contract

  • @ronschlorff7089
    @ronschlorff7089 Месяц назад +2

    Yes, there are always problems with space craft and rockets. I recall being a kid, "the space case" as I was called by my high school chums, in the 1960's, constantly skipping school to watch live space launches, on our glorious black and white TV, with "rabbit ears", which invariably, it seemed, got cancelled or postponed at the last few minutes. My poor mom had to write lots of "he was sick" notes for me. LOL. The teachers caught on and asked me to write a "news report" on all the space launches, when I was "sick", for extra credit in my science classes!! LOL :D

  • @dionysus2006
    @dionysus2006 Месяц назад +1

    Why is a Lunar gateway needed? Launch equipment from LEO to the Lunar surface using Starship cargo vessels. When enough components are on the surface launch a crew to LEO to the HLS using Crew Dragon (which has a LES) and send them to the Lunar surface. They would set up the base, a solar farm, and construct a landing pad then return to LEO and back to Earth on Crew Dragon. All this depends on a LEO propellent depot which I think should be 3 Starship tankers with 2 more Starships with cryo-chillers and solar panels. Since Starship is design to launch multiple times per week it would just keep launching to keep the propellent deport full on a continuing basis similar to Starlink. It doesn't need to be tied to a mission.

  • @Consf3aracy
    @Consf3aracy Месяц назад +3

    Im calling it now, NASA dont put anyone on the Moon before 2030

    • @mikepatton8691
      @mikepatton8691 Месяц назад

      Who knows when NASA actually gets their sh*t together, but unfortunately one thing is looking more likely, I'm willing to bet that China lands humans on the moon before NASA does. If China does that then even a basic Chinese moon base probably won't be far behind since whoever gets there first will be able to claim dibs on the best location with access to water ice.

  • @raedwulf61
    @raedwulf61 Месяц назад +6

    By the time NASA astronauts get to the moon, they will have to show their passports to Chinese customs agents.

  • @TheRocket995
    @TheRocket995 Месяц назад +2

    This is so sad and ridiculous how the country and nasa let all this happen

  • @DISCMANJEFF
    @DISCMANJEFF Месяц назад +2

    Let Elon take over... He could do it for half......

  • @Leoatwallacerockhole
    @Leoatwallacerockhole Месяц назад +2

    Its ok SpaceX will go it alone.

  • @ads06.1
    @ads06.1 Месяц назад +2

    NASA's biggest obstacle? NASA. In a relatively short period, China (CNSA) has caught up to and equaled the combined efforts of NASA, ESA, JAXA, and ROSCOSMOS when it comes to manned space operations and exploration. It totally makes sense that ROSCOSMOS and CNSA will start teaming up and I wouldn't be surprised if ESA joins them in the near future.

  • @tmcdowell5986
    @tmcdowell5986 Месяц назад +1

    No problem. Launch SLS with an Exploration Upper Stage and a landing vehicle but without the Orion. Once in a stable LEO, launch the Orion on a Falcon Heavy and rendezvous with the Exploration Upper Stage. Go to Moon. Land and return.

  • @garethmurtagh2814
    @garethmurtagh2814 Месяц назад +1

    50 years ago NASA rebuilt one of the Saturn V Launch Towers to incorporate “The Milk Stool” enabling the Saturn IB to operate off it to support Skylab. They also relocated the crew access arm on another to provide ground access into Skylab before launch. All on a shoestring budget 🤷‍♂️

  • @ZachariahJ
    @ZachariahJ Месяц назад +1

    Destin from Getting Smarter explained in great detail why Artemis has so many problems.
    I can't see it happening at all.
    But some people will make a great deal of money, and that's the important thing!

  • @j33psh0p
    @j33psh0p Месяц назад +18

    It's gotta be cheaper to just scrap all this and start from scratch with NO cost-plus contracts--to Space X.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад +1

      I would add in other companies as backups.

    • @vosechu
      @vosechu Месяц назад +5

      If only it were allowed. Congress requires nasa to spend in certain categories. The White House recommended that funding for sls and orion be cut dramatically, but congress raised them instead. Meanwhile they cut funding to basically all the other programs we love and care about. NASA isn’t the problem, lobbyists and congress people are.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад

      @@vosechu both are. But congress wants the pork to roll in in order to get votes.

    • @Quasi-stellar_object
      @Quasi-stellar_object Месяц назад

      Just film it again in studio or do CGI as always.

    • @SpottedHares
      @SpottedHares Месяц назад

      Space x the company that can’t get past low earth orbit is gonna get to the moon faster then a rocket that has already done so? Are you stupid, or just a blithering moron?

  • @SebastianWellsTL
    @SebastianWellsTL Месяц назад +17

    SLS is obsolete! It's a piece of technology from a bygone era and it should have stayed in that era.

    • @helifanodobezanozi7689
      @helifanodobezanozi7689 Месяц назад +6

      Blame Congress (from 10-20 years ago) for wanting to save shuttle era jobs.

    • @vosechu
      @vosechu Месяц назад +3

      Congress requires nasa to do this. The White House recommended that funding for sls and orion be cut dramatically, but congress raised them instead. Meanwhile they cut funding to basically all the other programs we love and care about. NASA isn’t the problem, lobbyists and congress people are.

    • @DanielGregory-h5x
      @DanielGregory-h5x Месяц назад

      I dont know where you get your information but you are 100% wrong.

  • @brettcoster4781
    @brettcoster4781 Месяц назад

    Great overview of what's happening in space. Many thanks.

  • @esbrasill
    @esbrasill Месяц назад +4

    This lander sounds like a good excuse to cancel the whole Artemis project

  • @Nrstudime
    @Nrstudime 18 дней назад

    Launch habitation lest goooo 🎉🎉

  • @Yuvi2909
    @Yuvi2909 Месяц назад +3

    At this point they should either abandon the project and start off fresh again or just replace SLS with Starship.

    • @filonin2
      @filonin2 Месяц назад +1

      They are meant to work in concert as the Starship is not anywhere near human rated.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад

      @filonin2
      How many humans have flown on SLS? What shape was the capsule in after the first test flight?

    • @TheSteveSteele
      @TheSteveSteele Месяц назад +1

      Starship needs to refuel in space at least a dozen times. That’s something that’s never been attempted before. The SLS is not a bad design like some around like to think it is. Repurposing old hardware designs saves money. And the SLS has already flown to the moon and back. SpaceX is WAY behind at this point. They haven’t built the HLS, Starship still hasn’t completed a single orbit around earth. It’s not human rated, (obviously). SpaceX isn’t the “Willy Wonka” factory that people seem to think it is.

    • @jamskinner
      @jamskinner Месяц назад +1

      @@TheSteveSteele SLS is terrible. It can’t launch often. It costs over 2 billion a launch. The moon mission did not go smoothly.
      As for starship it needs refueling, but we don’t know how many trips. Don’t just post a high number.
      SLS will never be cheap or good enough. Better to scrap it now.

  • @jamesbarnette4350
    @jamesbarnette4350 Месяц назад +11

    Cancel SLS , Orion and send them up on Dragon to transfer to HLS in earth orbit and ride it to the moon and back

    • @vosechu
      @vosechu Месяц назад +3

      If only it were allowed. Congress requires nasa to spend in certain categories. The White House recommended that funding for sls and orion be cut dramatically, but congress raised them instead. Meanwhile they cut funding to basically all the other programs we love and care about. NASA isn’t the problem, lobbyists and congress people are.

    • @Peachcreekmedia
      @Peachcreekmedia Месяц назад

      SpaceX will never deliver HLS. Musk may find them devoid of government contracts given his erratic behavior and drug use.

    • @Peachcreekmedia
      @Peachcreekmedia Месяц назад +1

      ​@vosechu They should have line item vetoed the program.

  • @kipkipper-lg9vl
    @kipkipper-lg9vl Месяц назад +2

    they are not serious about it, they are more concerned with diverse staffing than getting stuff done, China made a dam space station on their own already so things don't look good as far as competition goes

  • @jaseastroboy9240
    @jaseastroboy9240 Месяц назад +1

    Just make a permanent launch tower and make the vertical assembly building mobile. That way the mobile part of the setup doesn't have to be built to withstand the extreme forces of a launch and no mobile refuelling infrastructure required. The vertical assembly building could have attachment points for standard self-propelled modular transporters then add enough weight at ground level to prevent the wind pushing the building over when being transported. Then when located around the launch tower or at it's storage location the building would connect to fixed footings. This would have to be far cheaper than the transporter NASA is getting built. Especially as the vertical assembly building is essentially an empty box, yes, with gantries, hoists, etc.But I would think it was a simpler and cheaper task to move the vertical assembly building. Especially as the self-propelled modular transporters which would be a large part of the design are off the shelf and available from multiple manufacturers.

    • @TheSteveSteele
      @TheSteveSteele Месяц назад +1

      Make the VAB mobile? Really? Do you realize how big that building is?

    • @jaseastroboy9240
      @jaseastroboy9240 Месяц назад +1

      @@TheSteveSteele Moving buildings is done all the time. Some of them made of stone and weighing thousands of tonnes. And those building were never made to be moved. Yet small teams manage to do this with a tiny budget compared to what NASA is paying for the machine to move their rocket.
      The VAB is a strong steel structure which is welded and bolted together, not a massive Jenga stack of stone blocks. Putting the required lifting points on the building (and adding bracing and strengthening) to enable the self-propelled modular transporter modules to be bolted on would not be expensive.
      Basically, attach a suitable number of transporter modules, unbolt the building from the foundation points. The transporter modules lift the building a foot or two. Then the whole structure is driven and positioned over identical foundation attachment points at the launch platform. The transport modules lower the building and the bolts are reattached. Attach any services that are required. Just like the mobile launch tower, the move would not be done in high winds.
      Advantages would be a much lower cost. Much lower risk to the rocket. Off the shelf components for a low cost and rapid build. Any failures of the transporter modules would be easily and rapidly fixed by swapping out the faulty module. The rocket would be protected until just before launch as rolling the building aside would be much quicker than rolling out the whole rocket and tower. Teams of people that are experienced in moving buildings and working with mobile transporters already exist.
      So many advantages. The fuelling system doesn't have to attach to a mobile launch tower, the tower would be fixed as would the fuelling system. The transport system wouldn't be exposed to the force of a launch. The building and associated transport modules would be far away from the launch area at liftoff. The launch tower could be permanently attached to solid foundations. The tower could be made as heavy duty as required as there would be no consideration needed for it to be transportable.
      If somebody asked me to either move a very expensive, very fragile, rocket and launch tower. Or move a comparatively inexpensive steel building that had been braced and strengthened to be very strong. I know which one I would choose.

    • @riven8890
      @riven8890 Месяц назад

      bro's source is his crack pipe

    • @jaseastroboy9240
      @jaseastroboy9240 Месяц назад

      The current VAB is huge mainly because it has to accommodate the huge mobile platform moving in and out of it. How big is SpaceX's vertical assembly building by comparison? If the launch platform was fixed and the rocket was assembled on the launch platform then all that really needs to be mobile is the shell that protects the rocket and launch platform. The shell would only be a fraction of the current VABs size. The shell would basically be a movable version of SpaceX's VAB.
      It could be built at a fraction of the cost of the mobile launch platform. It would be quick to build by comparison as well.
      The only reason not to assemble the rocket on the launch platform is that the launch platform would not be usable for launches while the rocket was under construction. But NASA's launch cadence is so long between launches that this is unlikely to be ab issue.
      Think about this. Imagine you had a clean slate and two options were presented. One was to build a fixed launch tower complete with in place fuelling systems, communication, power, cooling, elevators, etc. The rocket parts would be transported to this launch tower and assembled in the spot where it will eventually be launched from. Around the launch tower is a shell that would protect the rocket and assembly workers from the weather. The shell being made movable.
      Second option, Build the rocket and launch facilities on top of a vehicle inside of a building far away from the launch site. Then after building your extremely valuable rocket very carefully and slowly drive the rocket and launch tower down the road to the launch site. Once at the launch site begin connecting the mobile launch platform to the infrastructure including fuelling systems, communication, power, cooling, etc.
      Which option sounds like it has the bigger risk?
      Then there is the scenario of a launch scrub for say unexpected weather or a rocket or launch platform fault. Now you have to go about disconnecting the fuelling systems, communication, power, cooling, etc. Then very slowly drive the mobile platform all the way back to the VAB so the problem can be fixed. Compared to just wheeling the shell back in place and fixing the problem or waiting for the weather to clear.

  • @ColdCutz
    @ColdCutz Месяц назад +1

    Ok here’s what we’re gonna do. We’re gonna rebuild the Saturn V and give the astronauts a graphing calculator on board. That should update it enough to get the job done.

  • @RuralJuror420
    @RuralJuror420 Месяц назад +1

    This might be a stupid question but why does every mission have cost overruns? Like if you genuinely go over budget EVERY time … change your methodology to be more accurate? Like they’re literal rocket scientists and cannot do basic math. Scary.

  • @i-love-space390
    @i-love-space390 Месяц назад +2

    It is sad that the requirement to reuse Space Shuttle technology yielded this piss poor 2.5 stage design. The SLS lugs that huge f'ing TANK most of the way to orbit, and uses HydroLOX on the BOOSTER stage. The Saturn V was a 3 stage design that used cheaper, simpler keroLOX engines on the booster, threw them completely away, and then saved the high performance HyroLOX for the second and third stages. By discarding weight by shedding stages along the way, the Saturn V could boost MORE PAYLOAD than SLS to orbit or the moon! There were also plans to upgrade the Saturn V with solid or liquid rocket boosters on the first stage, and some stretched upper stages so it would lift even more. With the success of the Falcon 9 so well documented and proved,
    a modernized Saturn V-like design could have a recoverable 1st stage, (maybe even a recoverable second stage) and still lift more payload than this SLS design. It could also use the new MethaLOX technology to discard the dirty kerosene on the booster stage and liwuid side boosters.
    And since the Saturn V was the same height as the tower, there would be no need to stretch it or build a new one.
    And these stupid cost-plus contracts have to end.

  • @PatrickPoet
    @PatrickPoet Месяц назад +1

    cost+ contracts encourage inefficiency since the slower they go the more they make

  • @troys6965
    @troys6965 Месяц назад +2

    It's called BECHTEL because BILKTECH was too obvious.

  • @michijimc9753
    @michijimc9753 Месяц назад

    A cousin of mine worked at the company who made the segments which when assembled forms the tracks of the original one.

  • @ryanhegseth8720
    @ryanhegseth8720 Месяц назад +2

    It’s story time for grown up toddler fan boys.

  • @axeman2638
    @axeman2638 Месяц назад +2

    Why can't they just pull out the plans for the apollo mission and use that? it worked so well 50 years ago.

  • @flightsimdev9021
    @flightsimdev9021 Месяц назад +3

    You have to wonder, over the years, how many people were crushed by those tank tracks?

    • @javaman7199
      @javaman7199 Месяц назад

      Just interns that didn't move out of the way fast enough.

    • @DanielGregory-h5x
      @DanielGregory-h5x Месяц назад

      Some genius figured out to line the road the crawler drives with river rocks. Its saves the bearings on the crawler. Apparently you can hear them popping as they are pulverized.

  • @walterraleigh-vv4su
    @walterraleigh-vv4su Месяц назад +2

    Seems like instead of one gigantic ridiculously expensive old-fashioned rocket, a bunch of cheaper reusable modern rockets would be more practical - if your real plan is to go to the Moon or Mars.

    • @kipkipper-lg9vl
      @kipkipper-lg9vl Месяц назад +1

      the rocket is fine they just don't get enough money, apollo cost more than 250 billion to complete, and even that was cut short

  • @ThomasHaberkorn
    @ThomasHaberkorn Месяц назад

    This is nuts (and bolts). Very expressive ones.

  • @pauld6967
    @pauld6967 Месяц назад

    Thank you for covering this infrastructure "uh-oh" (meaning MLP-2) that others either haven't noticed or don't appreciate the significance.

  • @Znegil
    @Znegil Месяц назад +2

    At this rate SpaceX will land on the moon by itself and then a few years later it will help NASA to do the same 😂

  • @bug688
    @bug688 Месяц назад +7

    It’s okay guys. Even when things start looking worrying, just know that humanity has done this before, and we WILL do it again!

    • @ngamashaka4894
      @ngamashaka4894 Месяц назад +4

      No sorry, looking at this I begin to think we didn't,
      just ordered my aluminum hat

    • @interpl6089
      @interpl6089 Месяц назад

      The worrying thing is that China will probably be there before NASA,

    • @technicalproductions6474
      @technicalproductions6474 Месяц назад

      ​@ngamashaka4894 we literally just went around the moon last year with the Artemis program it's just nasa doesn't have good funding

    • @ngamashaka4894
      @ngamashaka4894 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@technicalproductions6474 Yes and now we are unable to do something we did 55 years ago. Are we a devolution of our grand-fathers?

    • @technicalproductions6474
      @technicalproductions6474 Месяц назад

      @@ngamashaka4894 I just said it was because of funding 💀

  • @torch_k8110
    @torch_k8110 Месяц назад +1

    How tf is a tower of essentially trusses going to cost 30% more than the Burj Kalifa at 1/7 the height?!

  • @wren2900
    @wren2900 29 дней назад +1

    So they still believe NASA was on moon 55 years ago?)) clowns

  • @frankblangeard8865
    @frankblangeard8865 15 дней назад

    Is that Hollywood studio still available?

  • @ianrotten4453
    @ianrotten4453 Месяц назад +2

    $2.7 billion? Well, thats still cheaper than giviang Ukrane another $20 billion for war...

    • @DanielGregory-h5x
      @DanielGregory-h5x Месяц назад +1

      ITs only the biggest transporter for the biggest rocket ever assembled... its not made of playdoh.

  • @jameswilson5165
    @jameswilson5165 Месяц назад

    Is the original Bigelo module still attached and working?

  • @volo870
    @volo870 Месяц назад

    Game Over - YEAH!!! 🎶🎵🎶

  • @RaduM1
    @RaduM1 Месяц назад +2

    Why TF would you build a mobile tower!? I understand why the vehicle has to move... But why does the ground infrastructure have to? Not asking "Why?" in any project often enough, leads to cost overruns and eventually project's cancellation.

    • @TheSteveSteele
      @TheSteveSteele Месяц назад +1

      How do you propose they get the rocket from the VAB to the tower, without the rocket falling over? We could do like the Soviets and move the rocket lying down horizontally. But too much stress is placed on the rocket as it’s stood up. The mobile launch tower is the best way.

    • @RaduM1
      @RaduM1 Месяц назад

      @@TheSteveSteele I don't want to propose solutions as I'm not an engineer. I merely stated the fact that by not asking "Why?" we are prone to inherit soft requirements believing they are hard requirements. They have an existing solution (a mobile launch platform) searching for a problem: "How to assemble and then launch the rocket?". Only this time, the rocket is bigger so the old solution might not be the shortest path to a launch, nor the cheapest path. It might be faster and cheaper to build a new mobile VAB with a fixed tower. When the context changes, reassess your requirements! Some of them might be obsolete.

    • @DanielGregory-h5x
      @DanielGregory-h5x Месяц назад +1

      There is a MASSIVE underground launch complex. The crawler just moves the rocket 7 miles away from everything else incase it explodes.

  • @KC-lb3vs
    @KC-lb3vs Месяц назад +1

    The aliens that were already there told NASA to back off, so they've got to come up with something not to go.

  • @worldtrench0
    @worldtrench0 Месяц назад

    Thanks.

  • @rootvalley2
    @rootvalley2 Месяц назад +2

    SLS is not outdated it’s the only launch capable of getting to the moon

  • @pauljanssen7594
    @pauljanssen7594 Месяц назад +2

    Did we ever land a man on the moon, why is all the information and paperwork on the Apollo in in Gemini missions all disappeared and gone!

    • @kennethwallace5168
      @kennethwallace5168 Месяц назад +1

      Each rocket was slightly different than the last. Technicians literally were jotting changes down in notebooks. They simply just knew how it had to be built. The human factor was a bigger part of the program back then. Those notebooks are long gone.

  • @ilkoderez601
    @ilkoderez601 Месяц назад

    It would be interesting to know how the solar sail performs attitude control. Does it have reaction wheels? Thrusters? I follow all of the space news channels and nobody has mentioned how it works (aside from the obvious light sail part).

  • @richarddavis2605
    @richarddavis2605 13 дней назад

    Cost plus is possibly legitimate for truly ground breaking projects; but there is nothing particularly ground breaking about a rolling platform. Mining companies probably have this scale of stuff in a catalogue! And it should never be given to any company who has failed to hit budgets in the past.

  • @michaelmills6732
    @michaelmills6732 Месяц назад +1

    Vehicle Assembly Building, not vertical.

    • @DanielGregory-h5x
      @DanielGregory-h5x Месяц назад

      It was originally the Vertical Assembly building in line with the All Up Testing decision.

  • @TheCraigy83
    @TheCraigy83 Месяц назад

    the launch resistance /their own inertia is making them scale up too heavy . They need launching on a rail system that takes the huge inertia out the craft . I dont mean a double a train track btw lol ,something scaled up heavily optimised for a rockets great bulk..with a nice easy raise so the end of the track is a few hundred meters high .

  • @InsouciantSoul
    @InsouciantSoul Месяц назад

    You shoud do some longer deeper dives.

  • @BrianKelsay
    @BrianKelsay Месяц назад +2

    What some people are missing is that Bechtel had to take over from another contractor that started and did not finish. They had to redesign as the original was crap and start over. I would bet that NASA change orders also came in and caused more cost overruns.. They are back on track with progress though. The previous contractor vastly underbid. I think this fiasco is more NASA and Congress fault in trying to reuse and repurpose old tech from Apollo and Shuttle. They should transport this sucker on it's side and cheaply, then hoist it up at the pad.

    • @TheSteveSteele
      @TheSteveSteele Месяц назад +1

      You can’t transport the SLS horizontally then lift it like the Soviets tried with the N1.

  • @n00bnetrum
    @n00bnetrum Месяц назад

    Why does this video have a youtube disclaimer about the Apollo program?

  • @rubenduran86
    @rubenduran86 Месяц назад

    I have to say that there is a lot of hardware being put together for ML2. The MLP is going and sections of the tower are being built at the moment

  • @princecharon
    @princecharon Месяц назад

    It really looks like the crew that lands on the Moon again is going to need to not just ride the SpaceX HLS Starship from orbit to the surface and back, but all the way from Earth to the Moon. So much for the SLS...

  • @LennardA320
    @LennardA320 Месяц назад +5

    And spaceX just builds multiple towers for Falcon 9, Heavy and Starship. Did this within months and nowhere near a Billion for ALL Towers.

    • @lepidoptera9337
      @lepidoptera9337 Месяц назад +3

      And that tells you what it really costs to build one of these. Now, try to imagine what else this money may be used for by Bechtel, which is a military contractor. ;-)

    • @LennardA320
      @LennardA320 Месяц назад

      @lepidoptera9337 I don't know what is going on there with their "contract +" contracts where they pay 10% plus over all cost made. So the incentive isn't try to stay at budget but if more costs earn you more money, why would anyone manage cost overruns, if that is making it extra profitable. We are talking about Billions.
      All dollar bills stacked are higher than the tower that they need to make. Why can't you make a good steel tower already with tens of millions of dollars. It is just a steel frame with pipes for fuel water electricity. Look how SpaceX stacked it last tower thought last week. NASA is just the same as boeing now, but NASA Gets budget boeing has to earn it. I don't see it happen all those companies together make the Lunar gateway and the plan to land on the moon.
      If starship is twice as powerful as Saturn V you can get twice as much hardware to the moon. They just need to use the Booster and then make different stages for landing on the moon. And if you can refuel you can maybe bring 4 times as much as Apollo. But landing starship is empty weight 100 ton. That is a lot of dry mass to land. It has to be very light and well thought out.

    • @lepidoptera9337
      @lepidoptera9337 Месяц назад

      @@LennardA320 Yes, the cost+ scheme allows the contractor to charge a lot more than the actual project cost, but not because of the 10%, but because they can quote an almost arbitrary cost base. Now, a naive person may assume that the contractor pockets that money and all the government project managers are idiots. You can hold that religious belief until you actually meet a government program manager. I have. They are not idiots. They know exactly how much materials and services cost. Some of the people I worked with were among the sharpest minded people I have ever met. So why does the government "let" this happen? Because they have other projects with Bechtel that are not publicly disclosed and that they do not want to show up as a Congressional line item. Bechtel gets paid for those projects with excess money from the NASA contract.
      Did you never wonder why we are suddenly going back to the Moon? Because it's expensive and the US government needed an endless sink of money that they can hide secret programs behind. Unless, of course, you haven't noticed that there is a hot war going on in Europe and that the Chinese are also extremely active spying on us. Do you really think we are just standing by? Of course not. We simply aren't telegraphing either to the Russians or the Chinese what we are doing about it.
      What you should be really worried about, however, is the Saudi Arabian city called "Neom". The Saudis are pretending to dig sand for tens of billions of dollars, which looks even more crazy than the current moonshot programs of both the US and China. Of course they are not digging sand. They are hiding tens of billions of dollars of spending on their nuclear weapons program behind that project. I am sure you can find many similar, although smaller examples of "ridiculous" government spending around the world.

  • @scasey1960
    @scasey1960 Месяц назад

    Cost plus means “I own the risk of development instead of you”. Good work if you can get it.

  • @clone_bricks9855
    @clone_bricks9855 Месяц назад

    Love from Germany

  • @Robert-qw3lr
    @Robert-qw3lr Месяц назад

    It's not fair to take a straight line extrapolation. That's true. It could be parabolic.

  • @JohnSmith-ug5ci
    @JohnSmith-ug5ci Месяц назад +1

    We need to get totally out of space exploration until we get our debt under 1 trillion.

  • @racookster
    @racookster Месяц назад

    Even though I'm no fan of Elon Musk, I think it would be funny if SpaceX gets us back to the moon on its own just by using various crewed and tanker versions of Starship.

  • @Cartoonicus
    @Cartoonicus Месяц назад

    Hats off to Bigalow. They crawled so others could run.

  • @alexuwo
    @alexuwo 24 дня назад

    Close NASA. All one needs is SpaceX.

  • @JoeCosentino
    @JoeCosentino Месяц назад +1

    Sorry I was a space kid, but for the first time in my 70 years I don’t think we ever went to the moon. 50 years latter they can’t even get a rocket into orbit. NASA has seen its day and it’s time to go commercial

  • @davidhollfelder9940
    @davidhollfelder9940 Месяц назад

    Artemis is NASA’s last hurrah, flying rockets, that should not have happened. It’s a last ditch effort via legacy rocket technology, as they couldn’t grasp the idea that they may/would not ever fly in space again, now that SpaceX and others do it much better at far less cost.

  • @TheJPinder
    @TheJPinder Месяц назад

    Why don’t they just assume any date is ten years off?

  • @lordgarion514
    @lordgarion514 Месяц назад

    At this point, NASA should just give all the contracts to SpaceX.

  • @jeffparry2754
    @jeffparry2754 Месяц назад +1

    This is corruption, not incompetence.