Saturday, September 9, 2023

Don't Read This If You've Heard This About SLS Before

NASA says SLS is so expensive it's unsustainable.  

Ars Technica posts an article off this week's Rocket Report saying NASA finally admits what everyone already knows: SLS is unaffordable.  

As the title says, everyone already knows SLS and Artemis are too expensive.  I couldn't tell you how many times I've written about it, but the last time I wrote about it I called it an old story about a still new program

Published on Thursday, the new report (see .pdf) examines the billions of dollars spent by NASA on the development of the massive rocket, which made a successful debut launch in late 2022 with the Artemis I mission. Surprisingly, as part of the reporting process, NASA officials admitted the rocket was too expensive to support its lunar exploration efforts as part of the Artemis program.

"Senior NASA officials told GAO that at current cost levels, the SLS program is unaffordable," the new report states.

All of this reporting is either old stuff that we've all seen or small tweaks to that stuff we've seen.  In the past, I've focused on the RS-25 engines that SLS uses; four on each mission to be exact.   The RS-25 engines are also referred to by their old name, Space Shuttle Main Engines or SSMEs and were first built in the 1970s.  I've been reading and reporting about cost overruns on these engines for years now - and I think they're the reason somebody coined the term "Shuttles' Leftover Shit" for SLS instead of Space Launch System.  In May of '20, I found out that the first stage engines would cost $146 million per engine, so nearly $600 million ($584 m) for just the four engines of the booster core.  Engines that will litter the floor of the Atlantic after one use.  These were reused during the Space Shuttle days. That's not the cost of the core stage carrying them; that's simply the cost of the engines.   

In March of '22, NASA's inspector general said the operational costs alone for a single Artemis launch—for just the rocket, Orion spacecraft, and ground systems—will total $4.1 billion.

In the source article, it's reported that NASA has released some hand-waving report about bringing the price on the RS-25s down to "$70.5 million by the end of this decade."  

However, NASA's inspector general, Paul Martin, said this claim was dubious. According to Martin, when calculating the projected cost savings of the new RS-25 engines, NASA and Aerojet only included material, engineering support, and touch labor, while project management and overhead costs are excluded. 

In a program that's for man-rated space hardware, how can anyone honestly not include project management and other overhead costs?  Many of us have said with space-rated hardware, the actual hardware is almost free compared to the overhead costs.  That was for satellites, though. 

As Eric Berger points out something we've said many times:

And even at $70.5 million, these engines are very, very far from being affordable compared to the existing US commercial market for powerful rocket engines. Blue Origin manufactures an engine of comparable power and size, the BE-4, for less than $20 million. And SpaceX is seeking to push the similarly powerful Raptor rocket engine costs even lower, to less than $1 million per engine.

One option is to completely shut down the program.  I know it would give NASA management and the contractors from SLS and Artemis (not to mention their congressional lackeys) complete nervous breakdowns, but think of it this way: SpaceX's Falcon Heavy can only lift about 2/3 of the payload of the SLS, but does so at $100 Million per launch price is from 2022.  That means two launches give a bigger payload than one SLS launch at about 5% of its price.  It's not as simple as just saying to swap over to the Heavy; the Orion hardware would have to be redesigned, but let's not get into the sunk cost fallacy.  All that money spent on Artemis/SLS/Orion development is gone.  The question is if we keep spending far too much on every launch or if we sink a little more money to cut launch costs.  If we could cut that $4.1 billion per launch down to $300 to $500 million with new hardware costs (essentially doubling the current FH cost by adding new Orion hardware), it saves the money-bleeding that SLS is set to do. 

Artemis I vehicle on the pad September 1, 2022, before a series of things (including hurricanes) forced the mission to be delayed until November. Trevor Mahlmann photo.

 

 

10 comments:

  1. Look, you and others have said it before: The SLS is a JOBS program, getting to the Moon is an aftereffect.
    Lots and lots and lots of people would be kicked off the gravy train. which would blow back to crongresscritters and their ilk.
    Ain't a-gonna happen, leastways not in the near future!

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  2. Nice that they finally figured this out after spending how much in coin, skull sweat and actual hardware?

    Gee, if a tenth of the SLS cost was put to funding Starship, think how far advanced that program would be? And for anyone saying "SpaceX shouldn't get government subsidies blah blah blah," well, what do you think all that money down the drain to Lockmart and Boeing and Aerojet Rockedyne and all the other corporate entities who have made serious cake off of the stupid lousy system.

    Of course, for SpaceX to get that much cheddar, they'd have to open up production locations in every state that is currently building the SLS and be forced to hire all those legacy aerospace engineers and workers.

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    1. Hey, Beans, I resemble that remark! LOL...
      I was working a lead designer contract in another industry when the peak of the hiring for this was going on(or one of the peaks), and several shoppers in my section jumped onto the SLS express train at mucho higher rates. Most of my career was spent in aerospace, and i miss working, but i'm not going on the road again.
      I didn't go despite the temptation, as I was enjoying the work I was doing in southern Maine. Soon after several people left, my supervisor called me into his office and asked me if I was thinking about going. I replied that it was tempting, and before I could say anything else he offered me another $8/hr...I stayed until the end of the project. KA-CHING!
      No offense intended...

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    2. (sniff...sniff..) I love a story with a happy ending.

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  3. Once you take the Kings Shilling your trapped. All sorts of "Add On" suddenly become "suggested, then "Mandatory".

    I hope that Musk keeps it a private venture, that keeps it lean and hungry.

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  4. Does SLS love contribute to FAA slow approval process?

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    1. Shall I say I'd be less than surprised if it was? And I'd have the same reaction to SLS love being a contributing factor to the two DOJ attacks on Musk.

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    2. It's a given that FedGov does NOT like that upstart Musk, he doesn't play the Washington District of Crooks game very well.
      For example, I was listening to The Lars Larson Show two days ago, and he was talking about Biden's cronies shoveling 58 BILLION (of YOUR money!!) to get the rest of the Country Internetrified. Came out to about $43K/person, and nary was a word mentioned about Starlink. Lars has a Starlink and pointed out that it would be *cheap* compared to the DC Hucksters printing money for connectivity. Guess why FedGov doesn't wanna even mention,/i> Starlink? No kickbacks, that's why!
      Well, same thing applies to Starship, it's cheaper/faster/better but AFAIK Musk isn't in bed with anybody in Congress.

      OY!

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    3. "Musk isn't in bed with anybody in Congrss."

      Given our gerontocracy, most of them are probably too old to be fooling around anyway...

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  5. "SLS is too expensive."

    Math isn't a strong suit of NASA.

    Think about that.

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