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Title    NASA Will Pay a Staggering $146 Million for Each SLS Rocket Engine
Date    Wednesday May 06 2020, @05:05AM
Author    martyb
Topic   
from the dept.
https://soylentnews.org/article.pl?sid=20/05/05/1436249

NASA will pay a staggering $146 million for each SLS rocket engine:

NASA has previously given more than $1 billion to Aerojet to "restart" production of the space shuttle era engines and a contract for six new ones. So, according to the space agency, NASA has spent $3.5 billion for a total of 24 rocket engines. That comes to $146 million per engine.

The NASA news release says that Aerojet has "implemented a plan to reduce the cost of the engines by as much as 30 percent," noting the use of more advanced manufacturing techniques.

[...] NASA designed these brilliant engines in the 1970s for the space shuttle program, during which they each flew multiple launches. A total of 46 engines were built for the shuttle at an estimated cost of $40 million[*] per engine. But now these formerly reusable engines will be flown a single time on the SLS rocket and then dropped into the ocean.

There are four engines on a Space Launch System rocket. At this price, the engines for an SLS rocket, alone, will cost more than $580 million. This does not include the costs of fabricating the rocket's large core stage, towering solid-rocket boosters, an upper stage, or the costs of test, transportation, storage, and integration. With engine prices like these, it seems reasonable to assume that the cost of a single SLS launch will remain $2 billion into perpetuity.

[...] There are a lot of things one could buy in the aerospace industry for $146 million. One might, for example, buy at least six RD-180 engines from Russia. These engines have more than twice the thrust of a space shuttle main engine. Or, one might go to United Launch Alliance's Rocket Builder website and purchase two basic Atlas V rocket launches. You could buy three "flight-proven" Falcon 9 launches. One might even buy a Falcon Heavy launch, which has two-thirds the lift capacity of the Space Launch System at one-twentieth the price[...]

[...] SpaceX is building the Raptor rocket engine to power its Super Heavy rocket and Starship upper stage. The Raptor has slightly more power at sea level than the RS-25, and is designed for dozens of uses. According to SpaceX founder Elon Musk, it costs less than $1 million to build a Raptor engine. The company has already built a couple dozen of them on its own dime. So there's that.

[*] Not adjusted for inflation.


Original Submission

Links

  1. "NASA will pay a staggering $146 million for each SLS rocket engine" - https://arstechnica.com/science/2020/05/nasa-will-pay-a-staggering-146-million-for-each-sls-rocket-engine/
  2. "news release" - https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-commits-to-future-artemis-missions-with-more-sls-rocket-engines
  3. "$40 million[*] per engine" - https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2007/12/constellation-transition-phased-retirement-plan-for-the-ssme-set/
  4. "the costs of fabricating the rocket's large core stage" - https://arstechnica.com/science/2016/03/for-deep-space-rocket-dreams-nasa-calls-upon-the-worlds-best-and-biggest-tools/
  5. "Rocket Builder website" - https://www.rocketbuilder.com/start/configure
  6. "it costs less than $1 million" - https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1179107539352313856
  7. "Original Submission" - https://soylentnews.org/submit.pl?op=viewsub&subid=40791

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