Also, read about the mission architecture I sketched above - you go to an asteroid to stay, for years (at least until the next launch window, when you'll be replaced by another crew), in order to mine it. You bring industrial equipment, etc, and your first task is to become self-sufficient (as in you won't need expensive shipments from earth merely to survive) aka build the O'Neill colony/space station/whatever with the initially mined ore. Only afterwards, will you start to send the ore to earth. The investment will amortize itself in decades, if necessary (not in a mere few years).
You're not going to become self-sufficient using the resources on an asteroid. To begin with: little or no accessible water (from which you get oxygen, fuel, and... well, WATER) and Earth resupply is complicated and irregular.
You're probably better off starting with a lunar outpost and using the resources there. It's not as rich as an asteroid, but then again neither is Earth and we've been mining THAT for centuries.
This 'fabulous wealth' is peanuts - and I mean truly insignificant - by comparison with what you would obtain by merely cutting up the surface layer of an asteroid.
That depends ENTIRELY on your setup costs. A fifty billion dollar space mission that nets fifty billion and twenty thousand dollars worth of precious metals isn't exactly turning you a fortune. You can't wish away the up-front costs as if they will never matter.
Perhaps the politicians are the culprit, and not the engineers.
But Nasa is composed of both.
No, NASA is not. The Kay Bailey Hutchinson is NOT a member of NASA and neither is Ben Nelson, despite the fact that the two of them designed the Space Launch System pretty much single handedly.
They say an elephant is a mouse designed by committee; X-37B is what the space shuttle would have looked like if NASA wasn't being used as a bork-barrel cookie jar for the U.S. Senate.
So - what are the reasons for discarding Apollo, sojourner?
Similar to the reasons for discarding my grandfather's model-T ford: it no longer exists, and it didn't work all that great when it
did.
The fact that Saturn hasn't been built in 30+ years should be of little consequence as long as the complete plans are available.
NASA will sure be relieved to hear that! Why don't you go over there and break the news? I'm SURE they never even thought of that.
I find surprising that you affirm reconstructing the tooling for Saturn (everything there known) would cost more than solving the problems needed for building SLS
Primarily, this is because the designs for a working SLS are of identical value to the designs for a working Saturn-V. Just because you have pictures of its parts doesn't mean you can BUILD it.
What exactly makes the tooling for Saturn so expensive, sojourner?
You don't actually know what tooling IS, do you?
