Exclusive-SpaceX ending production of flagship crew capsule -executive
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[March 28, 2022]
By Joey Roulette
(Reuters) - SpaceX has ended production of
new Crew Dragon astronaut capsules, a company executive told Reuters, as
Elon Musk's space transportation company heaps resources on its
next-generation spaceship program.
Capping the fleet at four Crew Dragons adds more urgency to the
development of the astronaut capsule's eventual successor, Starship,
SpaceX's moon and Mars rocket. Starship's debut launch has been delayed
for months by engine development hurdles and regulatory reviews.
It also poses new challenges as the company learns how to maintain a
fleet and quickly fix unexpected problems without holding up a busy
schedule of astronaut missions.
"We are finishing our final (capsule), but we still are manufacturing
components, because we'll be refurbishing," SpaceX President Gwynne
Shotwell told Reuters, confirming the plan to end Crew Dragon
manufacturing.
She added that SpaceX would retain the capability to build more capsules
if a need arises in the future, but contended that "fleet management is
key."
Musk's business model is underpinned by reusable spacecraft, so it was
inevitable the company would cease production at some point. But the
timing was not known, nor was his strategy of using the existing fleet
for its full backlog of missions.
Crew Dragon has flown five crews of government and private astronauts to
space since 2020, when it flew its first pair of NASA astronauts and
became the U.S. space agency's primary ride for getting humans to and
from the International Space Station.
After each flight, the capsules undergo refurbishment at SpaceX
facilities in Florida, which the company calls "Dragonland."
"There's lifetime cycle issues, where once you start using it the third,
fourth, fifth time, you start finding different things," said retired
NASA astronaut and former SpaceX executive Garrett Reisman, who now
consults for the company on human spaceflight matters.
"SpaceX is really good about identifying these issues quickly and then
acting quickly to fix them," Reisman added, pointing to an investigation
in 2021 in which SpaceX discovered and fixed within months a toilet leak
aboard a Crew Dragon capsule that had flown humans twice.
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SpaceX founder Elon Musk arrives ahead of the launch of the SpaceX
Falcon 9 rocket with the Crew Dragon capsule, before launch of their
NASA commercial crew mission at Kennedy Space Center in Cape
Canaveral, Florida, U.S., April 23, 2021. REUTERS/Joe Skipper
NASA has given SpaceX some $3.5
billion to help develop and subsequently use Crew Dragon for six
flights to the space station. It added three more missions to fill
in for delays with Boeing Co's Starliner capsule.
SpaceX has flown four crews of astronauts to the space station under
its NASA contract at roughly $255 million per flight. The company
carried out a fully private mission last year with four passengers,
including a billionaire entrepreneur who funded the flight, for a
three-day trip in Earth orbit.
At least four more private astronaut missions on Crew Dragon are
planned with Houston-based space station builder and spaceflight
manager Axiom Space, with the first so-called Ax-1 mission scheduled
for April carrying four entrepreneurs to the space station to
conduct scientific research.
Musk, SpaceX's founder and chief executive, has focused intensely in
recent years on the company's hasty development of a re-usable
Starship, the centerpiece of Musk's aim to eventually colonize Mars.
Like Crew Dragon, SpaceX's workhorse reusable rocket, the Falcon 9,
and its more powerful variant Falcon Heavy are also refurbished
after each flight, and not every component is able to fly to space
more than once.
"The goal is to get more and more like aircraft operations, where
you can take the vehicle after it lands, fill it back up with gas
and oxygen, and go again very rapidly," Reisman said.
"Starship, if it achieves its design objectives, would be able to
affordably replace everything that Falcon 9, Falcon Heavy and Dragon
can do."
(Reporting by Joey Roulette in Washington; Editing by Eric M.
Johnson and Leslie Adler)
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