Uhh, how can you know that without knowing what the cost is going to be?
It's called protoyping. NASA has committed to a maximum payout of $4 MM by 2010, across both tether and climber competitions. Assuming the breakthroughs are made for sufficient prototyping, one can probably put +/- 100% bounds on costs, perhaps better. That's the goal of Elevator2010, basically... payout $4 MM so that preliminary cost estimates can be cobbled together.
Well, the current projections about the SE are complete fantasy so who knows how off they may be.
They're not
complete fantasy. You'll have to do some follow-up reading on methodologies. Refer specifically to Brad Edwards's work, as he was the one who did the initial work for NIAC. Some of the estimates were done by analogy, but several come from known technologies. "Out there" maybe, but not complete fantasy. Again, refer back to Elevator2010 for movement toward better estimates.
But I don't see the point of your apples and orange comparison of a station to a transport mechanism. And, as I pointed out in the post you are replying to, the cost and capacity and cited don't make me think it's going to be cheaper than what we're doing now. And since we can't build an elevator now comparing it to what we can do now is a spurious comparison.
Actually, there are several comparison points. Is it the railroad, or necessary railroad towns/watering towers/facilities/etc. Both projects are infrastructure (although the utility of the ISS as infrastructure has become more limited through design revisions). Moreover, there is an apt scale comparison for large 'space engineering' projects.
Can you tell me something about SE development costs? Not only can we not build an SE we can barely guess at it's cost. Advocating an SE is about like advocating building the Time Tunnel. Until some of the necessary breakthroughs occur it's pointless to "advocate" it.
What breakthroughs are you referring to, exactly?
The number I calculated for SE costs based on the wiki article has already been matched by rockets. And that number assumed the SE had no operational costs.
All of your operational costs have to be divided over the number of launches. A space shuttle flies five times a year at the best of times. All of those salaries have to be distributed over that timeframe. If you could average those over fifty launches a year, you'd realize an order-of-magnitude savings/kg right there. The salaries example holds whether you're talking S.E.s or more rockets, however, you're not building a new S.E. climber
every time.
I took a proejected cost and divided it by a projected capacity over an assumed lifetime. If you'd like me to repeat the exercise with numbers you prefer please provide the numbers.
How do you know the SE will be a one time investment? It will never need to be replaced? The first one will have all the capacity we will ever need?
No. In fact, your best savings are realized once you start using the first S.E. to start seeding others! That's an economy of scale!
How do you know what the operational costs will be?
Nobody does, but megaprojects have been done before. In my current industry, estimating takes data from pilot plants. Prototyping, of a sort...
If I said "No, elevator operational costs will be much higher" how could you dispute me?
We'd have to then go to how we've each come up with our estimates.
I wasn't precise enough. The space elevator is believed to have relatively high building costs and relatively low operational costs after that. AFAIK most rockets or at least major parts thereof aren't reusable.
Right. Moreover, those rockets which have reusable parts have not been as cheap as some would have liked.
I don't. But it is a fair assumption to make that running a cabin up and down a piece of string will be cheaper than throwing it up and down sans the string.
For many reasons.
It would, of course, still be possible that for some unknown reason the space elevator would have to operate far, far from an assumed ideal energy input - but i doubt that would be a reasonable assumption to make.
Many things tend to not operate at a preliminary ideal. However, the laser to PV system is providing interesting results!
Cool, thanks.[/QUOTE]