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NASA announces Boeing Starliner crew will return on SpaceX Crew-9

paxys
122 replies
1d

It's crazy to me that while we've been fantasizing about lunar bases, Mars settlements, asteroid mining and colony ships, now, 60+ years after our "space" era started, we still haven't figured out how to get a single person to low Earth orbit and back in a safe and cost efficient way. We all need a collective reality check on our spacefaring hopes.

trothamel
43 replies
1d

Given that SpaceX is about to launch four people on what is more-or-less a joyride (Polaris Dawn), it's really only the government and boeing that seem to be having problems.

ceejayoz
26 replies
23h48m

SpaceX exists because of that government's significant funding of the company and the prescient decision to award multiple (fixed-price!) Commercial Cargo/Crew contracts.

hackernewds
12 replies
23h41m

and the government should continue to fund private enterprise for innovation.

much of the billions for a charger network for EVs has made <10 chargers, they could have provided that to Tesla. similarly the EV tax credits provided to private companies has fueled EV proliferation

ceejayoz
6 replies
23h30m

The charger thing is misleading. The money hasn't been spent yet, it goes to states to use, and the goal is 2030.

https://www.factcheck.org/2024/08/trump-misleads-on-the-cost...

Just looking at the $5 billion program dedicated to building charging stations along major highways, Nigro said updated data from 10 states shows the government’s share of building each port is $150,000, on average. That works out to more than 30,000 ports and as many as 7,500 stations, assuming each has four ports (Nigro said the station number will likely be lower, since many stations will have more ports). Even more charging stations and ports can be built with the other $2.5 billion.

They did Tesla an enormous favor by pushing the other car manufacturers to adopt their standard. A good use of government power, IMO. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_American_Charging_Standa...

misiti3780
1 replies
22h0m

How does the government determine where to put all these new chargers?

avsteele
1 replies
23h0m

2030 for 500K chargers is just separate political goal, it isn't connected to the $7.5B allocated by the bill.

The bill allocates $7.5B over 5 years. He said most will be coming online 2027+ but seemed to admit that the expectation was for more to be online by now. While I agree the "9 stations for $7.5B" there are reasonable concerns here that the money will be well-spent. I can't even find anything on how much has been actually allocated to far and how many chargers are expected.

https://d1dth6e84htgma.cloudfront.net/02_22_24_Letter_to_Sec...

ceejayoz
0 replies
21h46m

2030 for 500K chargers is just separate political goal, it isn't connected to the $7.5B allocated by the bill.

Yes, it is. https://www.politico.com/news/2023/12/05/congress-ev-charger... "Biden signed the bipartisan infrastructure package into law in 2021 with $7.5 billion specifically directed toward EV chargers, with an eye toward achieving his goal of building 500,000 chargers in the United States by 2030."

The bill allocates $7.5B over 5 years.

Yes, to hand out to the states. Who then get to spend it on projects. Allocation is the start of the project, not the end.

https://afdc.energy.gov/laws/12744

"FHWA must distribute the NEVI Program Formula Program funds made available each fiscal year (FY) through FY 2026, so that each state receives an amount equal to the state FHWA funding formula determined by 23 U.S. Code 104. To receive funding, states must submit plans to the FHWA and the Joint Office of Energy and Transportation for review and public posting annually, describing how the state intends to distribute NEVI funds. The FHWA announced approval of all initial state plans on September 27, 2022, and FY2024 plans were approved in 2023."

https://d1dth6e84htgma.cloudfront.net/02_22_24_Letter_to_Sec...

You'll find me fairly unconvinced by a letter from Republican House Representatives to Biden. (You probably would find a letter from Democratic reps to Trump similarly useless as evidence.)

adolph
1 replies
18h4m

The charger thing is misleading. The money hasn't been spent yet

Not certain if that is any better. If an organization can't execute, it can't execute. It doesn't matter if it is some frankenstein of Boeing prime contractor and Rocketjet subcontractor or Federal and States.

ceejayoz
0 replies
17h16m

Sure, and if we’re still at ten completed charging stations in a few years, I’m happy to criticize.

I think that’s unlikely.

Phase one is “submit your plans”. Phase two is “we review, approve, and fund your plans”. I’m not surprised these have taken a while to coordinate across 50 state governments.

seo-speedwagon
4 replies
23h13m

Turning Elon Musk into the richest person on earth was a US government project on the same kind of scale as the TVA and Apollo program. It’s actually kinda funny when you think about it.

vessenes
1 replies
22h38m

This is reductive, in the extreme, to the point of being incorrect. SpaceX had to sue to win its first contracts, Tesla was actively cut out of Biden administration EV programs and awards. Whatever success they've had, they have absolutely earned.

NavinF
0 replies
21h9m

Tesla was actively cut out of Biden administration EV programs and awards

Incidentally this was the inception of the Tech Right. Before that, Elon exclusively voted for Democrats.

I didn't realize the impact back then: https://x.com/mualphaxi/status/1817562306764566824

kuthmano
1 replies
6h48m

the command of critical projects Elon has is unnatural. He builds his massive projects with no permits or regulatory approvals; see: - the massive supercomputer in Memphis, no power power approval from TVA and did do an EIA. The city council never new about the project.

- Starship and Starbase, no lauch approval

- Tesla FSD, no regulatory approval

-Starlink version 2 upgrade, the competition is still fight. Again, no approval

and many more.. all this projects a massive like really massive.. True Elon is a government project.

ceejayoz
0 replies
5h3m

Starship and Starbase both required extensive government approvals, including for each launch so far.

manquer
11 replies
22h0m

It is undeniable that NASA/NROL/USAF contracts and support benefited spaceX especially early on .

However their commercial launch business is still considerably larger than what US gov gives them and always has been , it is possible and quite likely they would have existed as a successful commercial space launch company without government contracts , albeit smaller and perhaps slower to reach many milestones .

I can also argue reasonably that many things US government wants is not useful (or simply restricted) for other customers and building those features were and are a distraction.

No different for a startup to have a very large customer who has all sorts of customization needs that no other customer will focusing on that can kill the company as ULA and Boeing space are feeling today.

SpaceX is successful because they don’t need government support not because of it, they can build starship without waiting for a nasa mission and not even using VC money but just money from their revenues .

ceejayoz
6 replies
21h42m

it is possible and quite likely they would have existed as a successful commercial space launch company without government contracts...

Even Musk doesn't make that claim.

https://www.cnbc.com/2017/09/29/elon-musk-9-years-ago-spacex...

"“I messed up the first three launches. The first three launches failed. And fortunately the fourth launch, which was, that was the last money that we had for Falcon 1. That fourth launch worked. Or it would have been — that would have been it for SpaceX. But fate liked us that day. So, the fourth launch worked,” says Musk."

Flights one, two, and three all involved government funding (Air Force and DARPA payloads).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RatSat#Aftermath

"Even though SpaceX finally has achieved a successful orbital flight, Musk only has $30 million left and was unable to support both SpaceX and Tesla for two months. Contrary to popular belief, Falcon 1's flight 4 did not directly lead to more customer contracts. Through 2008, SpaceX launch manifest at the time only consisted of RazakSAT. Rather, it was NASA's Commercial Orbital Transportation Services and subsequent Commercial Resupply Services contracts that provided SpaceX much-needed fund to save it from bankruptcy."

avmich
4 replies
21h19m

Don't forget SpaceX was the first private company which achieved orbit without external money, and did that for awfully less money than e.g. Air Force thought possible.

Give the credit where it's due, as they say.

avmich
2 replies
18h51m

Thanks for the links. I can't find in the article how much DARPA gave SpaceX, in dollars, and the second link talks about payment for the launch, not the grant.

    The mission carried a $6.7 million price tag covered by the U.S. Air Force and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
How big share of about AFAIK $90 millions spent on Falcon-1 program was from SpaceX investor(s) and how big was from external sources? In other words, how material was that external funding?

ceejayoz
1 replies
2h37m

I think it stands to reason that if they were nearly bankrupt after flight floor, having to self-fund flights one, two, and three would have definitely bankrupted them.

avmich
0 replies
1h55m

I think they had money to make up to 4 flights. Looks like they got some money even before the flight 4, but not sure how much compared to their own expenses.

manquer
0 replies
19h5m

SpaceX exists because of that government's significant funding of the company and the prescient decision to award multiple (fixed-price!) Commercial Cargo/Crew contracts.

This was the claim of OP I replied to, Are we not moving the goal posts here? Government support for early stage startups is absolutely not what OP claimed

DARPA AND USAF funding is important and also available to many companies before and since, the size of them is however not significant in comparison to what it takes to run a rocket company or even R&D.

Contrary to popular belief, Falcon 1's flight 4 did not directly lead to more customer contracts ...

Even Musk doesn't make that claim.

In the alternate reality where Falcon 4 succeeded but there were no COTS and CRS , would SpaceX have survived? Yes I think so, Musk would not have been able to keep it funded personally yes, but it is hard to see the first private rocket company with a functional rocket not being able to raise any money from investors at all.

We can of course argue how much Musk loosing partial control would have affected the trajectory of the company, quite possible they won't be where they are today without singular focus he was able to drive in the company, who is to say ? but they would likely be still here. It is also possible that Musk is talented and effective enough even with constraints external investors would have been still able to achieve the same kind of things, keep in mind SpaceX does have lot of external investors and raised outside money heavily in the last 15 years including a $1Billion from Google in 2015, Musk has been able to operate with that so not that far fetched.

---

Nobody is denying that US Gov has been instrumental in the success of SpaceX and rocketry in general. After all even with zero government support, SpaceX would still need the rich talent pool US Gov developed and allowed to work in the private sector to build a rocket at all.

The point is how much the revenue from Government launches helps/helped not how they has helped at all. US Gov is a large customer but not so large that loosing those contracts would make the TAM impossibly small, there is enough business outside to make it viable business not just attractive but viable nonetheless.

--

verzali
3 replies
21h30m

A big chunk of Starship funding is coming from NASA for the Artemis HLS.

avmich
2 replies
21h14m

https://spacenews.com/nasa-awards-spacex-1-15-billion-contra...

So, two flights to the Moon - ~$4B. SpaceX already spent around that on the developments in Boca Chica, each flight - expendable - is estimated at $0.1B, we already had 4 and they are surely more costly. We still have to have 2 HLS to fly and 20-30 Starship flights to refuel them, and that's the lower bound in expenses.

Big chunk, likely. But definitely not nearly all the money.

verzali
1 replies
9h34m

That's an interesting cost-based criticism of Starship. I hope you are wrong and SpaceX can actually do this profitably, otherwise its potential will be much reduced.

avmich
0 replies
1h50m

The development is what already being spent... Each flight, after development is complete, will be reusable - that's the plan - and will cost less than $0.1B == 100 millions dollars, if total per-Starship expenses are divided into the total number of that Starship flights. Yes, I hope the eventual costs per flight would be lower, the point is the cost of the program is surely way more than $4B.

hereme888
0 replies
23h28m

All space companies exist for that reason. Especially Boeing.

SpaceX just happens to be the best in every aspect.

armada651
5 replies
1d

it's really only the government and boeing that seem to be having problems.

As we've seen these past few years, Boeing is perfectly capable of royally screwing things up on its own without the government's involvement.

SlightlyLeftPad
2 replies
23h47m

Right, the public-sector government becomes afraid to take risks for political reasons. On the other hand, the publicly traded private sector over-optimizes for shareholder value, putting the cart of gold before the horse; Boeing.

SpaceX remains a private company solely focused on their mission undeterred by outside influence which allows engineers the space to do what they do best.

There’s a difference and anything that’s truly critical to our lives or human livelihood should consider delisting. Once shareholders demand your company to stray from excellence and quality in the name of raising the bottom line, it’s time to give it a hard look.

hackernewds
1 replies
23h40m

Private companies have shareholders as well.

vessenes
0 replies
22h39m

As a (very) small shareholder in SpaceX, I can tell you, it's Elon (and Gwynne's) game, full stop. I would be very surprised to learn an investor has even a tiny bit of influence at SpaceX.

somenameforme
1 replies
23h39m

The problem isn't government meddling, but the government creating perverse incentives. Boeing has an extremely strong relationship with the government, which means they get sent endless billions of dollars with quality being only a distant concern. Because it's not like Congress cares about space - NASA is just seen as a convenient jobs/pork medium. So long as money gets redirected to the right people, they're happy. And so maintaining this relationship, and milking it for all it's worth, becomes much more profitable and reliable than trying to compete, innovate, and bring down prices. On the contrary, high prices and long development times just drive even more profit. Most of their contracts have been cost plus where the government pays for all costs and then gives them a fat chunk of profit on top. Even the fixed price contracts tend to end up getting 'adjusted' over time.

Any company solely motivated by profit would probably be destroyed in this system, because the incentives created do not reward competence.

armada651
0 replies
18h21m

Whether it's in the public or in the private sector, the real problem is a lack of competent leadership. At some point we started respecting the person with the most profitable hustle more than the person showing actual competence and integrity.

lolinder
3 replies
20h50m

OceanGate launched three people on a joyride to the bottom of the ocean and the sub imploded.

Rich people being willing to spend buckets of money on an experience is not evidence that it is "safe" or "cost effective", it's just evidence that there are people in the world with more money than they know what to do with.

manquer
2 replies
18h53m

"cost effective"

Jet set was a thing in 50/60s Jet travel was viewed as a play thing for the extremely rich . Even today there is staggering 80% of the world population who have never flown in airplane ever in their life[1].

From the perspective of that 80% they can say airplanes are "just evidence that there are people in the world with more money than they know what to do with".

It takes a long long time for transportation to become affordable. What SpaceX has done so far is just make it a bit cheaper to make it possible for civilians to be able to even pay any money and do this. No innovation will be ever enough, that doesn't mean we demean it.

[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2017/12/07/boeing-ceo-80-percent-of-peo...

lolinder
1 replies
16h54m

I'm not demeaning anything, I'm just pointing out that OP's argument makes no sense. There may be other evidence that SpaceX is safe and cost effective, but rich people paying them to go to space is not it.

dylan604
0 replies
14h56m

Would the fact that the FAA granted SpaceX permission to launch civilians to space not speak towards the safety of the craft?

9659
2 replies
23h1m

SpaceX will lose a vehicle. Not a question of if, rather one of when.

relax! i am not saying Elon isn't the greatest engineer ever, and SpaceX is not a great company.

space flight is a dangerous business.

kuthmano
1 replies
6h46m

The Russians haven't lost a vehicle.

__d
0 replies
6h19m

Err ... Soyuz 1 and Soyuz 11 ?

delichon
1 replies
23h34m

It'll include the first commercial space walk ever. Calling that a joy-ride either trivializes an epic accomplishment or correctly describes a joy-ride of the gods. Helios' daily commute, but faster.

trothamel
0 replies
16h48m

correctly describes a joy-ride of the gods.

Pretty much this. Polaris Dawn is happening because Jared Isaacman wanted it to. And my point is that SpaceX has gotten the price down to the point where he was able to afford multiple trips.

baseballdork
0 replies
1d

The government (NASA with their commercial space effort) is the reason there's a SpaceX and a dragon to be available as backup. The government seems to be doing alright here.

rockemsockem
27 replies
1d

We stopped doing serious space development after Apollo and lost a ton of institutional knowledge between then and when SpaceX started picking up where they left off.

Documentation and old drawings, often lacking implementation details, can only take you so far

There's no big secret, if we do a thing a lot we will be able to do it consistently and reliably. Boeing has not done a lot of spacecraft design and manufacturing recently. They've spent a bunch of "time" on it, but haven't actually produced much.

Fortunately other companies, besides just SpaceX, are building lots of spacecraft.

golergka
19 replies
23h50m

One could argue that shuttle program didn't end up as successful as was originally hoped, but it is certainly “serious space development”.

squarefoot
5 replies
23h8m

Yes, also there's a world of difference between a single extremely hard to repeat mission whose only purpose was to win the race to the Moon at any cost for reasons that had more to do with politics than engineering (not to dismiss the huge engineering accomplishments, my point should be clear) and something whose plan is to send stuff in orbit every week and potentially people every month with the goal to do the same on the Moon very soon and Mars in less than a couple decades. The great accomplishment today isn't reaching a higher orbit than in the 60s, but doing the same every damn month, with significant cargo capabilities, and safely. One can't build a Moon base by sending up there a bag of screws every six months.

rockemsockem
3 replies
21h43m

What do you mean a "single mission", Apollo put astronauts on the moon 6 times and orbited it another 2 times.

You learn to do things better by doing it repeatedly. The best way to build up to weekly launches is to do it more and more and more often, which is exactly what SpaceX has done.

Stopping the funding that NASA was getting at the time is the reason we lost those institutional muscles and stopped building them up.

squarefoot
1 replies
20h35m

What do you mean a "single mission", Apollo put astronauts on the moon 6 times and orbited it another 2 times.

Possible bad wording on my part. I meant that the cost was hardly sustainable in a long run, so that once it was clear that the US had won the race to the Moon, the lack of significant incentives doomed the project because of high cost compared to the return. Back then there was no or very little interest in placing commercial satellites in orbit and nobody cared about Mars. The shuttle was different as it served as a lab and carrier to put satellites in orbit, and more importantly (replying also to avar here) disasters aside one would still have the shuttle returning after each launch, while every single Saturn V had to be rebuilt. I believe the move to a reusable carrier was obligatory to make short term launches feasible economically, which is what the Shuttle started and now SpaceX is continuing.

avar
0 replies
20h22m

The shuttle could get 24 tons to orbit, Saturn V could deliver 130 tons.

The per launch cost was the same when dividing the overall cost by the number of launches. Saturn V launched 13 times, the shuttle 135 times.

There's just no way to rationalize the whole project not being a terrible idea from beginning to end.

avar
0 replies
22h14m

The total cost of the shuttle was around $200 billion. A Saturn V launch was around $1.2 billion (today's dollars).

The Saturn V could get 44.5 tons to the moon.

So instead of the shuttle program we could have had whatever amount of moon base you'd get with just under 7500 tons on the moon.

And that's assuming a very expensive Saturn V, in reality the system would have become cheaper over time due to optimization and amortization.

mppm
5 replies
22h58m

"Not as successful as was originally hoped" is quite an understatement. The program missed all of its economical and operational targets (reliability, cost per kg in orbit, launch frequency) by a factor of one hundred. It was supposed to usher in a new era of scientific, commercial and civilian spaceflight, and competing programs were cancelled and deprioritized because they were about to be obsoleted by this amazing new reusable space lauch system. What it ended up being, instead, was an epic exercise in space budget whoring, which continues to this day with the Artemis program that insists on "reusing" Space Shuttle derived hardware for that exact reason.

avar
2 replies
22h25m

It spent way more money than initially planned, while doing so consistently over decades, and in all the right congressional districts.

It was wildly successful.

You're just under the mistaken impression that the goal was to go to space cheaply or whatever.

But the success of the shuttle program pales in comparison to the SLS and Artemis.

Now they're spending more money in all the right places, without that pesky distraction of launching the thing into space.

kelnos
0 replies
12h4m

Sure, if you define "successful" in the most cynical way possible. I don't disagree with you at all that many projects (even many non-space-related) are just jobs programs masquerading as "progress" or "research" or whatever.

But so what? I don't care about that measure of "success". I care about reliable, reusable, cost-efficient space launches, and all the technological and scientific advances that can bring. By those measures, the space shuttle was a disaster of a failure. That's what we care about.

avmich
0 replies
21h22m

You're just under the mistaken impression that the goal was to go to space cheaply or whatever.

You're way off in the wonderland considering the goals and achievements. Just remember who's the actual goal setter is. Don't fool yourself.

golergka
1 replies
14h34m

It explored an idea that ended up being a dead end. But we only know it in hindsight. Decisions need to be judged given the information available at the time. Was there a consensus that shuttle was a bad design at the time? Was it obvious that it will be the case?

mppm
0 replies
11h52m

Obviously it was not known from the beginning that it would be a dead end. However, engineers have this blind spot for keeping track of bigger-picture objectives, as opposed to technical specifications. If you set out to build a lawn mower, and end up with a rubber duck, this will be deemed a failure. But if you do build the lawn mower, all is good. Even if it costs a million dollars, and all the lawns in the country remain unmowed (except for a handful of government properties). So long as someone is paying for continued development, where's the problem?

In other words, a lot of such government-backed projects utterly fail in their objectives, not so much due to lack of prophetic foresight, but due to inability to re-evaluate when it becomes clear that the previously chosen approach can no longer lead to the envisioned outcome. ITER is another fine example of this.

eigenman
3 replies
23h23m

The first space shuttle prototype (Enterprise) started construction in 1974. The first shuttle launched in 1981. To the best of my knowledge, there were no major upgrades to the design over its career, save avionics. So even though the space shuttle was “serious space development,” it’s been a long time since a new human rated vehicle has been designed.

rockemsockem
1 replies
21h48m

It was also initially designed to be able to have nuclear thermal propulsion engines installed in later iterations, but that got scrapped.

Kim_Bruning
0 replies
8h30m

Those were for the other type(s) of shuttles, for use in space. (The ones that didn't get built).

The original STS design looked a lot more like late-game KSP1 (possibly depending on the player).

verzali
0 replies
21h37m

Well, Orion was developed.

rockemsockem
1 replies
21h49m

IMO the shuttle program did a decent job of preserving American human-spaceflight know-how, especially when measured against what it was feasible to accomplish at the time.

The true problem is that the US government stopped funding space in a serious way and so NASA did not continue pushing the envelope at the rate they did before. We've had some pretty great robotic missions in that time though.

pfdietz
0 replies
18h22m

No, the true problem was that the Shuttle program was just a terrible idea. Alternatives (like economical expendable launchers, or even just evolving Saturn) would have been much better.

jwells89
0 replies
22h18m

The shuttle program had several problems, but perhaps the biggest was something of a "design by committee" issue. Too many interested parties wanted it to do too many things, making it somewhere between bad and mediocre at all of them, to say nothing of the costs.

To build reliable, economical rockets and spacecraft (at least those burdened with the task of escaping Earth's gravity well), you need to be able to intensely specialize and streamline them to the greatest degree possible, with what complexity remains pulling its own weight several times over. They need to be really good at one thing, with any other use cases coming as a bonus.

avmich
5 replies
21h24m

Fortunately other companies, besides just SpaceX, are building lots of spacecraft.

I wouldn't say they do too much though.

In USA we have 1) Dragon - an overall good, rather conventional, rather modest in capabilities design. We also have 2) Lockheed's Orion, a rather capable, but quite, quite expensive design. 3) We also have Starliner, and I hope Boeing will at least try to support it, or better make it reliable enough; it's also rather modest, but much better than nothing. 4) We also have Dream Chaser... not quite have yet, and it's in cargo version for now, but still there's hope it will carry humans one day and will be successful. Better than many other designs, and of course not perfect. 5) We have Starship... maybe it will carry humans earlier than Dream Chaser, but that's still at least years away. It's a rather unique design, true. But quite unproven at the moment.

So... the best overall at the moment is still Dragon, and the best candidate to replace it is years away - I'd hope that would be Dream Chaser, though won't bet on it.

Overall... not too much I'd say. Just imagine yourself in place of those several companies which are building orbital stations today. What they're going to use?.. Do you see the problem?

dotnet00
2 replies
20h25m

Most of the companies with actual money behind their space station proposals seem to intend to use the IDSS, so theoretically they'd be able to take either of the commercial crew spacecraft. Besides that, iirc one proposal is basically a "basic" cylinder which relies on a docked Dragon to support it. Starship is in an interesting spot because in a sense it's a station in itself. Starship deployable stations currently have the problem that the payload bay opening mechanism and volume aren't set in stone yet.

avmich
1 replies
18h46m

Most of the companies with actual money behind their space station proposals seem to intend to use the IDSS, so theoretically they'd be able to take either of the commercial crew spacecraft.

Right, but to be practical, those commercial crew spacecrafts should exist in sufficient numbers to ensure the orbital stations are supplied, preferably without exorbitant price tags, which an insufficient supply could result in.

dotnet00
0 replies
17h35m

Agreed, so far, SpaceX seems to be fine with building more Dragons, I had been assuming they were just refitting the 3 they built initially for the free-flying missions, but turns out they have 5 in service at the moment. Boeing seems to have decided to stop at 2 Starliners, and of course too early to say about fleet size for Dreamchaser.

zeristor
1 replies
18h17m

We also have X-37 the military space plane, although that’s for the military.

X-33 was a thing, Venturestar by Lockheed. It seemed tantalising in close, a few mishaps and it was cancelled, but surely that would have been worth picking and taking that bit further.

avmich
0 replies
14h29m

X-37 is too light to carry humans. X-33 was a good idea... with less than adequate implementation, I guess...

kelnos
0 replies
12h13m

We stopped doing serious space development after Apollo and lost a ton of institutional knowledge between then and when SpaceX started picking up where they left off.

Yup. This is part of why I really love watching For All Mankind. I love the idea of an alternate history where the space race effectively never ended. In that universe, in 1974 they were farther along than we are today.

(Yes, I know, it's fictional, and even had the space race never ended in real life, the rate of progress would probably not have been as fast as it is in the show. But I can dream...)

Boeing has not done a lot of spacecraft design and manufacturing recently. They've spent a bunch of "time" on it, but haven't actually produced much.

And, arguably, the Boeing doing spacecraft stuff today is not the same Boeing that did spacecraft stuff decades ago, from a management and organizational culture standpoint.

zpeti
14 replies
1d

Does spacex not exist in your world or what?

option
13 replies
1d

we need more than one spacex.

zpeti
9 replies
1d

We have Ariane space, rocket lab, blue origin.

We need more than one musk. Unfortunately that’s like one in a century.

coryrc
5 replies
23h57m

Even Musk isn't Musk anymore.

nebula8804
2 replies
23h52m

He does not have a personally consistent track record but his company SpaceX seems to be executing just as good if not even better than it ever has.

metabagel
1 replies
23h13m

It’s all good until he has his Spacex Cybertruck moment.

nebula8804
0 replies
17h54m

People have been waiting for that like forever. It may happen, it may not. I spoke to multiple SpaceX employees post Musk twitter and they are as committed as ever with an insane amount of dedication to the cause...so if he does not lose his top talent, the likelihood of screwups like what you are describing seem small.

buildsjets
1 replies
22h18m

He’s our generation’s Howard Hughes. One Ket trip away from becoming a recluse, shuffling around with kleenex boxes for slippers muttering about being unclean and denouncing conspiracies against him.

zpeti
0 replies
21h26m

One Ket trip away from becoming a recluse

This was literally debunked by nasa but I’m so glad HN is so captured by anti musk narratives it’s impossible to post anything good about him with getting downvoted.

Pretty sad state of affairs.

tensor
1 replies
23h9m

I see you mistyped Shotwell.

option
0 replies
22h14m

she is good too. but musk did 0->1 work. She did everything else

Eggpants
0 replies
23h25m

Musk almost bankrupted both SpaceX and Tesla, He was more lucky than good.

biscottigelato
1 replies
23h35m

I agree. You are free to start one too~

metabagel
0 replies
23h15m

It helps to inherit wealth.

exe34
0 replies
1d

That appears to be answering a question orthogonal to:

we still haven't figured out how to get a single person to low Earth orbit and back in a safe and cost efficient way
SoftTalker
13 replies
1d

I fully agree. Personally I don't think we'll ever have an extended manned presence anywhere farther away than the Moon. We might visit Mars in the next century, maybe, but a colony surviving there is pure fantasy.

diggan
8 replies
1d

It's been 63 years ago since the first human visited the orbit around earth. Since then, development and research happens faster and faster. We now even have commercial companies who are developing space crafts for humans.

I don't think we've seen even the beginning of how things will unfold. Just 100 years will render a huge difference from today, and today we're already doing things that were unthinkable ~20 years ago (like reusable rockets).

garaetjjte
4 replies
23h51m

In other words, we are almost as far away from moon landings as they were from Wright brothers first flight. Not particularly optimistic.

SlightlyLeftPad
3 replies
23h42m

Just a couple hundred years ago, Settlers who risked their lives and spent several months on cutting edge technology (aka wooden sail boats) to find “new” land would like to have a word.

oceanplexian
2 replies
18h39m

It's also a bit poetic in that it took 30-60 days to sail from Europe to the New World. When Mars is aligned with Earth, the travel time will be similar. For example, New Horizons was able to reach Mars in 39 days.

DarmokJalad1701
0 replies
15h49m

Something going that fast would not be able to slow down any kind of useful payload into Mars orbit with current propulsion technology.

kyriakos
2 replies
23h37m

Commercial space flight will become mainstream as soon as it becomes viable to profit from it. Probably via asteroid or moon mining. At that point motivation to be in space will hit its peak. Let's not forget why humans went to orbit and the moon in the first place.

monooso
1 replies
22h55m

Let's not forget why humans went into orbit and the moon in the first place.

Political propaganda?

MGRandom
0 replies
22h52m

manifesting as real motivation

maxerickson
1 replies
23h57m

Why are we gonna sustain a presence on the moon?

SoftTalker
0 replies
23h52m

We might. I'm not saying we will. Neither place is habitable without exhorbitant levels of support and expense, but the moon is far closer.

caconym_
0 replies
18h13m

Given how much future is left (a whole lot), I don't really understand why some people seem so confident that humanity is just going to stay on Earth forever. Are you assuming industrial civilization will collapse? It's certainly possible, but I don't think it's a given.

hereme888
6 replies
23h28m

we haven't? isn't this exclusively a Boeing issue? SpaceX should just get the whole contract.

ceejayoz
5 replies
23h13m

SpaceX effectively does already. NASA has already bought extra flights from them. It seems likely they'll buy more now.

echoangle
4 replies
10h22m

Why would they buy more? They can’t even get the already booked flights done before the ISS is deorbited

ceejayoz
3 replies
5h5m

NASA likely will now need to replace the remaining Starliner missions on the schedule.

echoangle
2 replies
4h35m

Replacing missions isn’t exactly buying more though, right? The total number of planned missions didn’t increase?

ceejayoz
1 replies
3h48m

Sure. NASA will cancel Starliner flights, and replace them with newly purchased SpaceX ones. They are going to be buying more SpaceX launches.

echoangle
0 replies
3h44m

Ah, I somehow misread the initial comment and thought you said that they bought more Starliner launches. Sorry for that.

dev_tty01
2 replies
22h38m

You seem to be unaware that the Soyuz system has been safely moving people back and forth to LEO for decades. SpaceX has been doing it since 2020. This failure should only be taken as a comment on Boeing's broken engineering processes and incompetent management. It says nothing about our society's spacefaring capabilities.

dev_tty01
0 replies
13h52m

Yes, my bad. Thanks.

Archelaos
2 replies
23h32m

I agree. It reminds me that it is now 6,000+ years (at least) since our agricultural era started, and we still haven't figured out how to provide a decend meal every day for all the children on our spaceship Earth.

krapp
1 replies
22h12m

we still haven't figured out how to provide a decend meal every day for all the children on our spaceship Earth.

We produce more than enough food to feed every person on Earth and then a few billion more in the future. We simply choose not to. It isn't a technological or logistical issue, but cultural and political.

Archelaos
0 replies
20h48m

Yes indeed. It shows the importance of cultural and political issues in everything. And not least in space flight. See the motivation behind the Apollo programme in the past or who might be part of the next Crew-9 mission in the current situation.

mattmaroon
1 replies
1d

We get people to and from low earth orbit safely and (relative to the 60’s) cost efficiently all the time. One failure isn’t an indictment of the whole industry, any more than one broken down car negates how much better cars are today than in the past.

thegrim33
0 replies
22h40m

And it wasn't even a real failure; they contractually have to provide something like a 1 in 200 chance of failure or better, and in the state the vehicle is in they haven't or can't prove that they're meeting that safety margin, so NASA is choosing to go with an option that does have that safety margin. That's it. If they were to come down in it anyways there's still likely a 1% or less chance of failure.

zo1
0 replies
1d

We have to have a collective look at what 1st-world governments, the media, and most "ordinary" people have been focusing on since the late 60's.

The world is not mobilizing towards these big "civilization advancing" goals, we're all just faffing about solving the next tiny little thing infront of our faces. That plus we're breeding mediocrity and not promoting excellence through meritocracy. This is purely cultural, and it's right infront of us every day to see and participate in (or not).

treflop
0 replies
21h29m

This is like the difference between electrical engineering and software engineering. It’s just so more expensive to create and test anything in EE so development cycles are much longer. Compare that to software engineering where people are trying and making new paradigms like every week.

Space engineering is wildly more expensive so development and progress cycles are even longer.

philwelch
0 replies
23h22m

This is an absurd statement. There are currently three operational spacecraft that have been safely and reliably ferrying people back and forth from LEO for years now: Soyuz, Dragon, and Shenzhou. This is a test flight for a fourth spacecraft.

jstummbillig
0 replies
21h52m

The same goes for secure and bug free software development (while the cost of errors in software rise all the time)

Looking at transportation, noise and air pollution or medicine as other examples: We are still just really bad at most things, if you consider how little fantasy is required to find major fault in our important systems.

Space flight is not even that, just really exposed.

ijidak
0 replies
20h43m

And that a brand new company offers the only U.S.-based method for doing so, when NASA and these other companies have been at this since roughly World War II!

It's embarrassing for the legacy space industry.

Not to downplay the legacy space industry's amazing achievements like some armchair general (literally typing this from my couch...)

But, I'm shocked at how badly SpaceX is beating the incumbents.

electriclove
0 replies
23h51m

SpaceX is solving this and many similar issues.

hintymad
97 replies
21h49m

I wonder if there are books or articles that analyze how and why Boeing declined so fast and so spectacularly. Boeing used to be able to build 747 under budget and ahead of schedule, just like Lockheed could dazzle the world by creating U2 ahead of schedule and under budget with fewer than 200 people (or < 100?) in 15 months with the cost of a few millions. It can't be just the change of geopolitics post Cold War, right? It can't be just that the fixed-margin structure imposed by the government, right? It can't be just the mismanagement or the greed of the leadership, right? It can't just be that Boeing is in the phase of accelerated decline as any old-enough company, right?

I'm curious about such questions because on a larger scheme of the things, I really hope that Boeing is not a miniature reflection of the US - an empire in its twilight that got entangled in irreconcilable interests, doomed to watch its own inevitable decline.

trompetenaccoun
36 replies
17h21m

Last paragraph is a bit melodramatic. Here's what's publicly known:

- Boeing is a 'too big to fail' corporation with a significant source of revenue coming from the government. 40% in 2024¹, billions of dollars of public funds! Just a bit more and it would be mostly state-funded.

- They're the 4th biggest American defense contractor, so they're likely seen as vital for securing state power by many in the government.

- The government is not a good allocator of funds, free market competition works a lot better for creating the best product.

Using Ockham's razor, here's my guess what happened: To get in this position in the first place, there will have been a fair bit of lobbying and "greasing the wheels" involved. Boeing eventually found themselves in a position where they got government contracts, no matter what. Leadership got complacent, they didn't really compete anymore because they didn't have to. This was when Musk came in and disrupted the space industry. But at that point, company culture was likely already too far down the drain for quick fixes. The situation would already be much worse for their space division, if not for the fact that they have such good relations with NASA and the government. NASA basically covered for them and played down the seriousness of the issues for weeks. And even now, they're not having SpaceX rescue the astronauts immediately, which would be even more embarrassing for Boeing. Instead they're bringing them back together with the already planned SpaceX Crew-9 flight next year. Boeing keeps getting away with black eyes, there aren't enough consequences despite all the serious issues.

¹ https://www.seattletimes.com/business/boeing-aerospace/why-u...

philistine
19 replies
17h1m

The fact that SpaceX demonstrated, without a doubt, that reuse of a first stage was viable in December 2015, and that we still do not have any clearly reusable first stage from anyone else tells you the whole industry is complacent and juiced up on the fat margins of launching a first stage up, then chucking it in the ocean, and then asking for money for another first stage.

throwaway81523
6 replies
11h9m

Erm the Space Shuttle had a reusable first stage 40+ years ago.

throwaway2037
3 replies
7h11m

I'm sorry this was downvoted. It is probably a bit too pithy for HN.

I think you raise a good point even if there are some "technicalities" about it.

Real question: I'm not an aerospace geek. The term "first stage" has probably changed at lot in rocket science in the last 50 years. From the NASA Space Shuttle to SpaceX Falcon 9, has the definition changed? From my elementary school memories, the Space Shuttle used a giant center rocket and two booster rockets that we expendable, but you are definitely right that the Space Shuttle "thing" (no idea how to call it) was used over and over again, (somewhat) safely. Something that I don't know: Where Apollo programme capsules reusued? I assume no.

nycdotnet
1 replies
5h38m

The space shuttle had three main components - the orbiter (white and black space plane with the crew and cargo), the external tank (rust brown on all but the first few flights), and a pair of solid rocket boosters. The orbiter had three engines and received its propellant (oxygen and hydrogen) from the external tank. At launch, the solid rocket boosters (SRB) and the main engines were all running so technically they can all be considered part of a “first stage”. The SRBs would expend their propellant in around two minutes and separate. They dropped into the ocean, slowed via parachute, and were recovered by boat and refurbished. The three space shuttle main engines would continue to burn for several more minutes until the external tank was depleted. The ET would be discarded and burn up on reentry. Then the orbiter would use two small rockets with internally stored hypergolic propellants to boost up to its intended orbit.

Apollo/Saturn had a much more traditional staging design where the first stage booster would run then drop off, then the second stage booster would run, then drop off, etc. There exist other rockets like the Atlas which had what they called a “stage and a half” design where the center stage burned for a long time and there was an outer “ring” stage that dropped off after a shorter time while the center stage kept going.

After going to the moon, the only part of the entire Apollo/Saturn rocket that came back was the command module capsule with the astronauts and moon rocks. These were completely torched and affected by salt water and were not designed to be reused. Reentry from the moon is significantly faster than reentry from low earth orbit.

The shuttle orbiters were refurbished and reused. It was a very difficult, expensive, and time consuming process to get an orbiter ready for another flight.

All of that is to say that the picture is blurry for the shuttle regarding first stage reusability. Yes the SRBs and orbiters were reused and were lit at launch. The ET was in use at launch but discarded. In my opinion it’s sort of not that interesting to argue what is and isn’t first stage on the shuttle because the elements just don’t map cleanly.

The design of the system with the SRBs, tank, and orbiters being adjacent to each other is considered by many to have been too dangerous in retrospect. This design was a factor in both shuttle disasters - the SRB shooting fire at the ET causing it to explode on Challenger and cracked foam falling away from the ET during launch and hitting the leading edge of the orbiter wing for Columbia. If they were stacked vertically rather than adjacent, those specific failure modes would not have been possible.

KennyBlanken
0 replies
2h27m

All this is irrelevant. The shuttle required so much inspection, refurbishment, and repair that it was little more than the world's largest and most expensive piece of political pork for a giant PR stunt. Contractors were selected so that every state had a contractor making shuttle parts in order to bribe congressional reps into supporting the massive boondoggle.

Each launch cost almost half a billion dollars in 2010 money. The Falcon 9 is reportedly $60-65M per launch.

SLS was just more of the same, welfare for all the states with contractors who grew fat and happy off the shuttle contracts. There was no technical argument whatsoever for reusing such ancient technologies.

Each RS25 engine cost $35M to refurbish for use in the SLS. For the cost of building TEN falcon 9 engines, NASA refurbished one RS25 engine.

And yes, of course it was absurdly dangerous to rely on not just one but two solid rocket motors of which there is no control whatsoever except for slight thrust vectoring...

lupusreal
0 replies
6h24m

From my elementary school memories, the Space Shuttle used a giant center rocket and two booster rockets that we expendable

That's incorrect. The orange "giant center rocket" had no engines, it was an external tank which held the propellant burned by the orbiter's main engines. The SSMEs were on the "Shuttle thing" and were reused.

smarnach
0 replies
5h54m

It had a reusable orbiter, not a reusable first stage.

Rhinobird
0 replies
9h53m

The space shuttle was refurbishable. It needed an army of 5000 engineers a few months to get it flight worthy after each launch.

And ultimately that wasn't enough for safety.

bushbaba
4 replies
15h32m

Or spaceX is the only firm that inspires engineers to work hard, and take (calculated) risk. To move quick.

A lot of defense and aerospace is not used to the Silicon Valley mindset. Gotta give Elon credit in achieving what he did with spacex

tweetle_beetle
3 replies
9h59m

Let's be realistic though, it's nothing to do with the 'Silicon Valley mindset'. It's just the classical route to dethroning a poor-performing incumbant - hire good talent, throw lots of money at reasearch and stay focused on the smallest targets where you can demonstrate the biggest progress.

Despite his projected persona, Musk would love nothing more than to get to the position of being the bloated encumbant supplier with guaranteed government contracts regardless of results.

dotnet00
2 replies
7h19m

Despite his projected persona, Musk would love nothing more than to get to the position of being the bloated encumbant supplier with guaranteed government contracts regardless of results.

I'm impressed you can keep saying this nonsense despite how SpaceX operates being pretty well documented.

danielheath
1 replies
6h55m

I mean, what wealthy person wouldn't like to be on the "free money" train?

_factor
0 replies
6h28m

One with an absurd amount of money that actually focuses on improving society and science. Instead we have Musk, and you’re probably right.

throwawaymaths
3 replies
12h28m

To be fair literally no one else is doing this, not Russia, not China, not Japan, not Europe.

postingawayonhn
0 replies
4h22m

RocketLab (US/New Zealand) has been recovering stages for awhile. I think they're getting close to reflying one.

philistine
0 replies
46m

That is exactly my point. It has been 10 years and aside from some small baby steps, no incumbent has declared clearly and vocally that reusability is the future. They're all in denial. The Russians, the Chinese, Europe.

m4rtink
0 replies
7h9m

China has at least one Falcon 9 clone in testing stages (that one that accidentally launched during static fire a while ago) and many new-space rocket companies have reusable vehcles in pipeline (eq. Rocketlabs Neutron). Even Europe is going to do that - eventually. :P

DoesntMatter22
1 replies
15h36m

That's true but it also speaks to the fact that Space X is incredible. Not nearly as bureaucratic and innovating like crazy. The new Raptor engine alone is mind boggling in it's simplicity.

HideousKojima
0 replies
12h43m

And SpaceX was already beating the entire industry on price before they ever successfully reused a first stage.

Sysreq2
2 replies
13h53m

There US Army generally has one tourniquet that it’s deemed best. The CAT by North American rescue. Every Soldier is awash in these things. They hand them out like candy on Halloween. And rightly so.

But the Government has to buy them from businesses that meet certain characteristics. Woman owned, etc. That’s a great thing, right?

In this case however, that female owned business is the guy who invented the things wife. Who he sells them to at a mark-up. Who then sells them to the government.

Economy of scale? Ya! They are the number one buyer and pay the most. Honestly, who cares though, it’s only a couple million a year. Drop in the bucket.

How did Boeing fail? Death by a thousand cuts. That same story probably plays out across the entire supppy chain. Every part, every product, every supplier. Compounded over and over again.

zmgsabst
0 replies
10h46m

But the Government has to buy them from businesses that meet certain characteristics. Woman owned, etc. That’s a great thing, right?

There’s people who would say any bigotry in government is wrong.

datameta
0 replies
3h34m

That sounds like embezzlement in the USSR but painted with capitalism colors. Quid pro quo siphoning at every layer, undetectable as a whole, but a giant boulder of dead weight for the system.

seanhunter
1 replies
4h38m

- The government is not a good allocator of funds, free market competition works a lot better for creating the best product.

Government aquisition is a monopsony (market dynamic where there is one purchaser who wields all the power) which means "free market competition" doesn't exist. This causes lots of negative consequences. Here's a discussion of the topic in the context of defense but a lot of the same surely applies to space.

https://www.firstbreakfast.com/p/break-the-department-of-def...

dmix
0 replies
4h3m

This idea of neverending public-private partnerships, where Congress dumps money into the same tiny group of companies for decades and gov agencies just sit around finding new things for these same companies to build (over budget and way too late), was always going to get to a breaking point of dysfunction. Whether it's military or infrastructure or whatever.

The gov created this environment and the private companies protect it because it's big money and grease it so it's the only option (like selling the bullshit idea "no one else can do what [Boeing] does cuz we huge staff counts and billions").

They both enable each other

And people are too scared to have a system that encourages new smaller companies take part because they don't have fancy sales pitches or fail early prototypes or take longer to get to Step A. And everyone criticizes them to death. So the only option is to get bought by Boeing or Lockheed, who then do really good at Step A just to fail a Step C and D and E.

KennyBlanken
1 replies
2h39m

Boeing is a 'too big to fail' corporation with a significant source of revenue coming from the government. 40% in 2024¹, billions of dollars of public funds! Just a bit more and it would be mostly state-funded.

SpaceX (as of a year or two ago) was getting 45%+ of its funding from the US government.

And then there's the $900M in subsidies SpaceX asked for to provide rural internet access via starlink...

megaman821
0 replies
51m

Aren't subsidies for the consumer equipment and monthly charges? It is not a monetary gift to Space X, though it would increase their user base.

Karellen
1 replies
8h57m

The government is not a good allocator of funds, free market competition works a lot better for creating the best product.

That doesn't explain why their civilian aircraft aren't just not the best product, but have gone completely to shit over the last decade or two. The 737 max is the most notorious example here, as it's their most recent development and has never been good from the start - but reporting suggests that the engineering on their formerly-good lines has been going downhill also, and it's only the fact that they started out as good products which means they've taken longer to fall as low.

And there's very little government revenue for the civilian aircraft design and manufacturing side of the business. It's all free market competition.

throwaway2037
0 replies
6h59m

    > gone completely to shit over the last decade or two
Has the 777 and 787 done this? I don't think so. Yes, Airbus has many competitive aeroplanes in adjacent categories now, but that does mean the originals (and their many sub-models) from Boeing have "gone completely to shit".

Buttons840
1 replies
15h31m

Your say that believing the downfall of Boeing is reflective of the downfall of all of society is "melodramatic", and then spend the rest of your post explaining how Boeing's failures are exasperated by failures in government and other organizations. You defeat your own argument.

hollerith
0 replies
15h30m

Exacerbated, you mean: "make (a problem, bad situation, or negative feeling) worse."

throwaway2037
0 replies
7h20m

    > Boeing is a 'too big to fail' corporation
My sarcastic reply: "Yeah, so what."

My more thoughtful reply: I think "too big to fail" gets a bad rap on HN. In my view, for any sufficiently large country+economy, at some point, your top 3-5 defense contractors will be considered "too big to fail". No way around that. Depending upon the size of your country+economy, this is true for steel manuf also, but probably just the top 1-2.

Has anyone with great expertise in Boeing considered the effects of a break-up? I'm not sure why Boeing needs so many different industries under one roof -- space, civil, military, plus others.

lenerdenator
0 replies
15h51m

- The government is not a good allocator of funds, free market competition works a lot better for creating the best product.

This is irrelevant here; the only people buying most of the products that Boeing makes are governments or airlines (many of which have government backing, because countries find it advantageous to have an airline). Without government, there's just no Boeing, or SpaceX, or Lockheed Martin, or Airbus, or...

The problem ultimately goes back to 1996 when Boeing was more-or-less taken over by McDonnell-Douglas management, and quality engineering took a back seat to quarterly results. Everything, from bad QA to "greasing the wheels" with lobbyists, ultimately goes back to someone with an MBA deciding that those behaviors were worth it for the stock price increase.

And to be fair, they were... until they weren't. But by then, the guy with the MBA has either left or divested, and it becomes someone else's problem.

SpaceX's success can be in a large part contributed to the fact that they don't have a bunch of retirement and pension funds demanding a chunk of the profits every quarter regardless of actual market space performance.

ericfr11
0 replies
16h36m

Lobbying is the biggest problem. So much corruption. Everyone is bought, and 2016 showed that, indeed, the US are declining

elif
0 replies
6h25m

In the late 00's there were billions on the table of junk contracts for parts service training with crazy pricing to the USAF.

I would speculate that when those got shaken out, (and likely some space contracts sniped away by SpaceX) Boeing did not make any adjustments for the revenue loss and simply tried to continue on their original bloated trajectory but instead cutting every corner possible along the way.

datameta
0 replies
15h42m

Corporate rot of engineering-first culture.

Jtsummers
14 replies
21h45m

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/01/boeing-737... - Gift Link: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/01/boeing-737... (good for 14 days from today)

https://qz.com/1776080/how-the-mcdonnell-douglas-boeing-merg... - 2020 article on the topic

I'm trying to find an article from circa 2007 on the changes at Boeing but I can't find it right now. Read those two and follow their various links and you'll get more information.

The long story short version is that post McDonnell Douglas merger, Boeing's management culture was replaced with MD's management culture and things have only declined since.

hintymad
13 replies
18h49m

Thanks! A follow-up question would be why MD's management won, even though it wreaked havoc. Or it was really just the hindsight...

crop_rotation
7 replies
18h20m

In almost all mergers the management of the worse comapny ends up winning, provided there was no loopsided difference in size. The thing is, since those executive were not good at creating product, they are more likely to be good at politics and hence they end up overtaking management of the new combined company, even if their company was the smaller one.

robbomacrae
4 replies
17h48m

I’m curious to know of similar examples happening or references that back this up if you or anyone has them.

philistine
0 replies
16h59m

NeXt leadership completely overtook Apple. I don't know if it ended up panning out.

cvwright
0 replies
16h47m

US Air buying American Airlines just to become American Airlines, is one of my (least) favorites

crop_rotation
0 replies
17h42m

A good series of examples is in the book "Barbarians at the Gate", chronicling the career of F Ross Johnson. His company would get acquired and then he and his folks would outmanoeuvre the acquiring company management.

collin128
0 replies
17h7m

I enjoyed Lights Out: Pride, Delusion, and the Fall of General Electric by Ted Mann and Thomas Gryta

petre
0 replies
17h22m

They should have fired the failing company's management after the merger. It failed due to the fact that they were incompetent.

User23
0 replies
15h23m

Worse-is-better, it’s not just for operating systems. Or maybe management is just another operating system.

jordanb
1 replies
18h3m

Finance people prefer finance people. MD's bean counter management were seen as being more responsible and "hard nosed" than the Boeing management who were focused on things that "didn't drive the bottom line" like the product, culture, etc.

theGnuMe
0 replies
15h53m

People like what they understand. But they need to respect what they don’t when the experts say so.

Tuna-Fish
1 replies
18h10m

Boeing was known as a great engineering firm that was not that great at turning their engineering excellence into shareholder returns. The shareholders wanted executives more focused on said returns.

robotnikman
0 replies
15h48m

Sounds like the solution is to turn it into a privately owned company then. Of course, that's greatly simplifying things, but it would be a right step in the right direction.

dotnet00
0 replies
7h15m

I recall that in a previous thread, someone had explained that the agreement between Boeing and MD was that MD's management would be retained at similar positions in Boeing, and that many of MD's management gamed this agreement by raising their position before the merger. Leading MD's management to end up higher in Boeing's management.

NotSammyHagar
6 replies
15h12m

1. MD merging with Boeing and taking over management, basically. Management gurus hate this being pointed out

2. Moving headquarters to Chicago - part of the MBAs taking over

3. Losing the engineering first mindset - this is really the core of what happened there.

When the company kept focusing on stock returns and "financializing" the company, and did things like spinning off Spirt airplane assembly company, that was the real visible symbol of the problem. In the past few months they gave up and rebought them to join with Boeing.

The solution for being will be a multiple year transition of the company into being much more technology and engineering focused. They will have to eject the MBA type "reducing cost is the goal" type leaders. The problem is those are completely the leaders of the company today.

SV_BubbleTime
5 replies
15h5m

Absolutely MBAification. But also complexity crisis.

My two most major issues with the world today.

Boeing got some but worse, and also made their products so complex that humans can’t understand it as a whole let alone communicate it to others.

It’s not just Boeing. It’s everyone, everywhere. All systems in every market require so much extra “stuff” that we’re on a spiral.

Compound that with MBAs that insist things “run lean” and “the core competency group you aren’t in found X, so meet your target of Y or find somewhere else to work” to “We need that BlackRock money, so do whatever the govs of NY, IL, and CA say to do because their trillion dollars speaks”.

No one is ready to address either issue.

lupusreal
2 replies
6h13m

Most of the complexity in modern software is not inherent to the problem meant to be solved by that software, but instead emerges from both the organizational structures used to develop software, and from the modern engineering culture of software development.

For instance, Boeing famously bungled the 737 Max. But 737s were first created in the era of slide-rules, there is nothing about the plane which is too inherently complex to be done well. MCAS, the software portion of the debacle, was so simple in principle it could have been easily implemented by one competent engineer plus a few more to check his work. Complexity inherent to the problem space is NOT the problem here.

SV_BubbleTime
1 replies
3h15m

I can tell who has never made anything. Or only made software before.

lupusreal
0 replies
1h34m

Go on then, explain why you believe something like MCAS is too complex to make properly. Mismanagement is the root of these problems, not the supposed complexity of the problems.

MCAS was one flight control law, a one that was poorly conceived in the first place and then botched in implemention, but still only a single flight control law. If you think that such a system is too complex to created properly, then please tell me how many thousands of engineers must have been on the team that created the first all-digital fly-by-wire system for an aircraft. That was a hell of a lot more complex than one flight control law on a 737, and they were actually doing something new back then. Thousands, why it must have taken tens of thousands of people amirite.

zifpanachr23
0 replies
12h38m

Software is unfortunately a big part of the complexity crisis. What you are describing is an investible consequence of abstraction (not that abstraction cannot be handled sensibly at some level, but it at any point you reach a situation where nobody is capable of understanding the entire software stack, then we are in trouble. We are almost certainly at that point now in most industries).

There was an interesting lecture Jonathon Blow gave a while back that addressed this issue but it was predictably panned as the ramblings of an insane game developer, I think wrongly. A lot of the points made were true.

fransje26
0 replies
9h0m

Boeing got some but worse, and also made their products so complex that humans can’t understand it as a whole let alone communicate it to others.

It’s not just Boeing. It’s everyone, everywhere. All systems in every market require so much extra “stuff” that we’re on a spiral.

Nah. That's just another facet of engineering incompetence.

Complexity doesn't just happen, it is allowed to happen.

We repeatedly went to the moon over 50 years ago, with complex systems that were well understood by the different teams that built them.

Now, 50 years later, if we are not capable of repeating the same feat, we are doing something wrong.

If we use software-controlled hardware and then throw are hands in the air screaming "it's too complex", we are doing something wrong. That stuff shouldn't have been used in the first place.

weswilson
4 replies
15h8m

There was an internal whitepaper written by a Boeing engineer back in 2001 that warns against the dangers of excessive outsourcing.

https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/69746-hart-smith-on-...

It reads like a plea to not turn into McDonnell Douglas (this was only a few years after the MD and Boeing merger), which we all know it essentially has. The last couple of sentences fire shots at Douglas Aircraft directly:

"The fate of the former Douglas Aircraft Company, which was reduced to a systems integrator in the early 1970s by excessive outsourcing of DC-10 production, is a clear indicator of what will happen to other companies which fail to sustain the conditions under which it is possible to launch new products. It is hoped that this sacrifice can save the new and expanded Boeing from a similar fate."

nickff
3 replies
11h20m

The trouble is that government contracts always strongly incentivize ‘excessive outsourcing’, and Boeing’s absorption of MD increased the dependence on government contracts, though Boeing was already on that road (especially after taking on Rockwell). Government oversight (almost) always discourages large profit margins, which makes increasing low-risk costs very appealing. In addition to that, there are strong political incentives for ‘distributing’ contracts widely, with the Space Shuttle being a famous example of this, having parts made or assembled in 48 different states.

Rhinobird
2 replies
9h48m

In addition to that, there are strong political incentives for ‘distributing’ contracts widely,

Government/Defense contractors can track their suppliers and tell Congress exactly how many jobs are in which districts per project.

dmix
1 replies
4h40m

Yes making the actual product is very very secondary to successfully appeasing Congress, produce 'jobs', and follow the litany of rules in place about now the money is used and paperwork after to check boxes.

These aren't businesses operating in a competitive market with pressure to produce the best things quickly. Their goal is simply to be the best gov lapdog vs the only 1 or 2 other gov lapdogs.

Being extremely late and extremely over budget is standard practice in that world and worst case is usually the project gets cancelled for budget reasons then restarted 5yrs later doing the same thing.

This is the environment the gov fostered, they made Boeing etc critical to national security and industry while having a total aversion to risk, and zero forethought into long term investment in legitimate competition. All we get is the same growing monster that becomes the living embodiment of The Iron Law of Bureaucracy https://www.jerrypournelle.com/reports/jerryp/iron.html

xivzgrev
0 replies
4h25m

Sure the government can create some inefficiencies but trying to blame them removes culpability off Boeing. If it was truly our government then many more government contractors would be delivering broken crap and that doesn’t seem to be the case. Example NOC stock seems to be doing just fine over past 5 years while Boeing..,has not.

randmeerkat
2 replies
12h17m

I'm curious about such questions because on a larger scheme of the things, I really hope that Boeing is not a miniature reflection of the US - an empire in its twilight that got entangled in irreconcilable interests, doomed to watch its own inevitable decline.

I’m tired of this hyperbolic, melodramatic angst about the general decline of the U.S. Did you not read the part about the crew being returned by SpaceX? A company that just made landing rockets a reality only 9 years ago, not even 10 years has passed and reusable rockets are as boring as smartphones. NASA identified an issue on the Boeing Starliner, and a cutting edge company (SpaceX) stepped up for a non-emergency rescue mission. There was no loss of life, or equipment, there’s been no injuries, just mild inconveniences. This isn’t a nation in decline, this is a nation that has even begun to peak yet.

hintymad
1 replies
11h2m

I'd be extremely happy to be wrong, as I invest my life and my family's in the US. As for the concern, it's not about this one particular incident, but about the pattern that other countries have experienced: the government and the society has so many entangled interest that no one knows how to move things forward. As a result, the country perishes. I'm not saying that the US is in that trajectory, but I did see some aspects of institutional decay, like the cost of canon shells is 6X of Russian's, despite that Russia is a much more corrupt country, or like the country is so divided and many people simply accept that election is about telling stories and personal attacks instead of logical discussion of policies. Like it would take billions to build the next-gen battleships or planes, and we couldn't have good enough supply chain in the US. Like our medical system is so much more expensive than other developed countries, and the list can go on.

randmeerkat
0 replies
4h56m

I'd be extremely happy to be wrong, as I invest my life and my family's in the US.

Spend less time reading the news and more time enjoying your family. The world has been “ending” for decades now, the U.S. isn’t going anywhere and will continue to get some things right while getting other things wrong.

“Until such time as the world ends, we will act as though it intends to spin on.”

~ Nick Fury

idiotsecant
2 replies
18h18m

Aggressively incompetent MBA micromanagement.

cqqxo4zV46cp
1 replies
18h13m

I think that they’re looking for intelligent, insightful analysis. As opposed to the myriad parroted HN comments on the subject, written by developers that pretend that their expertise is somehow transferable.

ksenzee
0 replies
17h24m

Except that in this case, the consensus HN view is also the wider consensus. Boeing engineers have been yelling about this as loudly as they can, for many years now, and the public is finally listening.

dylan604
2 replies
21h43m

Wasn't the U2 a skunkworks project where they just did it vs opening it up for input from committee whether from corporate or bureaucratic? Starliner was far far from that. From day one, everyone's fingers were in the pie.

hedgehog
0 replies
16h27m

U2 was Skunkworks, they started with an existing airframe (F-104?) and worked from there. Significant compromises, for example the wings droop so much they skid on the ground on landing and it's use was limited by the improved anti-aircraft missiles that became available around the same time.

CoastalCoder
0 replies
17h44m

Tangent, but I've seen a U2 at the Air Force Museum in Dayton. It's amazing how small that thing is, given its capabilities.

merman
1 replies
4h25m

Any organization that seemingly operates poorly typically just has bad incentives. Congressional funding for space became a feedback loop of pork for states (jobs program) from Apollo, continuing to today with SLS. Commercial crew demonstrates how stunningly dystopian over-specific congressional funding is. The solution is simple: Congress should take a giant step back from NASA involvement so NASA can have more commercial programs like commercial crew.

dwallin
0 replies
4h10m

Unfortunately, the way we structure, fund, and manage modern corporations creates tons of poor incentives all on its own, no legislative influence needed. (unless your goal is to maximize short term profit signals at all costs)

atrettel
0 replies
15h39m

I also recommend Mentour's excellent series of videos [1] on this subject too if you want more detail from an aviation perspective.

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nCbHpJShoXk

csomar
1 replies
9h17m

I'm curious about such questions because on a larger scheme of the things, I really hope that Boeing is not a miniature reflection of the US - an empire in its twilight that got entangled in irreconcilable interests, doomed to watch its own inevitable decline.

Markets cycle. Companies cycle. People cycle (actually just die unless you consider their offspring their continuation).

All systems do cycle; including the USA. It doesn't mean it's the end. If China doesn't rise and crashes it, there isn't really any other serious challenger and it will likely be the "rising" empire again.

christophilus
0 replies
7h21m

Eh. Maybe. My money’s somewhere in between. The US is an empire in decline, but it isn’t clear that China is the replacement. If China can somehow survive demographic collapse, then I’d put my money on them, but that’s a big if.

adsims2001
1 replies
21h44m

Flying Blind by Peter Robison isn't exactly the book you have in mind, but I did enjoy it and it's the closest I know of

theGnuMe
0 replies
15h51m

I’ll check it out… my guess is that it is a systems and silos problem.

Scarblac
1 replies
11h16m

How many of the US brightest go work in aerospace engineering these days?

Edit: and to those that do, SpaceX probably looks a lot more attractive.

Glawen
0 replies
5h58m

Probably not a lot when in the same city you have two huge tech companies. You would be crazy to go to Boeing

ulfw
0 replies
15h24m

Companies serving the military and companies serving the population at large should generally be separated. Boeing's fall (thanks to the reverse McDonell Douglas takeover) was mostly as their defense arm grew. Huge margins, a very different type of working. Boeing stopped giving a damn about it's civil aviation business, as is exemplified by moving their HQ from civil manufacturing hub Seattle first to Chicago and now to Arlington County, Virginia literally to suck up to Washington and lobby 24/7.

That's a very different type of business.

If Boeing was forced to make money with a successful civil aviation business alone it would be run very very differently.

talldatethrow
0 replies
3h42m

I know two MIT grads that then went on to work at Boeing as mechanical engineers.

They are not impressive at all on almost any subject you talk to them about. Not for Boeing engineers and definitely not as MIT grads.

I don't think they could handle the coursework at Cal IMO, and I thought MIT was even more difficult.

They do seem like a very good example of diversity DEI type admission and hiring. And these kinds of Boeing problems might be the result.

simonh
0 replies
8h40m

SpaceX is a US company too. The government has to be comfortable letting the incumbents fail, so that companies like SpaceX and Anduril can take their place.

lysace
0 replies
21h47m

I wonder if there are books or articles that analyze how and why Boeing declined so fast and so spectacularly.

I'm sure there's a number of books on the topic in the publishing pipeline.

It can't be just the mismanagement or the greed of the leadership, right?

It can.

kabdib
0 replies
9h5m

"McDonnell Douglas bought Boeing with Boeing's money" is how it was explained to me

justinclift
0 replies
14h21m

This book probably has some interesting insights:

"You Can't Order Change: Lessons from Jim McNerney's Turnaround at Boeing" - December 26, 2008

https://www.amazon.com/You-Cant-Order-Change-Turnaround/dp/1...

Probably mostly of the "do the opposite of whatever this guy says" variety. ;)

The top review on this book says:

    The author credits James McNerney for turning around Boeing. He
    neglected to say which way they were turning. For example, he
    credits JN for outsourcing so much of the 787 -- which included
    the wings, perhaps the thing Boeing did best. The 787 ended up
    way over budget and three years late. That's good management?
This seems like a good follow up book too:

https://www.amazon.ca/Man-Who-Broke-Capitalism-America_and/d...

gmerc
0 replies
11h12m

Stock buyback for investor gratification enabled the most optimal way for executives to keep meeting kpis in the short term rather than long term investments

cjblomqvist
0 replies
9h41m

There's a lot of theory about this. Look into strategy theory. A few well know concepts as entry points; Feedback loops, path dependency, disruptive innovation, group thinking. Other related concepts needed to analyze the Boeing story completely to understand their strategic position and defensibility could be; Core competence, Blue Ocean, Porter's Five Forces. More macro and fundamentally I'd look into Austrian school if thought and "destructive innovation", and core concepts such as division of labor.

Without knowing the details it makes a lot of sense that Boeing ended where they did (Boeing/SpaceX fits a lot of theories above). What may save the US is not the ability to save companies like Boeing - that would more likely hinder progress on a mid to long term scale - it's the ability to come up with new companies/innovators to overtake the incumbents.

In my interpretation. Fundamentally it goes all the way to the quality of institutions and culture. Time will tell, but I'm feeling more worried about those than the current ability to innovate.

Sevii
0 replies
17h20m

'Lessons from the Titans' has a great chapter on Boeing.

Glawen
0 replies
6h37m

I read the book on GE, Lights Out: Pride, Delusion, and the Fall of General Electric. I guess many things apply to Boeing too.

Bluestein
0 replies
4h7m

can't just be that Boeing is in the phase of accelerated decline

Peak air-travel.-

Arainach
0 replies
15h41m

It can't be just the mismanagement or the greed of the leadership, righ

....no, that does in fact explain everything that led to the decline of American manufacturing and engineering.

sitkack
84 replies
1d

Excellent news! Thank you NASA for making the right human and engineering decision.

This was news to me tho, "and Dragon-specific spacesuits for Wilmore and Williams." The spacesuits are specific to the vehicle?

Changing my underwear so I can drive to hardware store.

somenameforme
54 replies
22h30m

I'm unsure of the specifics of the Dragon capsule, but I know that on the Soyuz even the seats themselves are custom molded to each astronaut. You've gotta keep in mind that the capsules are designed for failure scenarios. That includes things like extremely high g force ejections (pushing close to 20g) from a failing rocket, depressurization scenarios, and so on.

It all seems a bit over the top when things go well, but especially as we start to up the rate of sending people into space - things don't go well quite often. The Space Shuttle only sent people to space 135 times, and there was a complete loss of life on two of those missions. If aircraft had that sort of failure rate then you'd see a plane dropping out of the sky about once a minute, literally.

jonplackett
48 replies
22h24m

That is quite the analogy. Not sure if it says more about the insane dangers of space or the insane reliability of airplanes.

blcknight
45 replies
22h11m

Aviation is insanely reliable. The 777 flew thousands of flights per day, every day for 18 years before its first fatality.

It’s why scandals like the 737 Max are so appalling. We know better. Boeing knew better.

Retric
40 replies
21h5m

Personally I am amazed just what the focus on safety has achieved.

The 737 Max was objectively surprisingly safe to fly at the time of the groundings. As in for the average flying passenger their odds were significantly higher to die of something else on the day of their flight than from a crash. But still we know how to do better and things improved.

Imagine if we treated each individual car accident as a failure and millions of like could have been saved. It may have involved making breathalyzers a mandatory feature etc, but I suspect there’s a lot more we could do even without that.

beerandt
16 replies
20h3m

Decades of focusing on safety are being unwound because of ~decade plus (so far) focus on efficiency and environmental regulation.

You can't maximize both.

ahartmetz
7 replies
19h25m

Yeah, 50+% of new cars being SUVs (gas guzzlers, kill pedestrians, easily roll over) is because of those damn environmentalists.

djbusby
2 replies
18h59m

And those killer Class 2b and 3+ pickups.

Manufacturers push those because of less environmental regs on those vs the perfectly viable Class 1.

beerandt
1 replies
18h13m

Or don't try to regulate 'class 1' into something people don't want to buy.

And FYI those trucks are bigger because you need more volume and moment-arm when building them out of lighter aluminum instead of heavier steel- a direct consequence of CAFE standards.

djbusby
0 replies
14h45m

Yea, I know why. And I'm mad about it. And I love my Class 1 and am mad they are hard to find.

I imagine we'd agree that CAFE was poorly done.

beerandt
2 replies
18h12m

If you regulate 'normal' cars into things people don't want to buy, don't be surprised if they want suvs or trucks instead.

dylan604
0 replies
15h9m

If you price gasoline higher, people don't want those SUVs or trucks. Gasoline is too damn cheap in the US. Gov't regulations work on multiple levels.

Kim_Bruning
0 replies
8h40m

Don't discount the effects of marketing here. Companies found a loophole and started marketing to exploit it.

philwelch
0 replies
18h58m

This is actually true though; it’s a case of unintended consequences.

dmd
4 replies
19h52m

That's right. It's definitely those darn environmental regulations. Nothing at all to do with short-term profits and MBA-syndrome.

beerandt
3 replies
17h58m

Yet you probably loved cash for clunkers.

Retric
2 replies
14h14m

Getting old cars off the road meaningfully improved safety even if it didn’t do much for the environment.

d110af5ccf
1 replies
8h31m

It actively harmed the environment. Once the thing has been manufactured doing anything less than driving it into the ground is wasting the upfront environmental cost.

Retric
0 replies
4h39m

Not always. The average car in Wyoming gets driven 24,000 miles a year something getting 12 MPG is burning 2,000 gallons a year directly and another 30% indirectly from manufacture transportation and extraction of oil. That’s a lot for a 5 year old car you could easily be saving 30,000+ gallons of oil.

Obviously, that’s average many cars are significantly worse. Run the numbers and swapping a high mileage but poor fuel economy car for a hybrid/EV and the payback can be a net positive.

lostlogin
1 replies
18h59m

What efficiency and environmental aspects of car design do you see as causes car accidents?

beerandt
0 replies
18h0m

Dozens.

#1 most obvious atm is autostop.

Starter gives you enough juice to enter the intersection, but engine sputters and you get tboned. Same for not providing enough acceleration/ hp.

Also 1 pedal driving.

Electric cars that outweigh the 'old' 'inefficient' light trucks because batteries are heavy. Harder to stop, more wear on roads. Tires that are designed to extract breaking energy over stopping.

Lithium fires (not cause but much more dangerous result).

Aluminum crush zones in cars not big enough to have crush zones.

Every design decision is a compromise.

core_dumped
0 replies
19h19m

Focus on “efficiency” and environmental regulation?

I think you mean to say cutting back on costs due to corporate greed?

theteapot
9 replies
18h58m

x2 737 Max nose dive crashes killing all onboard within 6 months of each other is not "surprisingly safe". It's surprisingly unsafe!

eropple
8 replies
18h50m

Perhaps be generous with your reading of the post and consider the 737 MAX's flight record and fatality rate on a per-mile or per-passenger rate to, say, cars in the United States. Because, by the standards of other transportation methods, even the 737 MAX was very, very safe.

It is a testament to the not-yet-entirely-captured regulatory regime of international flight that the 737 MAX was not considered safe enough.

theteapot
7 replies
17h51m

2 nose dives in 6 months apart within 2 years of first operational flights. This is not safe. This was anything but a testament to the aviation regulatory regime at the time. There was glaringly obvious engineering and procedural issues the FAA and Boeing management waived through.

Is the MAX safe now? After killing over 300 people needlessly, being grounded for 1.5y, and an extensive investigation? Yeah sure, probably.

To be saying what your saying, I think you mustn't of followed Max 8 MCAS debacle very closely, or at all.

Retric
6 replies
17h7m

First being X months apart isn’t how you calculate risk. What matters is total failure over total flights and there’s a gap between the last crash and the fleet being grounded where that risk kept on going.

~2 years * 2 flights per day * 365 days per year * ~350 aircraft would be 511,000 flights but it’s / 2 because aircraft where being delivered over time that’s 2 crashes per ~255,000 flights or 1 per ~127,000. (Edit: Actual numbers were less than half that at 3 crashes per 1 million flights.)

By comparison someone living to 80 is 80 * 365 days = 29,200 days. Meaning the average day would be more than 3x as risky as taking a flight on a 737 Max. It’s not actually that simple as hospitalized patients are unlikely to fly, but you get plenty of elderly people dying from hart attacks etc on aircraft.

I don’t mean to suggest the aircraft was safe compared to other commercial aircraft, (edit: it beat the DC-8 and 707 which was still in use at the time) but general aviation in the US for example is 5.3 fatal accidents per 100,000 flight hours not flights. https://www.ntsb.gov/safety/data/Pages/GeneralAviationDashbo...

idunnoman1222
2 replies
4h36m

A car is dangerous because of traffic not because the front falls off (generally)

Retric
1 replies
4h26m

Current research shows ~850 people die in the US each year from mechanical failures in cars, but underperforming tires breaks etc contribute to far more.

The difference is we don’t do NTSB style investigations after a traffic accident.

idunnoman1222
0 replies
2h29m

The reasons we don’t do NTSB investigations is generally bc of what I said

kelnos
1 replies
12h35m

I don't think that's an apples to apples comparison at all. An elderly person dying of natural causes is a relatively unavoidable, normal death that just happens.

People dying because a plane crashes because of the negligence and penny-pinching of the airline manufacturer is no comparable at all.

What we want to compare is the crash/fatality rate of the 737 MAX during that period with rates for other aircraft types. And I suspect we'll find the 737 MAX falling far short of the standard if we do that.

I don’t mean to suggest the aircraft was safe compared to other commercial aircraft

Right, but that's the only kind of comparison that really matters.

general aviation in the US for example is 5.3 fatal accidents per 100,000 flight hours

We're talking about commercial airline safety. It's pretty well-known that general aviation is less safe, but that's not really relevant to the discussion.

I agree that I'm safer getting into a 737 MAX than I am into a buddy's Cessna or a car or train(?) or boat or whatever, but I don't care about that. If I've chosen to fly somewhere, I would prefer to fly on a plane with a better safety record than the 737 MAX.

Retric
0 replies
11h3m

I would prefer to fly on a plane with a better safety record than the 737 MAX.

So, I’ll ask you which commercial aircraft have still in use have worse safety histories. If you’re being rational clearly you should be concerned with actual risks not just media reporting.

Not that I actually mean this as personal attack on you, it’s just the kind of irrationality I am referring to here.

eropple
0 replies
16h52m

Right, exactly. The 737 MAX mess is bad. But the numbers remain on the side of any cleared-to-fly jetliner, even including that situation, compared to almost any other form of transportation except maybe walking.

ViewTrick1002
4 replies
18h35m

Compared to other models the 737 MAX had horrific deaths per passenger mile after the accidents.

Retric
3 replies
16h19m

Much worse than other modern aircraft, but there’s many with worse track records globally. The DC-8 and 707 where still in use at the time (https://simpleflying.com/douglas-dc-8-active-2022/) and had worse track records, as did the 720 which just retired. Going back to Concord which retired in the early 2000’s and was far worse. Go back further and the prop aircraft were crazy dangerous.

Again it should be compared to modern aircraft, but this just shows how far we’ve come that the bar has moved this far.

kelnos
1 replies
12h28m

Again it should be compared to modern aircraft

Right, exactly, and this is why this sub-thread is so maddeningly weird. I'm going to compare the 737 MAX's safety record to that of the 737 NG, 777, 787, 757, as well as to Airbus' current-gen 3xx planes. I don't care how it compares to the DC-8 or 707 or 720 because it's exceedingly unlikely I'll ever fly on one of those.

And I'm certainly not comparing to the kinds of small planes general aviation pilots fly, and I'm not comparing against other modes of transportation. I already know that I'm safer in a plane (even in a 737 MAX) than in a car, but if I'm choosing to drive, I'm choosing to drive. If I'm choosing to fly, then then the 737 MAX's record, coupled with how poorly Boeing has handled the situation, is a big concern to me.

Retric
0 replies
11h20m

is a big concern to me

And I get that, it’s obvious given the choice you pick the safer aircraft. But in a broader context the numbers are so low it’s hard to contemplate.

Currently it’s 2 per 6 million flights. Spend the cost of a flight on Powerball tickets and you’re more likely to with the jackpot than have been on one of those fatal crashes. But people still think of those risks and chances as worth thinking about, which is also why lotteries stick around.

ViewTrick1002
0 replies
6h47m

All while the expected value as given by the competition through the A320 Neo series is zero deaths per passenger mile with more than double the fleet size.

DoesntMatter22
3 replies
15h15m

Surprisingly safe? Right now the 737 Max is at 1 death per 3 million trips.

The 787 Dreamliner which came out 15 years ago, has no deaths at all.

It's not good. It's about 5x as deadly as the 747-400... And it just got started.

Retric
2 replies
14h21m

I agree it’s bad for modern aircraft, but the Concord would be over 33 crashes per 3 million trips not 1. These numbers are just really low by any objective measurement except modern airline safety standards.

Driving 25 miles in the US is in 2022 was as dangerous on average vs a random 737 Max flight over its history. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motor_vehicle_fatality_rate_in... In 2022 the average car was driven 14,500 miles or ~600 flights worth of risk, but people still really worry about it.

kelnos
1 replies
12h21m

I don't really get why you insist on continuing to compare the 737 MAX deaths to unrelated, irrelevant other statistics.

The Concorde was a niche aircraft that hasn't flown for over 20 years. Even if it were flying today, I would still consider its safety record as in a completely separate bucket than subsonic commercial airliners.

And I don't care how the 737 MAX compares to driving. I care how it compares to other, similar, commercial aircraft in use today. If I'm going to drive, I drive. If I'm going to fly, I'm going to care about how the plane on my itinerary compares to other planes I could be sitting on with a similar itinerary.

Retric
0 replies
11h9m

unrelated, irrelevant other statistics.

Risk I regularly take are hardly irrelevant to me. I consider this kind of comparison to be foundational to rational behavior.

completely separate bucket than other subsonic commercial airliners

It didn’t have the worst history compared to other subsonic commercial airliners flying at the time when they grounded it. What it had was the potential for improvement.

If you actually care about safety knowing what the actual most dangerous aircraft are would be the rational decision. And today the 737 Max has had 20x the flights and still the same number of accidents. So if you’re concerned about safety how does it stack up?

kelnos
1 replies
12h25m

Without diving into your bizarre claim about 737 MAX being safe...

It may have involved making breathalyzers a mandatory feature [for cars] etc, but I suspect there’s a lot more we could do even without that.

My understanding is that drunk driving is a small minority of car crashes/fatalities. In most crashes, the driver(s) involved are completely sober. Making breathalyzers mandatory in cars would be awful.

Retric
0 replies
11h56m

My understanding is that drunk driving is a small minority of car crashes/fatalities

Your understanding is wrong, “About 32% of all traffic crash fatalities in the United States involve drunk drivers (with BACs of .08 g/dL or higher).”

737 MAX being safe

At the time it was under 1 accident per 300,000+ flights which is objectively lower than 2 other jets flying at the time. Today with 346 died in 2 crashes but another 200+ people died of medical emergencies on 737 Max flights. That’s the kind of risk people are taking, flying it’s slightly more dangerous than spending that much time sitting at home watching TV.

AceyMan
1 replies
18h41m

The 737 Max was objectively surprisingly safe to fly at the time of the groundings [...]

e.g., "Things ran great, until ... they didn't."

This gets my vote for most vacuous statement on HN this year.

Retric
0 replies
14h46m

The groundings happened after the 2 crashes. When the groundings happened it had the 3rd worst record of then flying large commercial jet aircraft and far from the most dangerous of commercial aircraft of all time.

Tossing that many caveats and still not being the worst aircraft is shocking to many people.

phire
3 replies
20h49m

And none of the fatalities were the fault of the aircraft.

One crashed on the runway after pilot error, killing three people (two of them weren't wearing seatbelts)

One was shot down by a Russian anti-aircraft missile, killing all on board.

And the other is a mystery, we can't even find the crash site. But most evidence points towards deliberate pilot suicide.

core_dumped
2 replies
19h26m

[EDIT]: apologies, my reading comprehension needs work. I thought you were referring to the 737 MAX, not the 777

What? Do you have a source for the last one? That sounds like corporate propaganda. It’s well understood AND PROVEN that the MCAS system (which was a system borrowed from decades old military code) was at fault for this incident. Saying it was suicide seems incredibly disrespectful to both pilots… https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lion_Air_Flight_610 In the article it even states they found the wreckage…

ak217
1 replies
19h21m

The flight you linked was a Boeing 737. We are talking about the 777.

To date, neither the 777 nor the 787 have had any passenger fatalities from any aircraft engineering flaw. That is a monumental achievement.

core_dumped
0 replies
19h12m

I guess I misunderstood the comment I was replying to. The parent comment mentions the 737 MAX so I assumed that’s what the commenter was referencing.

I have read up on the 777 and yes, I agree it’s incredibly safe statistically (as is the 787). I didn’t realize the commenter was talking about the Malaysia flight either. Apologies to them

kevinventullo
0 replies
21h45m

Both I reckon. Still, I wonder what the safety record for airplanes was back when the total number of airplane flights ever taken was the same number as today’s total number of space flights ever taken.

caconym_
0 replies
18h52m

It says a lot about the insane dangers of the Space Shuttle in particular. There were several issues with its design that made it an accident waiting to happen, notably its spotty abort coverage on ascent (even worse pre-Challenger) and the exposure of its fragile thermal tiles to debris falling off the external tank. Both issues stem from basic architectural choices and could not easily have been solved without a radical redesign.

I think Dragon 2 could easily be roughly an order of magnitude more reliable than the shuttle, if not more. It has full abort coverage and a TPS that doesn't habitually receive damage from falling debris, and is more robust to impacts besides; and its record so far is exemplary.

avmich
3 replies
21h44m

on the Soyuz even the seats themselves are custom molded to each astronaut

The seats are standard, but each astronaut has their own mold, taken on Earth, which is put into the seat.

avmich
0 replies
18h28m

Yes, the liner is quite comparable to the seat in size, if you mean that. Not sure about the weight.

dudeinjapan
0 replies
21h20m

Startup idea #18463: Butt molds as a service

philwelch
0 replies
18h59m

When aircraft had that sort of failure rate, everyone involved learned from their mistakes and improved things until they became safer.

marssaxman
13 replies
23h58m

Don't spacesuits typically have some umbilical connection to the capsule life support systems? It's easy to imagine that these connectors might not be standardized between different capsules, and that sending up a new space suit might be easier than designing an adapter.

sitkack
9 replies
23h52m

927!

We are literally building the future, HTF do we keep getting into these situations?

marssaxman
6 replies
23h1m

What does "927" mean?

fouronnes3
5 replies
22h27m

927 is a noun at this point to me. Hell so many xkcd could be: 1319, 936, 2347. It's crazy how often referencing a xkcd is the highest signal to noise way of communicating a concept.

marssaxman
2 replies
21h16m

I guess that's a real S5:E2 experience.

genewitch
1 replies
20h56m

there's a joke that goes something like

A group of professors liked jokes, but got tired of hearing the same ones, so they started numbering them. So instead of telling a joke or funny observation when something happened, they'd say "112" and the others would laugh. or "64", more laughter.

One day they get a new prof on their team and after a few weeks of this number, laugh, number, laugh, during a meeting, the new guy says "-149". There's dead silence for a while. The eldest prof starts laughing, "i've never heard that one!"

ramses0
0 replies
17h57m

The new guy thinks he's got the hang of it and says "112" at lunch the next day. Silence... "it's all in the delivery, man!"

fragmede
0 replies
19h50m

those are good ones. 386, 303, 979, and 1053 also come to mind.

Kim_Bruning
0 replies
8h37m

XKCD as a new (pattern) language you say?

At least it's more pithy than "Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra".

yhvh
0 replies
23h24m

Efficiency

bewaretheirs
1 replies
22h26m

Easy to imagine but there are so many details to nail down that it's hard to do in practice.

In the words of someone in the industry who tends to be on the laconic side:

"It is not as simple as a 'common connector'. There are different pressures, mixture ratios, comm gear, seat interfaces, etc. A requirement for commonality flows requirements upstream to the suit, seat and spacecraft. "

https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=60593.msg2...

marssaxman
0 replies
22h0m

I meant it the other way around - incompatibility is the easy-to-imagine default! In absence of some heavily-funded, top-down, NASA-driven standards-development process, no such thing as a standard spacesuit connection should be expected to exist.

dylan604
0 replies
15h5m

Some where recently, I read something about this being an accepted thing. If you have 2 separate capsules that both use the same connector where there is a fault found with the connector, then both capsules are grounded because of the one connector.

tmalsburg2
5 replies
21h40m

How do you know it’s the right decision?

alangibson
4 replies
20h34m

Acceptable loss of crew event is like 1 in 250 (can't remember the exact number). They can't quantify the probability of failure, so not putting them in Starliner is the right call.

skissane
2 replies
19h43m

1-in-270 is overall probability threshold for a 210 day notional ISS stay.

For the journey home from ISS to Earth, the probability threshold is 1-in-1000. Likewise, it is 1-in-1000 for the journey from Earth to ISS.

The riskiest part, which increases the probability from 1-in-500 to 1-in-270, is the ISS stay – the extended stay in space is faced with a continuous risk of micrometeoroid damage.

cdchn
1 replies
19h20m

Its kind of grim to think a trip to the ISS has a 1:270 chance of death just from the unavoidable roulette of getting zinged by a micrometeroid.

schiffern
0 replies
16h29m

1/270 is the total risk from all causes. Just the risk from micrometeoroids would be (at most) 1/270 - 1/500, which is roughly 1/587 (0.17%).

dylan604
0 replies
15h1m

From the press conference today, they stated that there is already an extra SpaceX suit on the ISS. Both astronauts have tried it on, and it fits. They will be bringing an additional empty suit up when Crew launches.

dudeinjapan
0 replies
21h18m

Justin Bailey mode

bewaretheirs
0 replies
22h23m

I believe that's still the contingency plan in the unlikely event that they have to evacuate the ISS in the period between Starliner undocking and Crew-9 docking.

lostlogin
1 replies
18h55m

Changing my underwear so I can drive to hardware store.

If there was a fair chance I’d die on the trip, damn straight if be in my super hero undies too.

sitkack
0 replies
13h13m

For years I would fly with Sponge Bob Squarepants themed underwear so in the infinitesimal chance of a catastrophe someone cleaning up the wreck might get a chuckle.

james_pm
1 replies
21h11m

The suit is part of the spacecraft. In the case of Dragon, it pressurizes, inflates and deflates at times depending on the phase of the mission.

ozim
0 replies
20h19m

I think you underestimate space travel to space station.

Well it seems like it is routine thing now and spacex seems like routinely launches without a flaw.

But going up there and making it back is still huge feat that is possible only by collaboration of huge numbers of super experienced and highly trained professionals.

I am going a bit over the top - but still travel even to low earth orbit is something far outside of any human being reach - on his own or his group of buddies.

acomjean
65 replies
1d

I dont blame NASA, who knows what else is wrong with that capsule.

I feel bad for Boeing. Though to be honest when I worked on a project where we were a Boeing sub (defense)we didn’t really care for them..

Competition is good, and it’s sad they can’t get their act together. Hopefully someone else will, though it will take years. The problem with Boeing is they seem to treat all their projects like the non competitive defense space..

diggan
53 replies
1d

I feel bad for Boeing.

I don't quite understand this. Boeing is a for-profit company that chose to try to optimize profits over anything else, and now that's biting them in the butt. What's to feel bad about? That the executives made the wrong decision?

upon_drumhead
23 replies
1d

Boeing is made up of a lot of people, some who have done their absolute best. They don't deserve the failure that their leadership caused. I feel bad for Boeing employees, but I don't feel bad for their management.

lysace
20 replies
1d

This trope that anyone who is not a manager is Good and anyone who is a manager is Bad rubs me the wrong way.

The reality is often a lot more complex and nuanced.

scarmig
12 replies
1d

Most of the time, workers and managers are smart, well-meaning, and hard-working. Even executives (though as you get higher and higher up, you see more and more people whose qualification is political skills and not expertise).

The issue with Boeing is less any individual and more institutional decay. Over time, a spigot of effectively unconditional cash corrupts an organization, especially once anyone with enough internal weight to fight against it is no longer involved in the day-to-day. Give it 20 years, and SpaceX will be the same way.

whiplash451
5 replies
21h57m

It doesn’t have to be this way. A visionary leader at the top can prevent decay over decades (see Apple, Nvidia)

madaxe_again
2 replies
18h13m

And yet once that leader is gone, the rot sets in. See Apple. Twice.

specialist
0 replies
6h22m

Succession remains an unsolved problem. Seemingly.

I hope to be alive long enough to see how Toyota's story plays out. They seemed to have lost their way under Akio Toyoda. We'll see if Koji Sato can get them back on track.

I'm also keenly interested in Haier and its "Rendanheyi model". They're worthy of HBR style case studies, receiving at least as much attention as Apple, Sony, Honda, Toyota, etc. And yet we know so little about them. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haier

In 2021, Liang Haishan succeeded Haier's legendary CEO Zhang Ruimin. What happens next? Continued success? Long slow decline? Jump into a volcano?

I'd love to know.

nottorp
0 replies
8h59m

See Apple. Twice.

Apple is one of the halves of the phone duopoly sadly, so it will take a long time for them to pay for Cook's decisions this time.

mike_hearn
0 replies
5h26m

Neither Nvidia nor Apple have access to a spigot of unconditional cash. Their customers are quite discerning and have alternatives they could switch to.

Kim_Bruning
0 replies
8h51m

Visionary leaders do sometimes work I guess.

But among other things they are subject to the dictator trap, and of course they have a best before date.

So a visionary leader is a good person to have during bootstrap, but then your processes need to become self-sustaining.

hackernewds
3 replies
23h36m

It could be individual incompetence as well, why discount that and thumb our ears?

upon_drumhead
1 replies
23h30m

Because while the issues are serious and many, Boeing is still making extremely safe and working airplanes. It's impressive and shows that in general, things are going right. It doesn't excuse the decay and issues, but this isn't a case where everything they do is faulty. they're just held to an extremely high bar.

nottorp
0 replies
8h58m

Boeing is still making extremely safe and working airplanes. It's impressive and shows that in general, things are going right.

<cough> 737MAX

It doesn't excuse the decay and issues, but this isn't a case where everything they do is faulty. they're just held to an extremely high bar.

... only to the bar they set themselves with the older 737s?

scarmig
0 replies
23h28m

Every organization will have incompetent individuals. A healthy organization is able to remove them; a typical one will blunt their effects; and an unhealthy one will allow them to reproduce themselves and seize power.

We want it all to be a matter of just one or two incompetent individuals, because then the solution is simple. We just need to be aware that incompetent individuals exist, and through sheer force of will we can prevent them from destroying great things! But a much darker possibility is that it's something inherent to complex systems. Then, there's nothing to do to escape the inevitable cycle. Whatever brilliant schemes we come up with are doomed to failure, because the issue isn't individuals being stupid but institutional incapability to repair itself.

bugglebeetle
0 replies
16h19m

Most of the time, workers and managers are smart, well-meaning, and hard-working.

This has not been true at any job I’ve had, from working in fast food as a teenager to now being a data scientist. What you describe would be exceptional in almost any company, where things otherwise regress to the mean of these various aspects, or, in especially bad circumstances, go south of that. Boeing would seem to be in the latter category at this point.

Kim_Bruning
0 replies
9h14m

This is obviously something we are going to need to solve if we want to advance further as a society.

I really want to know about studies being done in this area.

upon_drumhead
0 replies
23h24m

Manager's entire job is to provide the organizational support and navigate the organizational challenges to allow the non-manager employees the space to do their job. When we talk about systemic organizational failures, managers are the ones that own that problem and are accountable for the failures.

Sure, on an individual basis, you have pockets of amazing managers that can't overcome organizational inertia. I feel for them as well, but when organizational failures come into play, I'm certainly taking more pity on the employees then the managers.

specialist
0 replies
6h36m

"Management" is short hand for the Jack Welch wannabe MBA try hards. Not middle management.

From my limited experience with megacorps, and lots of reading, persons Director level and up are bat guano insane. Execs live in their own separate Machiavellian fantasy world bubble. Any nod to reality (eg rocket go boom) is a selfown for corporate ladder climbers.

Any productive work at an org like Boeing, post infection by MD's leeches, is in despite of "managagement"'s best efforts.

nottorp
0 replies
9h1m

The problem is management sets the core rules and incentives. And no matter how competent and motivated you are, at some point you either move along or stop caring.

There are bad employees but they have less influence over the company overall.

markdown
0 replies
15h22m

Except that's capitalism for you. The profit motive means only those willing to put profit (and often very short term profit) ahead of everything else means that only unempathetic assholes (and often psychopaths) end up as leaders of these organisations.

So not everyone who is not a manager is good, but almost all top-level managers are bad. They need to be in order to make the decisions needed to advance short term profit before all else.

jjk166
0 replies
21h28m

Managers are responsible for what they manage. If something goes wrong, either management caused it, or failed to prevent it.

It's possible for the underlings to be good despite bad management, but if the underlings are bad that is again a consequence of poor management.

The only exception would be deliberate sabotage, which is not unknown but incredibly rare.

caconym_
0 replies
18h4m

I don't think the comment you replied to implies such a black and white distinction. Is it so absurd to suggest that some of the people working on Starliner actually cared, and did the best work they could?

Managers too, though ultimately this failure must come down to management at some (presumably high) level.

Jtsummers
0 replies
21h22m

This trope that anyone who is not a manager is Good and anyone who is a manager is Bad rubs me the wrong way.

It should rub you the wrong way. It denies both the agency and the moral obligation of the professionals working under the managers.

9659
1 replies
22h52m

s/some/most/

engineers on the bottom don't care about the politics. they design and implement the best they can.

cqqxo4zV46cp
0 replies
18h9m

This isn’t any better. Are you an IC? All you’re probably saying is, “the people that I work with more directly, that share the same organisational context as me, that I personally can relate to, etc are good, and the other ones aren’t”.

Mistletoe
14 replies
1d

“between 2013 and 2019, Boeing spent 43 billion dollars on stock buybacks (a hundred and four per cent of its profits) rather than spending resources to address design flaws in some of its popular jet models,”
KennyBlanken
13 replies
1d

Not excusing it, but it was very popular pre-pandemic and when the pandemic hit, many corps got caught with their cash reserve pants down.

Of course we taxpayers (corporate share of tax revenue is miniscule compared to 50 years ago) bailed them out...

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/24/business/coronavirus-bail...

WalterBright
12 replies
1d

Coronavirus problems are not Boeing's fault.

mlyle
10 replies
21h54m

If companies voluntarily choose to operate with lower cash reserves and then end up unable to weather hard times or make necessary investments in their products, do they have any fault for what happens next?

WalterBright
9 replies
21h5m

You can't operate a successful company (i.e. with a decent ROI) if you're sitting on a Scrooge McDuck cash vault.

It wasn't Boeing's fault that the governors shut down the economy, something that had never happened before in the US.

lmm
7 replies
18h5m

You can't operate a successful company (i.e. with a decent ROI) if you're sitting on a Scrooge McDuck cash vault.

Of course you can. There are thousands of examples around the world - not least the great success story of the last decade or so, Apple.

Minimising your cash holdings is a microoptimization. It might get you a fraction of a percent more return in good times, but that doesn't make it wise.

WalterBright
6 replies
17h18m

Apple is a highly unusual story.

The purpose of being in business is to make more money than you could by putting the money in an interest-bearing account. Another way of saying it is there is no point to operating a business if you cannot make more than the "opportunity cost".

Minimising your cash holdings is a microoptimization.

What businesses are in business to do is put cash to work earning more than the opportunity cost, often meaning about 15% ROI.

That certainly is not a microoptimization.

In fact, what most businesses do is borrow money at, say, 5%, and then invest the money so it earns, say, 20%, and therefore make 15% overall.

I do something similar with my investments. I borrow money and buy investments with the borrowed money.

It's similar to borrowing money to buy a house, and then selling the house at an appreciated price to make many multiples of your down payment.

mlyle
4 replies
15h44m

I do something similar with my investments. I borrow money and buy investments with the borrowed money.

Yes, minimizing uninvested capital --- or the extreme case of it, turning that negative through leverage --- is great, until it isn't.

WalterBright
3 replies
12h6m

You're never going to make much money if you aren't willing to take on risk.

Elon Musk at one point was within hours of personal bankruptcy with Tesla when he managed to secure more funding. He's the richest man in the world, and got that way by taking on enormous personal risk.

How wealthy would you be today if you put everything you had into Amazon stock the day of its IPO?

mlyle
2 replies
2h57m

Yes, but the world doesn't work better if everyone maximally leverages their way into every weakly EV-positive (or EV-negative) high volatility play. If everyone is maximally leveraged, any tiny negative disturbance wipes out all wealth.

At some point, you're just hoping to get lucky, and to leave other people (debtors, governments) holding the bill if you don't. This is what people talk about when they criticize others for "privatizing profits, socializing risk."

Economists have a word for it, too: "moral hazard." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_hazard

Back to Boeing: Boeing put up really good numbers by gutting engineering and manufacturing organizations, hoping it would all turn out okay. For awhile it did, but then it didn't.

And it's questionable how much of these costs Boeing is going to bear, because there's a whole lot of talk in policymaking circles about how to keep an important defense manufacturer and top manufacturer alive (through contracts, tariffs, and supportive policy).

WalterBright
1 replies
41m

Creditors know they are taking a risk when they loan out money, and that risk is priced into the interest rate.

The moral hazard comes into play when the risk is forced on some unwitting bystander.

mlyle
0 replies
14m

that risk is priced into the interest rate.

A degree of risk is priced into the interest rate. I still have a fiduciary duty to my lenders to not take undue, undisclosed risks. In practice, people get away with this except in the most egregious cases, but that doesn't make it less wrong.

Worse, systemic risk isn't priced into the interest rate, because the government tends to bail out the banks.

Everyone using leverage and betting on things going up forever is a really big part of how you get 2008. A lot of people made a ton of money in the run-up to 2008 (privatized profits); the population as a whole paid the costs (socialized losses).

edit: I wrote "borrowers" above when I meant lenders.

lmm
0 replies
9h30m

In fact, what most businesses do is borrow money at, say, 5%, and then invest the money so it earns, say, 20%, and therefore make 15% overall.

Getting more of your capital as debt is a microoptimisation (unless there are special circumstances like different tax treatment, and usually even then) - that's the classic Modigliani-Miller result. Holding more cash makes your nominal return on equity lower, but improves your cash position, and unless you push it to the point where you're taking a real risk of actually going bankrupt the two effects balance and your risk-adjusted return is the same.

I borrow money and buy investments with the borrowed money.

Exactly. So it really doesn't make a lot of difference how levered a given company is, because an investor can always make a more or less levered investment in the company - if a company has a lot of cash then an investor can lever up a lot, if a company has a lot of debt that same investor levers less or not at all, and ultimately either way the investor gets the same level of risk and the same return.

It's similar to borrowing money to buy a house, and then selling the house at an appreciated price to make many multiples of your down payment.

Not really - there are all sorts of special treatments for home mortgages (in particular the mortgage interest tax deduction, the most horribly regressive piece of the tax code) that mean you're genuinely disproportionately better off to do one. But it's rare for something like that to apply to corporate borrowing.

mlyle
0 replies
20h37m

Boeings choice to not sufficiently invest in its core products while pumping its stock through buybacks belongs solely to Boeing and Boeing’s board. The impact to their reputation was a predictable and ignored consequence.

In Boeing’s case it has very little to do with coronavirus, which was just a related example: some businesses set aside enough seed corn to survive without help, and others didn’t.

DiggyJohnson
0 replies
22h43m

No, but Boeing was going this way before the pandemic. I left in 2021 for context.

spacemadness
7 replies
1d

I think they meant they feel bad for the people actually doing work, not the people strategizing around wringing out the company for short-term profits so they can move on and do it again someplace else. At least I really hope that’s what they meant. You never know on HN.

diggan
5 replies
1d

But wouldn't you say "I feel bad for the people working at X" in that case? And besides, isn't that also a quite strange sentiment?

Replace Boeing with Facebook/Google, and it still sounds strange to feel bad for the workers at those companies when the executives make bad decisions like chasing profits over all. I mean, why? People obviously like it there, otherwise they wouldn't work there, so why feel bad for them?

tass
1 replies
1d

There is a lot of pride to be had from seeing something you worked on, with your own hands, successfully work - look at mission control videos for examples of how excited people get. Conversely, if it fails, there’s a lot of disappointment.

You can’t compare something like these massive pieces of hardware with people inside failing and taking all your work with it, with some software launch that maybe fails and takes a couple of bugs to be fixed before relaunch.

The Boeing story is tragic because they were a source of pride for America overall, played a huge part in winning WW2, made some great technological advances, but succumbed to MBAs fleecing all their goodwill. There are still world class aerospace engineers working there, and sure they could probably get a job somewhere else, but they might need to uproot their lives to do so.

jordanb
0 replies
17h56m

Interestingly the market for Aerospace engineers is really small. For many of those guys, they could only go work at Airbus or Embraer. Some could potentially get jobs in military with Lockheed or something. Very few may be able to find work with Textron or similar.

krisoft
0 replies
17h36m

Replace Boeing with Facebook/Google, and it still sounds strange to feel bad for the workers at those companies when the executives make bad decisions like chasing profits over all. I mean, why?

Because there are people working at Boeing, people like you or me, who poured their heart into the project and the institution sapped their energy away and made their efforts ultimately worse than futile.

There was someone working at Boeing who spent years of their life qualifying those thrusters. They tried their very best. Perhaps they even batted for more testing. Or more analysis. Or perhaps they didn't because they didn't know better, but they still spent their best effort to do a good job.

And when they heard that the engines are acting up they probably felt like a trap door has opened under them. They felt that sinking feeling in the pit of their stomach. Either angry that they haven't caught this in testing, or angry that they haven't approved their request to test more.

Years and years ago they proudly told their mom/girlfriend/drinking buddies that they are working on a beautiful spaceship. And they were very proud of the project. And now all those people have heard that their spaceship is a liability. All that good feeling turned ash in their mouth.

There are people at Boeing who worked very very hard the last few weeks (months?) trying to uncover what is wrong with those thrusters. There are others who spent endless hours in meetings with NASA discussing risks and explaining tests and arguing persuasively that the space ship is fine enough to ride. And it is not really their individual fault that the spaceship is not fine.

And even worse, there are people who spent years of their life designing and building flawless systems. And they did a great job and built their subsystem really really well. Well made, high quality products. Yet nobody will think of their stuff positively because some other subsystem failed.

It is kind of like you are working on a beautiful great pyramid. (FYI pyramids were not built by slaves.) And you work hard, and quarry stone all day, and shape it, and push it and pull it and you really really do your best job. You are really a champ. And you should deserve to celebrate in the sun with your team mates the beautiful pyramid. But unfortunately you are not one of the lucky ones working on Khufu's pyramid, you are on the team which works the second pyramid built for Sneferu. And something is wrong with the plans. Or the foundations, or the site selection. Or the rocks are not strong enough. Nobody really knows but even though you are doing a great job individually the damn thing is collapsing in front of your eyes. And it will be known forever as the "bent pyramid". And it sucks. And you feel bad. And that is sad and we should feel bad for those people.

davidmurdoch
0 replies
17h16m

Curious if you generally lack empathy?

CydeWeys
0 replies
23h49m

Replace Boeing with Facebook/Google, and it still sounds strange to feel bad for the workers at those companies when the executives make bad decisions like chasing profits over all.

I don't understand this sentiment at all. I know quite a few people who worked on the Google Domains team. It was a good team, a good product, and it sadly was all blown up by some senior executive decision that didn't make any sense.

Why can't I feel bad for the workers I knew whose product got deleted out from under their feet?? Some of them are in the process of getting laid off now!

madaxe_again
0 replies
18h14m

Are there actually people doing work at Boeing? As far as I can tell they outsource every last thing, retaining only a management hierarchy internally. Elements which were once Boeing are now spun off subcontractors, and machining, assembly, component design, integration - all of these are third party activities.

What do Boeing actually do?

mym1990
1 replies
1d

There are still some, even many, people there that are doing their jobs as well as they can at the expense of bad executive decisions. I’m sure morale there is not great. I don’t feel bad for the executives at all, or the company really, but there are likely some great people that are just getting kicked around based on the crisis of the week.

diggan
0 replies
1d

But it's exactly the same at Facebook/Google/Amazon/Palantir and countless of other places, yet people chose to work at those places. Why feel bad for them? They've made their choices, and if they're not happy with those anymore, they can make new choices.

vardump
0 replies
1d

I don't think anyone is feeling bad for Boeing's executives.

But can feel sorry for the rest of the organization and the subcontractors. Blameless parties are going to suffer a lot of collateral damage.

mlhpdx
0 replies
1d

Treating Boeing as a single entity is absurd. The people there have done great work and their collective contributions to the people of the US and world at large is very much appreciated by many (including myself).

It is a tragedy that what was even greater has been so badly diminished by the greed and incompetence of a few. Hating what’s happened to Boeing (and perhaps those responsible for it) is very different than hating Boeing.

haliskerbas
0 replies
1d

Completely agree with you, not only are they for profit but they’ve gotten a lot of help from Uncle Sam along the way too!

db48x
0 replies
14h48m

They didn’t really try to optimize for maximum profits.

That memo from 20 years ago talks about how Boeing management was optimizing their earnings to capital expenses ratio by selling off factories and manufacturing lines to their contractors. The idea was that this would make Boeing more efficient. In theory they would have the same profits but lower capital expenses. The memo points out how fallacious this is, because while it does improve _this year’s_ numbers, next year’s profits will drop because they no longer own the factory that makes the profits. The memo points out that the contractors will now be earning a larger and larger share of the profits that Boeing used to collect, while Boeing keeps all of the risks. When you buy a whole fuselage from one supplier and a pair of wings from another, you take on all the risk that they won’t fit together properly while the suppliers pad their profits by making you pay extra for every change you ask for.

johnbellone
4 replies
1d

The Boeing of today is merely a husk of its former glory. If the U.S. had another viable domestic airplane manufacturer I bet we’d see a lot more pressure on them. That can still happen. I hope it does.

dingaling
1 replies
23h8m

When Lockheed left the civil aircraft market after the TriStar it was largely because the three-way competition with Boeing and McD was unviable.

Given that, the subsequent merger of McD with Boeing should not have been approved.

9659
0 replies
22h50m

The commercial aircraft part of McD was dead when the merger happened. The had a cash cow called the "MD-80", which was a derivative DC-9. That had stopped selling.

Boeing got more value out of the defense part of McD.

bamboozled
1 replies
13h11m

It’s over, you can’t just rebuild the old Boeing. It’s gone.

Good job bean counters.

bamboozled
0 replies
11h28m

…not because it’s impossible. Because there is zero incentive to do so. The money has been taken.

bottlepalm
2 replies
1d

NASA failed to communicate the seriousness of the issue from the beginning. Their press conference mentioned all the work they've been doing for MONTHS. Who knew? Everyone thought things were 'fine'. Huge huge huge failure by NASA here. They can't be trusted.

malfist
0 replies
22h48m

They did communicate. Feel free to peruse the articles from Eric Berger on Ars. Lots of good info there

torginus
0 replies
1d

the non competitive defense space

I'm still processing that sentence

throwaway2037
0 replies
6h56m

    > we didn’t really care for [Boeing]
Hi, thank you to share your first hand experience. This is one of best features of HN. Can you provide some specifics (if allowed)?

projectileboy
0 replies
17h51m

Breaking up businesses that are “too big to fail” is good for the economy in the long run, and for defense firms is arguably an issue of national security. It seems to me an incredibly bad idea for a nation to have all of its defense eggs in a single, increasingly fragile basket.

roughly
18 replies
1d

If we're going to keep Boeing around because it's in the national security interest to have an American airplane manufacturer, we need to either nationalize it, break it up, or remove the entire leadership class. The company exists at this point for the same reason that Chase bank does: because they cannot fail, because we will not let them. The market structure will not work for this company, at least not the way corporate management is done in 2024, and if I'm the Air Force or any other branch of the US military reliant on Boeing goods, I'm not feeling particularly optimistic about my supply of Boeing parts, planes, and armaments right now.

sgc
2 replies
1d

Breaking Boeing up would make it ineffective and likely lead to its failure. You could maybe spin off a couple small divisions, but not more than that. Nationalization is a non-starter in the US - not worth wasting the time and effort to try to make it happen. The only real option is to remove the current leadership, and place the company into Conservatorship to force the new leadership to do the right thing - ideally for at least 10 years, but 5 to 7 years would be the more likely political outcome of such a move.

I think virtually anybody who wants to see Boeing succeed long term, would get on board with this option.

At the same time, the FAA needs to be reformed (and funded) to bring it back to the enforcement agency it should be. They got into bed with Boeing and their lack of oversight in civilian aircraft let the corporate sickness fester and have a safe space from which to spread throughout the organization.

icegreentea2
1 replies
1d

It's not clear to me that splitting up Boeing in commercial+business jet, defense, and space would make it more ineffective than its current incarnation? Boeing's ability to purpose build commercial jet frames for defense applications both seems to be... a) not performing well (see KC-46), and also b) not a future growth industry with the focus shifting to the Indo-Pacific and peer conflict (given the vulnerability of these types of platforms).

sgc
0 replies
23h45m

It's not a technical problem. It's that they need to stay too-big-to-fail, to be able to resist the very aggressive competition of other aircraft manufacturers. If they are broken up, the smaller companies would not be able to compete effectively, and they would also be immediate acquisition targets by largely foreign competitors.

I agree with others here that think they need to be a quasi-government-run company, but in the US that is done through oversight, managing the manager rather than stepping into the management role directly. Of course we have to absolutely gut that awful management with extreme prejudice, to start.

ethbr1
2 replies
1d

We should just go ahead and admit that Boeing is a government company, and that's what it takes to be one of the big-3 global commercial aircraft manufacturers these days (Boeing, Airbus, Comac).

Fire all Boeing senior leadership, go through the remainder of the company with a fine toothed comb and fire anyone mid-level who did anything dumb, then conduct a search to replace everyone.

Make the government an explicit stakeholde (25%?) with board representation.

Dilute shareholders ($0.50 per dollar?) for investing in a bad company, but make any employee shareholders who are still employed whole ($1 per $1).

roughly
1 replies
1d

Yup. There's no market pressure of note on Boeing, otherwise they'd be even the slightest bit concerned that their planes are falling out of the sky. They exist to turn government contracts into stock buybacks.

icegreentea2
0 replies
1d

It's not true that there's no market pressure on Boeing. It's true that Airbus' production capacity limitations have blunted the impact of the QA issues on Boeing's financial performance, but Boeing is in fact suffering. They've been suffering for at least a year (their net profit margin has been 0 or lower for the last 4 quarters). Their stock price is down ~20% from a year ago, and is down ~35% from their high from just before the Air Alaska incidence.

The problem isn't that management assumed that there would be no market pressure, the problem is that management assumed that engineering and production excellence "just happens". They're not dumb enough to believe that shoddy products won't effect their financial position - they just don't know how to make non-shoddy products while also posting decent financials.

SoftTalker
2 replies
23h56m

They are a big one but not the only one. We still have Lockheed-Martin, Northrop-Grumman, Raytheon (now RTX), General Dynamics, and maybe others.

Letting them merge with McDonnel-Douglas was a mistake.

stackskipton
0 replies
23h32m

Only Lockheed and Northrop are only ones making military aircraft. Raytheon and GD have long stopped.

buildsjets
0 replies
23h41m

Letting them merge? Boeing and McD were essentially forced to merge by the Department of Defense post cold-war. So were Lockheed and Martin-Marietta, and Northrop with Grumman, etc. It was in the national strategic interest, apparently. Recommended reading: https://www.wbur.org/onpoint/2023/03/01/the-last-supper-how-...

AnonMO
2 replies
1d

a better bank would have been Wells Fargo. Chase and JPM are not in the same category they are profit machines with great balance sheets. that's why they swooped in last year during the bank crisis and took over some banks.

roughly
0 replies
1d

Yeah, I'm mostly referring to Chase's relationship with the Fed, FDIC, and regulators - they're clearly the bank of choice for rescuing distressed banks, and they're the largest bank in the country by a pretty substantial margin.

You're right about the difference, though - they're stable, well-run, and with a solid balance sheet, and it's clear the tradeoff for being effectively the Bank of the US is they're regulated and stress-tested six ways to Sunday.

If that were the model being applied to Boeing, this'd be a different story, but I think there's been a clear decision made that Chase is critical infrastructure and should be treated & audited like it that hasn't been made about Boeing yet.

dylan604
0 replies
1d

Wells Fargo is a better example of criminal vs negligent. Has Boeing verged into criminal? It's not like they were continuously bilking the gov't for all of this, which to me keeps them out of criminal. but of course, IANAL

nsxwolf
1 replies
23h55m

We need keep Boeing around so that SpaceX doesn’t turn into Boeing.

tim333
0 replies
21h17m

There's other competition out there.

alphabettsy
1 replies
1d

What’s the issue with Chase Bank and leadership that’s similar to Boeing?

roughly
0 replies
1d

Nothing I'm aware of with Chase's leadership, but they're the largest bank in the US by far by AUM, and that's because they've been the partner of choice for the FDIC & regulators looking to rescue distressed banks. In other words, they're a private corporation being used to fill a role the government deems essential, and consequently probably the safest place on earth to put your money right now, at least with regards to the risk of a bank failure.

(As I noted elsewhere, they're treated much differently than Boeing, in that they're audited, stress-tested, and generally put under the kind of scrutiny warranted by that kind of role.)

protastus
0 replies
1d

This company needs to be audited, starting at the top. Once a business is considered critical for natural security (Boeing is certainly in this category), it has an obligation to deliver with quality and on time. Boeing is failing and needs recovery.

misiti3780
0 replies
1d

100% agree.

GeekyBear
11 replies
1d

Isn't the question of how the astronauts will get back the real story here?

belter
9 replies
1d

And also, do they have a way to evacuate right now in case of emergency?

ripjaygn
8 replies
1d

They will reconfigure Crew 8 for six occupants for emergency evacuation.

dylan604
2 replies
1d

I'm guessing if the ISS was no longer able to sustain life support, Starliner would be used. Guaranteed loss of life by staying on ISS or having an unknown <100% chance of surviving using Starliner, of course it will be chanced.

I'm not really sure what point your question is attempting to get at

belter
1 replies
1d

They don't have a way to come back to Earth right now on a Spaceship cleared for human flight.

NavinF
0 replies
14h35m

I'm sure the astronauts would much prefer to have a Dragon available, but I don't think NASA's "cleared for human flight" means much. After all, 4% (14/355) of all the astronauts that flew on the space shuttle died when their vehicles exploded.

nine_k
0 replies
23h25m

ISS is huge, and is very unlikely to fail all at once. In a case of a catastrophic failure, they could stay in a less affected part of the station. All life-critical systems on spacecraft are duplicated and triplicated. With the current SpaceX launch capabilities, a rescue Crew Dragon could arrive within days if not hours.

echoangle
0 replies
1d

The evacuation option right now is Starliner

Jtsummers
0 replies
1d

Starliner is the evacuation option right now. It's a risky one, but until Crew-8 is reconfigured their only option.

DiggyJohnson
0 replies
22h42m

They would use Starliner, which was announced a few weeks ago.

diggan
0 replies
1d

The option was between Starliner or Crew-9, so not using Starliner means they'll use Crew-9.

gitfan86
4 replies
1d

The highest quality and most up to date source is EricBerger on X https://x.com/SciGuySpace

dylan604
1 replies
1d

More up to date than the actual press conference currently ongoing linked else where in the thread?

gitfan86
0 replies
1d

Yes, because NASA and Boeing have been both putting their own spin on the things they say. If you read his threads on X you can get a good idea of what I'm talking about

somenameforme
0 replies
23h6m

Here's the link to all of his articles: https://arstechnica.com/author/ericberger/

I don't have a positive opinion of Ars, but he's absolutely one of the best sources for space news and reporting.

NavinF
0 replies
1d

No, that NASA article is mostly fluff. The original link to the ongoing press conference and Eric Berger's summary of it (https://x.com/SciGuySpace) are better.

xyst
13 replies
1d

What a massive embarrassment for NASA and Boeing. Boeing name used to mean something, now it’s joined the rest of the junk in this modern world.

Gareth321
7 replies
1d

I think this is much less embarrassing for NASA than Boeing. NASA outsources their engineering now, and Boeing was, until very recently, a prestigious aeronautical engineering company. It's going to be very difficult for the world to adjust to the new reality that Boeing is no more. It's an even stranger reality that the company which routinely blows up rockets in pursuit of what everyone believed was impossible just a few years ago is now the clear and obvious choice. I think that's the even bigger story here for me: what Musk has done with SpaceX is nothing short of revolutionary. In hundreds of years people are going to be watching this as a pivotal moment in human development: https://youtu.be/sf4qRY3h_eo?si=fAhcunCLHY803wn7&t=454

Look at this shit. Just look at it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1AXnMlxK22A

WalterBright
3 replies
1d

NASA has always outsourced their engineering to aerospace companies.

TMWNN
1 replies
1d

Indeed.

It's amazing how many people, whether sympathetic to SpaceX or not, believe that NASA built its previous spacecraft in-house or something. The main differences between Commercial Crew and previous US manned space programs are that a) two different vehicles were built, not one, and b) NASA does not own or operate the vehicles; their builders do. Everything else is the same: NASA provided specifications for what it wanted in a manned spacecraft capable of reliably carrying people to ISS, various companies bid based on the specifications—their designs varying greatly from one another—and NASA chose the winning bids.

skissane
0 replies
17h43m

The main differences between Commercial Crew and previous US manned space programs are that a) two different vehicles were built, not one, and b) NASA does not own or operate the vehicles; their builders do. Everything else is the same: NASA provided specifications for what it wanted in a manned spacecraft capable of reliably carrying people to ISS, various companies bid based on the specifications—their designs varying greatly from one another—and NASA chose the winning bids.

I think there is a big difference you haven't mentioned.

With Apollo, with the Space Shuttle, with the US components of the ISS, with SLS/Orion – NASA owned the design and made the big design decisions. They hired contractors to do a lot of the grunt work of the engineering – analysing different options, fleshing out high-level designs into detailed designs, etc – but the big picture design decisions were made by NASA. (Or, in the case of SLS, dictated to NASA by Congress.)

By contrast, with Commercial Cargo/Crew and HLS, NASA is just writing the requirements spec and letting the contractors make the big design decisions. And then the contractors have to convince NASA's engineers that the design actually fulfils those requirements. But NASA isn't making decisions like "what fuel should the launch vehicle use"–so long as they can convince NASA that what they are doing meets the requirements spec, the contractor can do almost anything they like. Whereas, on earlier programs, NASA was making the final call on many of those high-level design decisions.

rootbear
0 replies
23h30m

I grew up in Huntsville, AL, in the 60s and the space program was the main business of the city. My father worked for Chrysler Corp. on the Saturn 1B, and most of our neighbors worked for either NASA or one of the many contractors.

ren_engineer
0 replies
21h16m

and Boeing was, until very recently, a prestigious aeronautical engineering company

what do you define as "recently"? This Boeing/lockheed project has been a taxpayer funded disaster for over a decade and this is just the obvious end result. Boeing managed to siphon billions of tax dollars in the meantime

misiti3780
0 replies
21h56m

imagine if you could go back in the past 20 years and show someone that video. it's science fiction level crazy. im happy and proud that happened in the US and not china or russia, everyone else should be too

marssaxman
0 replies
23h46m

Look at this shit. Just look at it:

Thanks for the link. That is truly amazing to watch!

dylan604
1 replies
1d

I'm waiting for Boeing to change its name to get away from all of the negativity associated with Boeing. It's the classic move for a company that doesn't really want to change business practices, but need to "start over"

bloopernova
0 replies
23h53m

  Blackwater
   |
  Xe Services
   |
  Academi
   |
  Constellis Holdings
I wonder if Boeing will try that? They still seem to be in the "deny deny deny, hope people forget" method of operation.

soupfordummies
0 replies
1d

It’s hard not to be cynical these days when almost everything seems to be “maximize every possible drop of profit at the expense of almost anything else.” It seems so short-sighted and instant-gratification-y.

ivan_gammel
0 replies
1d

No, it is not an embarrassment. Space is hard, failures do happen often there. There is and will always be a human factor, politics and cost optimizations. Despite that they delivered people to ISS and have a plan B. It is partial success. The problems will eventually be fixed and USA will solidify its leadership in space race by having different launch systems and never again being dependent on rival powers.

404mm
0 replies
23h16m

Why for NASA?

Boeing is the one who (yet again) let everyone down. First by making another unreliable vehicle, then by downplaying the seriousness.

mbStavola
13 replies
1d

We need to nationalize Boeing and get rid of the money men who ran this company into the ground.

WalterBright
8 replies
1d

Nationalized industries have no good record of quality or efficiency.

See Chernobyl.

FabHK
5 replies
23h48m

Private industries have no good record of quality or efficiency.

See Three Mile Island, Bhopal, Fukushima, Enron, Theranos, etc.

With the cheap talking points out of the way, one could examine this question carefully and objectively now.

WalterBright
3 replies
23h36m

I recommend reading a blow-by-blow account of the causes of the Chernobyl disaster, and compare the long list of failures and coverups with that of the other disasters you mentioned.

FabHK
1 replies
21h57m

Any large disaster will be caused by a long list of failures. Chernobyl was a particularly colossal screw-up (mostly a concatenation of unlucky coincidences, one specific instance of ignorance due to political meddling, and severe human errors eg by Dyatlov).

But it is preposterous to draw conclusions about state vs private enterprises from this N=1 example. There have been many successful government-run megaprojects (Panama Canal, Dutch North Sea dams, China's high-speed-rail). There have been many unsuccessful private ones.

Adjudicating this question would require careful enumeration and analysis across many instances, not just throwing out one example.

McKinsey, for example, states that megaprojects can fail "when big projects cross state or national borders and involve a mix of private and government spending."

https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/operations/our-insight...

WalterBright
0 replies
21h11m

I have friends who grew up in the Soviet Union. None of them have ever mentioned a longing for Soviet quality.

blackoil
0 replies
13h47m

Read about Bhopal tragedy, it is pretty much same.

hereme888
0 replies
23h23m

I suggest you walk outside and experience the real world, not whatever articles you're reading.

TMWNN
1 replies
1d

The comment section for the Washington Post article <https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2024/08/24/starlin...> reporting on today's news is overflowing with anger/despair/grief/denial from anti-Musk, anti-SpaceX people. One example:

For those who "More Engineers and Less MBAs", that's a dog whistle - Just so you know, Boeing is the most diversified aerospace and aircraft manufacturer in the U.S. Typically, Engineers are more arrogant and misogynistic, while MBAs tend to be more progressive, though they can also be more driven by profit. Want an example? SpaceX is a so called "Engineers driven" company.

At this point, Starliner is actually safe enough (less 1/270 of failure chance) to bring those 2 astronauts back home. The only reason why NASA is not using Starliner, is because there is an election 3 months away. NASA administrator (a politician) made the final decision, so it's not up to MBA or Engineer, it's up to a politician.

Vote Blue, Nationalize SpaceX and Pass it to Boeing to Run, everybody wins except Musk.
WalterBright
0 replies
23h49m

"Engineers are more arrogant and misogynistic, while MBAs tend to be more progressive"

Utter bilge. I bet the author knows nothing about engineers or running a business.

HL33tibCe7
3 replies
23h45m

So let's get this straight -- the quasi-nationalised Boeing fucks up, a private company steps in to save the day, and your conclusion is that fully nationalising Boeing is the answer?

nemo44x
0 replies
16h20m

It’s amazing, isn’t it? These same people complain how everything is broken and that the solution is to double down on it. It’s such a sad state of affairs that the corruption is actively supported by people and they want to feed it more and make it bigger.

misiti3780
0 replies
21h54m

lol - i read it the same way

Kim_Bruning
0 replies
8h44m

"Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith. "

I think a stronger interpretation would be that Boeing's management/corporate culture needs a dramatic shake-up.

Short of letting the company fail completely if left alone, nationalization might well be the best measure out of a long list of not-great measures to shore things up.

Not saying that it's the measure that should be chosen per-se, but as usual it's often better to be pragmatic than ideological at least.

rx_tx
8 replies
1d

A few tidbits/notes I took:

- They'll reconfigure Crew-8 for 6 occupants for contingency evac between Starliner undock and Crew-9 arrival.

- Starliner leaving ISS autonomously early September

- Crew 9 launching no later than Sept 24th with 2 crew + 2 empty seats

- Crew 9 coming back down in ~Feb 2025

HeatrayEnjoyer
3 replies
1d

Why have Crew 9 up there until February?

rx_tx
1 replies
1d

Maybe NASA still wants to get something for the money spent launching Crew 9 and get some science done, not just be a rescue mission. They don't want to cut that mission short.

dylan604
0 replies
1d

Sure, if Starliner returns in auto mode successfully, then Boeing will be able to save face, and NASA will be able to take some stock in that. However, if there is a viable alternate option that has a much better track record of working, NASA would potentially not survive as an agency if there was a catastrophic ending to a Starliner return with the astronauts on board.

So from a keep humans safe while still attempting to complete the Starliner mission as much as possible, to me this is the best solution. In fact, it's kind of bonus for Boeing to test the automated return that was not part of the original mission. </spinDocter>

dotnet00
0 replies
1d

That's the standard crew rotation cycle, and their capsules stay as emergency escape vehicles during their stay.

daveevad
1 replies
12h9m

- Starliner leaving ISS autonomously early September

What shall we make of all of this should it succeed?

tlb
0 replies
11h42m

Suppose they’ve estimated the risk of failure (and killing the astronauts) as 10%. Then

- returning Starliner empty is the correct decision

- a successful return doesn’t indicate they were wrong about the risk

- the experts will learn a lot more from poring over mission data

sebazzz
0 replies
12h0m

Crew-8 has only 4 seats right? Does reconfiguring mean “configure life support for 6 crew members”?

dev_tty01
0 replies
22h28m

- Crew 9 launching no later than Sept 24th with 2 crew + 2 empty seats

Actually, they said no sooner than Sept 24th.

WalterBright
7 replies
23h54m

Elon Musk is a lot like Kelly Johnson (Lockheed Skunkworks). No company was ever able to replicate the Skunkworks, though many have tried.

I've read biographies of both - well worth reading for anyone who wants to read about great Americans.

vessenes
4 replies
22h28m

I loved Kelly's memoir; reading his story and how he did what he did makes it seem so simple in the telling; looking at the many billions wasted by companies trying to get close tells you -- not so fast.

I learned in that book that he actually returned money to the government for, I think, the U-2 project -- they made a few extra planes and had money left over. Amazing.

I'd love to read a longitudinal retrospective of failed skunkworks setups and see why participants thought they failed -- I bet it's a diverse list of reasons.

WalterBright
2 replies
22h25m

Of the ones I learned about, it was because they were going to replicate Skunkworks "only better". The latter broke it every time.

vessenes
1 replies
22h9m

Kelly had a subversive quality to him that is probably almost impossible to institutionalize; I think it's unusual to find that mixed with some nationalist pride -- in that way, I see him as a product of the war, and the postwar boom.

That plus his broad multilateral intelligence -- seeing design and implementation as one thing that one could expect to understand and possibly master -- stood out for me, reading about him.

Anyway, if a leader like Kelly is needed for a skunkworks, that itself may be quite difficult. I'd guess most large companies would take a functioning "almost as good as" Skunkworks any day, if they could tolerate the guy/gal running it.

WalterBright
0 replies
21h32m

Kelly was famous for telling the CEO of Lockheed to butt out whenever the CEO called him to ask him what he was doing.

He was tolerated because he got results. With the size of his budget, it would be a very, very rare CEO who would tolerate that.

WalterBright
0 replies
18h48m

what he did makes it seem so simple in the telling

I recently did a presentation on how genius code is code so simple that people dismiss it with "anyone could have done that!"

misiti3780
1 replies
21h52m

Which Kelly Biography - I read "Skunkworks". Is there something else worth reading?

bottlepalm
6 replies
1d

Embarrassing, NASA has been downplaying the seriousness of this for months.

Boeing is cooked. SLS should be scrapped. There has got to be consequences for over spending, under delivering, and outright failing.

malfist
1 replies
22h43m

You keep posting this reply everywhere, doesn't make it true. They've always had the option of coming down on crew 8, they will have the plan of coming down on crew 9. The starliner is still functional as well, just the risk is unquantified. Remember NASA requires a risk assessment of 1:270 odds to proceed. Saying they're not coming back on starliner doesn't mean that it's certain death if they do

TMWNN
0 replies
20h48m

You keep posting this reply everywhere, doesn't make it true.

Amazing that, even after today's confirmation of what we all expected, there are still those in denial.

They've always had the option of coming down on crew 8

Yes, lashed to a jury-rigged harness in the cargo department. Right now NASA is in de facto violation of the ironclad rule of always having a seat for everyone aboard ISS, and for about three weeks between Crew 8's departure and Crew 9's arrival, the violation will be even greater.

Saying they're not coming back on starliner doesn't mean that it's certain death if they do

As I wrote in the link in the comment that you keep seeing everywhere but never bothered to read:

NASA has said that in an emergency the astronauts will use Starliner. That is not the same thing as saying that using Starliner (whether in an emergency or not) to return to earth is as safe as using Soyuz or Crew Dragon, and every day the return is delayed (hitting two months very shortly) is additional proof of this.

Put another way, if there is an emergency on ISS right now, the two astronauts that flew on Starliner have to take Starliner back because there is no alternative. There are no extra seats on Soyuz or Crew Dragon docked there.

and

In an "ISS explodes tomorrow and there is no Starliner" situation, of course Wilmore and Williams will be strapped in as tightly as possible as cargo in Crew Dragon. The ride might be bumpy, but should be survivable.

The interesting question is, in an "ISS explodes tomorrow" scenario, does the above still occur? Based on all available reporting the answer would until very recently have been "No; Wilmore and Williams will use Starliner". I am no longer sure that this is the case.

Note the last sentence.

null0ranje
1 replies
1d

It's a fixed-price contract, so Boeing is out $1.5 billion on this.

somenameforme
0 replies
22h54m

Starliner is the capsule, SLS is the rocket. SLS [1] is not a fixed price contract. The government's dumped tens of billions on it already, and continues to throw good money after bad. And the "fixed" price contract for Starliner keeps getting adjusted with NASA giving them hundreds of millions more dollars, allowing them to skip certain qualifying tests, and so on.

[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Launch_System

Georgelemental
0 replies
19h6m

AIUI SLS is a creation of the US Congress, only they can end it

bigyikes
6 replies
22h20m

Since there are no people on board…… I hope it blows up

practicemaths
4 replies
21h46m

I hope it does not. We do not need more space debris in orbit or more risk to the station and crew.

Also if it lands okay then they are more likely to deduce and correct what the issues are for a possible future mission (though at this point I do not know the likelyhood that Starliner will get another chance)

Shekelphile
1 replies
21h20m

I hope it does not. We do not need more space debris in orbit or more risk to the station and crew.

Even if such an explosion happened the debris wouldn't be around for long, stuff in LEO will fall back to earth quite quickly without stationkeeping.

akira2501
0 replies
20h58m

Vehicles in LEO have taken near catastrophic strikes before. There's a better safety margin, but it's not reduced to zero.

mhandley
0 replies
19h14m

The problematic thrusters are in the service module, which separates and burns up on reentry. So even if it lands OK, they won't learn anything new about the thruster problem by recovering the capsule.

jakeinspace
0 replies
21h42m

It would only "blow up" on reentry, don’t think there’s much risk of an actual pressure vessel rupture or hypergolic explosion. So no space debris at least, just littering the ocean.

fnord77
0 replies
18h23m

If the RCS is wonky, wouldn't it be more likely to burn up on reentry not being able to keep its heat shield pointed the right way?

wiremine
5 replies
1d

I read "A City on Mars" last year, and it opened my eyes to just hard space travel is. The government constraints on aerospace projects doesn't help. There's a reason SpaceX moves so much faster; they don't have to justify and explain things to taxpayers.

Beyond that, the book makes a good case for how unrealistic a long-term colony on Mars is... at least in the short term (Short being the next 50 to 100 years).

My biggest take away is: for all his talk, Musk basically just wants to be the Uber to Mars: shuttling people there and back. He don't seem serious about _actually_ solving the problems of how to stay alive and thrive once we get there.

I found it sort of depressing as first, as I'd love to see people loving on Mars in my lifetime. But when I thought about it, I saw that they outlined a bunch of really important problems we should be working on as a society. The sooner we work on those problems, the better.

[1] https://www.acityonmars.com/

icegreentea2
3 replies
1d

Boeing developed Starliner under the exact same set of constraints that SpaceX had for crewed dragon.

wiremine
1 replies
23h51m

Boeing developed Starliner under the exact same set of constraints that SpaceX had for crewed dragon.

You could be right. My (limited) understanding is that SpaceX is doing most of their R&D internally, and therefore they don't have the same oversight requirements more NASA-centric projects require. But that was based on an article about Artemis, and not Starliner.

dotnet00
0 replies
23h5m

NASA officials have previously admitted to applying more oversight to SpaceX than they did to Boeing regarding commercial crew. SpaceX's success is in being self-motivated. The government money is nice, but they want to develop and commercialize the tech anyway and are willing to put their own money into it. As evidence we have all the private Dragon flights, extra capsules built for free-flying missions and their self-developed EVA capability that should launch some time in the coming week.

That significantly relaxes the controls compared to Boeing, which is structured around exploiting cost-plus contracting, so every bit of work needs to be tracked and billed, the more time it takes, the better. Starliner was fixed price and they had to put in their own money so they would've been doing the bare minimum to keep the program going. They've only built the bare minimum 2 vehicles they'd need to meet contract requirements, and can only launch on the few launches reserved on a now retired rocket, so no room to commercialize until someone pays them to make it work with Vulcan.

tim333
0 replies
21h19m

Well, Boeing seem to have been given about twice the budget, not that it helped much.

laweijfmvo
5 replies
19h9m

So, what happens if it does blow up, or otherwise has a catastrophic failure on re-entry? Will we be able to say for certain if it was due to Starliner’s faults, or just the fact that there wasn’t a human pilot?

All Boeing hate aside this is a learning experience for everyone involved.

caconym_
2 replies
19h0m

It will certainly be (rightly) blamed on the vehicle. It's designed to operate completely autonomously---they flew two full test flights that way before ever putting crew on it.

sneak
1 replies
18h53m

I’m pretty sure it will be blamed not on the vehicle, but on the company that manufactured it.

caconym_
0 replies
18h45m

What do you imagine is the material difference between what I said and what you said?

But if you want to split hairs like this, get it right: companies. Boeing is the primary contractor, but others likely share some responsibility---for instance AJR, who supplied the problematic thrusters.

teractiveodular
0 replies
15h38m

Yes? There's ridiculous amounts of telemetry in these things.

flohofwoe
0 replies
18h56m

I would be very surprised if any human actions are required for delivering people into and returning them from space, or even any controls being present in the capsule to allow the human payload making any changes to flight parameters ;)

theginger
3 replies
23h38m

What happens if you need to file a tax return but you can't because your flight back from space got cancelled and you were delayed for 6 months?

kens
1 replies
22h23m

This actually happened on Apollo 13. Backup pilot Jack Swigert was assigned to Apollo 13 two days before launch because the expected pilot, Mattingly, had been potentially exposed to rubella. The flight launched on April 11, just a few days before the April 15 tax deadline and Swigert realized in flight that he had forgotten to file his taxes. Flight controllers thought it was a joke but Swigert was serious: "It ain't too funny. Things kind of happened real fast down there and I do need an extension. I may be spending time in another quarantine besides the one that they're planning for me." (I.e. besides the 21-day astronaut quarantine, he might end up in prison.)

The IRS stated that they could resolve the problem since anyone outside the United States on April 15 automatically gets a two-month extension. (Even though "legally, no one has ever decided whether a journey into space technically counts as leaving the United States.")

Of course, Apollo 13 soon had problems that pushed aside any concerns of tax filing.

NY Times report: https://www.nytimes.com/1970/04/13/archives/apollo-13-coasts...

Mission transcript: https://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/static/history/alsj/...

cdchn
0 replies
19h9m

"legally, no one has ever decided whether a journey into space technically counts as leaving the United States."

That gave me a good laugh. Shouldn't it definitely count? You're zipping over every country on earth while you're in orbit so you definitely left!

But if you take off and land in the US, did you _really_ leave? You don't go through customs and immigration for every country you fly over when you're in an airplane, and generally aren't legally considered to have "visited" them. So, wow, good question.

refulgentis
0 replies
22h47m

The government forces HN to turn into Reddit: everyone has to post vacuous banter comments until you file. (edit: the post I am replying to was the top comment at the time, for about an hour)

sidcool
3 replies
1d

February 2025!! Whoa.

umeshunni
2 replies
1d

That's for Crew 9, not the Starliner crew

Uvix
1 replies
1d

The Starliner crew are staying on the station until then - they'll be leaving on Crew 9.

umeshunni
0 replies
20h36m

Ah, that makes sense.

shirro
3 replies
18h0m

Boeing was awarded more money for their vehicle, had years of extra time and two previous demonstration flights. This flight should have been close to flawless given the additional time Boeing had for remediation and testing. Boeing engineers should have understood their systems well enough to convincingly demonstrate the vehicle met NASA's safety requirements. Even after much additional testing during the flight they couldn't make their case. Starliner will probably complete its third uncrewed return intact and people might question if NASA was being overly cautious but perhaps Boeing should have supplied a crewed vehicle with reliable thrusters and avoided this embarrassment.

suggestion
0 replies
1h54m

This is what happens when MBAs are made technical leads in charge of engineers. All the big 5 Federal Contractors are plagued like this.

black_13
0 replies
15h6m

Boeing problems are because everyone wants their 401k to return as much as possible Boeing got to where it is because of Wall Street

adwf
0 replies
2h34m

And don't forget that SpaceX had to sue the government/Boeing/Lockheed/ULA, multiple times, just in order to be allowed to compete for these contracts rather than having it locked down to the usual suspects.

rst
3 replies
1d

NASA press conference ongoing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AGOswKRSsHc

(Bottom line: they couldn't tell what was up with the thrusters, and didn't want to bet anyone's life on it not getting worse.)

meroes
2 replies
1d

Didn’t they say Teflon was coming off/bubbling and disrupting the flow of the thrusters?

dotnet00
0 replies
23h17m

Yes, permanent teflon deformation. Problem is, if the deformation observed in ground tests was permanent, why did the ones in space eventually seem to recover?

That's what's making it harder to trust the thrusters I think.

diggan
0 replies
1d

I understood what they were saying about the simulations as that the teflon seemed to have expanded slightly and disrupting the oxidizers input, meaning the thrusters wouldn't work as they should.

kelnos
1 replies
12h43m

A little difficult for Boeing's stock price to tank on a Saturday, though...

But I bet the market will have some things to say on Monday, unless Boeing can do some damage control before then.

whimsicalism
0 replies
9h38m

presumably there are private liquidity pools

someperson
0 replies
13h35m

Space journalist Eric Berger of Ars Technica has been speaking to his contacts and writing articles about the very likely SpaceX Crew 9 plan for the last week.

ripjaygn
2 replies
1d1h

Starliner will try to return uncrewed back to earth.

BoingBoomTschak
1 replies
1d

Knowing Boeing, possibly unscrewed too, haha.

fuzzfactor
0 replies
1d

That's going to be a lot of miles on a self-driving vehicle.

But if there are no further incidents it may not end up with such a bad Carfax after all ;)

mattmaroon
2 replies
1d

This was the only way this could ever play out. After all of Boeing’s last five years, even if 100% unrelated, no bureaucrat anywhere would take that risk. If something goes wrong, you’re the idiot who put the astronauts on a vehicle from a company who has had a long string of recent failures.

Even at the best of times space travel is risky, why tie your career to that?

mjamesaustin
1 replies
23h59m

Not only would you be the bureaucrat who put astronauts on a vehicle with documented problems, you would have done so when a perfectly capable alternative was sitting there able to help.

mattmaroon
0 replies
16h18m

Good point, even worse.

fredgrott
2 replies
21h37m

key point:

NASA and BOEING disagreed on whether it was safe for Starliner to depart to Earth with astronauts.....

I think it might be time to short Boeing stock....

fnord77
0 replies
18h17m

Did anyone explain to Boeing management that two astronauts dying a fiery death would be a far bigger hit to the company's stock and reputation than just writing this capsule off?

cft
0 replies
21h12m

Same as shorting the dollar: it will fall, but you don't know when

stan_kirdey
1 replies
1d

does the crew get paid overtime if they were to stay until Feb?

rufus_foreman
0 replies
22h47m

According to a report I read, their extra time is being compensated by Boeing with $50 gift cards for Red Lobster.

credit_guy
1 replies
23h35m

I wonder if the astronauts get some type of extra-pay for the time when they are in space. It feels they they should. If that's the case, these 2 astronauts got quite lucky. They were supposed to stay only a few days in orbit, and they end up staying a few months.

starik36
0 replies
22h24m

They should at least cancel their Netflix subscription.

diggan
0 replies
1d

NASA is focused on the mission, which is the Starliner test flight. Macabre, maybe, but someone has to focus on what they set out to do.

Obviously, they're not gonna just count out the humans involved, but it make sense they want to focus on the core mission.

At least that's how I understood it from listening to the press conference for the last half hour or so.`

Laremere
1 replies
20h23m

I doubt NASA wants to put 4 astronauts on the next Starliner flight. So if NASA declares this crewed flight test a failure and requires a redo (and possibly even reverting back to a third out of one planned uncrewed flight test), Boeing is still on the hook for their operational 6 crewed flights.

Here's the problem: Starliner flies in the Atlas 5 rocket. Which is officially deprecated and all of the vehicles that will ever built have been booked. Which would mean that Boeing has to nicely ask Project Kepler for one (or more) or their remaining Atlas 5 slots. All of this also pushes back the final flight of the Atlas 5. Starliner already has 5 years where it's the only mission in that rocket, requiring hardware and operational knowledge to be on retainer just for Starliner. At least the pad that launches Starliner can also do Vulcan launches, so they won't be hogging a launch pad just for this problematic program.

tzfld
0 replies
12h30m

If they manage to human rate Vulcan, I don't think it would be technically hard to launch Starliner on it. Just looking at Cygnus which used three different rockets from three different companies.

AnonMO
1 replies
1d

Boeing will probably sue the manufacturer of the failed RCS thrusters in the next year.

extropy
0 replies
1d

Possible. Depends how the contract is structured, they may be able to claw back some money from Aerojet.

Boeing still takes all the blame.

worik
0 replies
13h49m

Hitchhikers!

theGnuMe
0 replies
15h57m

This was the only possible outcome politically. It’s also likely the best one safety wise as well.

spoonfeeder006
0 replies
21h34m

At first I misread that as the astronauts would come back aboard the starliner

And I was like...now I'm scared for them

sneak
0 replies
18h50m

For how long have they been claiming that these crew members aren’t stranded up there?

rldjbpin
0 replies
9h54m

the cost of abstraction and complexity is shining through. hope the next mission goes as planned.

poopsmithe
0 replies
13h2m

The most bonkers thing to me is how Starliner was allowed to fly with crew on board when it was on the pad leaking helium. This leaking was known and ongoing for hours and they let it fly anyway.

pharos92
0 replies
4h44m

McDonnell Douglas bought Boeing with Boeings money. Engineering culture died and became bean-counter, lowest common denominator corporate-culture. Lobbying went up, outsourcing to third world went up, quality went down, whistleblowers fired and suppressed.

These organizations no longer exist for the purpose of building great products and pushing the limits of engineering. It's easier to operate on the tit of the state and rake in billions through sleazy backroom deals and lobbying with the state acting as an artificial intermediary between cause and effect.

mensetmanusman
0 replies
6h45m

Crazy to think they would have had to be saved by Russia were it not for SpaceX.

kotaKat
0 replies
1d

At least this saves Dave Calhoun becoming a vital participant in the 2024 Senate hearings on missing astronauts.

jonplackett
0 replies
22h21m

So when is the uncrewed flight back? I wanna watch.

jmyeet
0 replies
20h39m

Many of you might assume that Starliner is a cost-plus contract. Cost-plus contracts are common for large capital projects but they often end up running way over budget because the provider is essentially incentivized for budget overruns because they get paid more.

It turns out Starliner is a fixed-price contract (for $4.2 billion). So when Starliner had an issue a couple of years ago Boeing was forced to do another test and eat the launch cost. We ened more of this.

SLS (and Artemis?), for example, is largely done by cost-plus contracts.

It's common for companies and governments to want to have more than one supplier so they can't so easily be price-gouged (which doesn't really work but that's a separate topic). SpaceX got a $2.6 billion contract for Crew Dragon and its launch cost has to be substantially lower than Starliner's.

So NASA will still push Starliner for this reason. But this whole debacle is deeply embarrasing for Boeing, so much so that people at the top may actually get fired. That's really rare for the executives responsible for a strategy to be held accountable for its failures.

Boeing is just not in a great place and I honestly don't know how you right the ship at this point. A fish rots from the head and I imagine Boeing has descended into warring fiefdoms where some VPs just try and increase their head counts so they can get promoted to SVP.

jcalvinowens
0 replies
2h31m

Are there any more detailed technical reports about the current starliner problems out there yet? All I can find are a few paragraphs in press releases. Maybe we just have to wait.

gigatexal
0 replies
15h1m

Boeing’s space program is effectively DOA with this. How do they recover from this? Seems like a huge win for spacex.

genter
0 replies
22h21m

"NASA Decides", not "Shitty Boeing Engineering Results In".

Come on NASA, place the blame where it's due.

flag32
0 replies
23h12m

Good call.

ethical
0 replies
12h1m

The problem? Agile and software. Too many monkeys trying to write a Shakespeare non masterpiece.

ethical
0 replies
12h2m

The problem? Agile and Software. Too many monkeys trying to write a Shakespeare non masterpiece.

elif
0 replies
6h39m

I suspect this is a component of why the presumptive president is pushing the unrealized gains tax. If Elon were forced to produce tens of billions liquid he would have to sell shares of his companies, and perhaps IPO spaceX, allowing the government to more tightly control it.

egorfine
0 replies
8h13m

It seems that for Boeing management, engineering is an annoying nuisance that gets in the way of making money.

dev1ycan
0 replies
17h22m

It actually disgusts me reading the boeing subreddit and how there's comments coming from obvious traders or management being upvoted straight up lying through their teeth about this.

I'll quote one:

"It’s ridiculous. Only a few of the 27 thrusters had issues. The capsule is designed to operate with only half the thrusters."

(4 upvotes)

Obviously the reply to it straight up calls him out and exposes it, but it just shows that people around Boeing have no respect whatsoever for human safety, it's all dollar bills to them...

I do not think I'd trust my life to boeing anytime soon, I do not want to be guessing mid flight if the boeing I'm on was built in the last 20 years or not (newer = less safe)

blackeyeblitzar
0 replies
1d

This is evidence of the utter failure of constantly pumping money into a dated cartel of prime contractors that have no incentive to do better. I am very thankful we have Elon Musk to be bold enough to enter this impossibly capital heavy market and show a better way. I hope this is the start of a reset on how taxes are funneled to government contractors.

Natsu
0 replies
1d

I'm just glad they're prioritizing crew safety here. I don't have a lot of trust in Boeing right now.

LegitShady
0 replies
22h25m

“Starliner is a very capable spacecraft and, ultimately, this comes down to needing a higher level of certainty to perform a crewed return,” said Steve Stich, manager of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program. “The NASA and Boeing teams have completed a tremendous amount of testing and analysis, and this flight test is providing critical information on Starliner’s performance in space. Our efforts will help prepare for the uncrewed return and will greatly benefit future corrective actions for the spacecraft.”

"we think its gonna blow up"

IAmNotACellist
0 replies
19h57m

"They bought their tickets, they knew what they were getting into. I say, let them crash."

Arn_Thor
0 replies
21h15m

The only sensible choice. Glad to see NASA make the right call. Putting the lives of the crew over expedience is the correct priority.