| ▲ | credit_guy a day ago |
| The Hohmann transfer time between Saturn and Mars/Earth is around 16 years. So, all the ships used for such a supply mission would reach their destination at least 32 years after they’ve been built, assuming we build them on Earth. |
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| ▲ | pigpop a day ago | parent [-] |
| That's not really a problem if the supply is continuous. Think of the last time you drank a 12-year scotch, that distillery had to be set up and start producing at least 12 years ago for them to label the product that way but they've continued production constantly since then which ensures there is a steady supply to be delivered to stores. |
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| ▲ | credit_guy 20 hours ago | parent [-] | | Spirits are not capital intensive. Building a rocket is very capital intensive. You'd like to be able to reuse it. But if one single mission takes 30 years, then you can reuse this rocket once, at most twice. Let's say you reuse it twice, you amortize the capital cost over a period of 90 years. Now, let's say someone builds the exact same rockets, but they do missions between the asteroid belt and Mars. Each trip takes about 2 years. Everything you can source on Titan, you can find an asteroid to source it from. By the time you reuse a Titan-bound rocket once, you reuse an asteroid-bound rocket many times. | | |
| ▲ | pigpop 18 hours ago | parent [-] | | I'm not sure what you're talking about, my initial comment was a (sort of silly) idea about building a mass driver on Titan that uses native materials to launch payloads on an inward bound trajectory, not to ferry them back and forth with a rocket. |
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