Since the ultimate objective is the mission to Mars, it's rather irrelevant, as long as it doesn't ruin the company. My point is, it might not be worth developing such technology just to launch satellites, but once it's developed for something greater, it can also find a use in more "mundane" areas. That's how a lot of technology we use today was made.
Jesus Christ, do you even think about what you are typing here? Of course they're developing their tech for standard space launches now, but they're also using them as scale experiments for interplanetary launches.
I mean, they're not like those morons who wanted to start a Space Elevator project by starting to build a Space Elevator, hoping the necessary tech would be developed along the way. Musk et al have a plan, involving several incremental steps, towards getting to their endgoal.
Which is exactly what I said. The development of Falcon 9 a stepping stone on the road to Mars. It's value is not only monetary, but also as a way to develop technology that will be needed for a future Mars rocket.
By the way, their website says that a Falcon 9 launch (capable of lifting up to 12 tons of cargo) is priced at 54 million. Took me less than a minute to find that. If you want to have a more precise figure, I suggest you contact their sales department.
I know that. I had a problem with finding figures for Proton. Looking at the wiki article, it does indeed put it much below the Proton (80 million), and Falcon 9 1.1 has about 75% of it's launch capability. That's an improvement, all right. Then there's Russian Angara A3, which has a similar launch capability, but costs about 70 million. Same goes for Zenit, but it's lacking launch capability. The wiki article is missing numbers for a few important rockets. It'd be nice to have some data on larger Angara versions, different versions of Zenit and Soyuz.
Regardless, going by the wiki article, he managed to shave off 14 milion when keeping the launch capability comparable to Angara. That's about 63% of Proton-M's price, while having about 75% of it's launch capability. I'd say, those numbers sound good, and he promises further cost reduction. That's certainly an attractive option.
**** off. Read the damn article. Musk says they've brought prices down significantly. Does he cite concrete numbers? No. Because it's not an article aimed at people looking to shoot stuff into space.
It's not about what he said. You strongly backed his claim he already brought down launch costs, so I asked for clear evidence. Regardless of who the article is aimed at, it's always better to have concrete numbers. What exactly a "significant" reduction means? (OK, I'm guilty of that one myself. Still, it's good to have the numbers.)
Last I checked, SpaceX is not a ****ing charity. They have a bottom line they have to look at. If they were incapable of launching sats at the prices quoted AND turn a profit, this whole venture wouldn't make sense. Somehow, I don't see them loss-leading this whole thing.
Individual launches will obviously turn a profit (a hefty one, I suspect), but I wonder if (and if they do, when exactly) they're going to pay for development costs. It's not like there's a satellite launched every day. However, a lot of it's value lies in the fact it's a scale experiment for interplanetary launches. It's harder to pinpoint this value and convert it to dollars, but it's most likely the most important one in the long run.