> <i><font color="yellow">You are a wealth of info that has little to do with the point.</font>/i><br /><br />I am not certain what you are referring to, as discussions regularly drift or bifurcate as one point is picked up, tweaked, and followed.<br /><br /> /> <i><font color="yellow">Furthermore you need a good editor. ... 1000 dollars per poung.</font>/i><br /><br />Yeah, I'll remember that. <img src="/images/icons/rolleyes.gif" /><br /><br /> /> <i><font color="yellow">As it is 2000 per pound is quite a bit less then 10000 for regular rockets. No commercial enterprise can buy a ride on the Shuttle anyway.</font>/i><br /><br />Determining actual costs and pricing of launch is a very imprecise process. Figuring out how many launches to amortize development costs across, determining the proper rate to depreciate hardware that is reused, identifying what gets billed as overhead to launches, etc. are difficult, especially when the number of events (e.g., launches) are limited or unknown. Add in the lack of transparency of most launches (typically because they are government subsidized through various means and for various reasons (e.g., keeping or creating an industrial base, national pride)), and trying to arrive at an objective cost becomes very difficult.<br /><br />For example, the DOD paid a lot for the Atlas V and Delta IV EELVs. If LockMart or Boeing offer their launch service to a commercial organization, could another launch competitor claim that LockMart and Boeing's launch costs are subsidized by DOD development costs? Probably.<br /><br />The $10,000 per pound has been paraded by NASA for years as to the reason new launch technologies are needed. I agree that it is probably bogus, but nevertheless, the number has been used regularly by NASA Administrators for years.<br /><br />As for the lack of commercial launches on the shuttle, I am very aware of that; although, for a number of years it was policy that the shuttle would be</i></i></i>