You seem to be under the mistaken impression that just becuase many mission profiles require considerable tonnage to orbit, that we would somehow be "doing it the same as Apollo"...<br /><br />Nothing could be further from the truth!<br /><br />You really need to wrap your brain around this concept;<br />Many times, the CHEAPEST, and most EFFICIENT way to launch complex hardware (that, by the way, weighs more than 20, or 50, or 100 or more tons) is in ONE PIECE rather than several.<br /><br />I am at something of a loss as to why you equate this with "doing it the same as Apollo", and assume that there is something inherently "bad" about having the capability to put large payloads in orbit (or on track for the moon, mars, or other points)...<br /><br />Many older HLV's (such as Saturn) are not cost effective enough to ressurect. That doesn't mean the capability is not needed. It also doesn't mean that EVERY payload needs an HLV. Some do, and you can't reasonably enter into a mission profile that requires (for example) 400 tons of ship, equipment, landers, fuel, food, air, and people, in 20 ton "bites"...<br />You better be able to put that 400 ton mission together in less than 20 launches! <br /><br />Paul F.<br /><br />