RadarRedux,<br /><br />We all are voicing our pet projects here, but I think that we have to keep a sense of the possible if we are going to have any kind of real discussion. Certainly, private enterprise is finally, after 20 plus years of talk, stepping up to the commitment needed for real spacefaring hardware. Not in a big way, mind you, but Scaled Composites and Virgin Enterprises are pretty serious in their plans for a sub-orbital tourism program. If that pans out, then we will start to see some real investment in space.<br /><br />For some reason, people seem to think that private industry will be able to do space for far less than NASA does. I am certain that we will see some reduction in costs, but I don't see any basis to believe that engineers will suddenly start working for 10 dollars an hour, machine shops will cut their rates to pennies on the dollar, or that exotic composite materials are going to be fashioned into flightworthy vehicles for a few thousand bucks. Space is expensive, and it is going to stay that way until launch vehicles are mass produced, and it still will be expensive. Anyone priced a 747 recently?<br /><br />To expect private industry to suddenly be in a position to bid on a project that requires launch facilities, a tracking network, advanced materials science, software that can act on its own, and a recovery capability is unrealistic at this point in time. So far, we have seen one major effort, bankrolled by one of the richest men on the planet, who just happens to have a thing for spaceflight. Many people see a groundswell of private entries into the space program, but so far, no one has made it out of the atmosphere except for Scaled Composites. We can expect there to be 3 or 4, at least, private companies with working flight hardware before we see contracts for missions going to the private sector.<br /><br />Building a base on the Moon could easily cost over 100 billion dollars, which the government can afford if it is spread ou <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> The secret to peace of mind is a short attention span. </div>