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Comment by pfdietz

7 days ago

Falcon Heavy is more expensive per kg than F9, because it throws away more things. SpaceX flies it for certain military missions but you will note they launch their own stuff on F9.

A full launch on F9 (with recovered S1) is estimated to cost $15M and can put up to 17,600 kg into LEO, or $850/kg.

> (>4 accounting for the 10x launch armor).

You're double counting there. 3x would be just fine even with 10x launch armor.

> seems like a terrible idea in general

And here's the problem: you started from an emotional reaction and are trying to rationalize that.

> A full launch on F9 (with recovered S1) is estimated to cost $15M

Estimated by who? SpaceX charges 74 million for this. Nothing credible I can find indicates that SpaceX is running an amazing 80% profit margin on Falcon 9 launches.

> And here's the problem: you started from an emotional reaction and are trying to rationalize that.

No, your premise is “just launch the trash into space” and you’re hand waving away the complexity, costs, and danger.

  • SpaceX charges what the market will bear, and because they have no good competitor their profit margins can be very large.

    Anyway, the number is from fairly old Musk interviews. Costs have likely decreased since then.

    https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2026/02/spacex-falcon-9-true-c...

    > No, your premise is “just launch the trash into space” and you’re hand waving away the complexity, costs, and danger.

    At least I didn't trot out a string of obvious errors like you did.

    When people do that, it's a strong tell they're engaging in broken thinking. What you did, I think, is believe something, then try to rationalize it. When your thinking reached a justification you liked you just stopped thinking (because, after all, thinking more could break the pleasing argument you just constructed, and that would feel bad).

    • > SpaceX charges what the market will bear, and because they have no good competitor their profit margins can be very large.

      Is your premise that SpaceX will ship nuclear waste at or below cost? Because the 74 million is a publicly available price. And when SpaceX ships stuff for the government the prices go up, not down.

      > Anyway, the number is from fairly old Musk interviews.

      Yes, Musk is famously honest and accurate with his claims.

      > At least I didn't trot out a string of obvious errors like you did.

      What obvious errors are those? You don’t seem to like that I’m using publicly available pricing.

      > When people do that, it's a strong tell they're engaging in broken thinking. What you did, I think, is believe something, then try to rationalize it. When your thinking reached a justification you liked you just stopped thinking

      Pot, meet kettle. You are basing your entire premise on a speculative future that doesn’t exist. You should have just proposed sending it up the space elevator.

      None of this idea makes sense from a financial, physical, or risk stand point. “This stuff is too dangerous to store in a hole, let’s launch it into space in 3000 rockets, and then we’ll push it away from earth with another thousand solar electric rockets, and then we’ll use solar energy to evaporate it all! What could go wrong?”

      Honestly if you’re betting on a hypothetical future where all this is effectively free, why not just bet on a future where reprocessing uranium drops in price as well?