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Honda is not running this as a commercial rocket. This seems more like a test platform. Or a way to train engineers.

SpaceX invested in reusability long before they had any idea about their own launch services.

> Its not that they where / not able to quickly get the same tech going. They simply have less market

BlueOrigin has been trying for nearly as long as SpaceX and have infinite money and don't care about market. Apparently having lots of money doesn't make you able to 'quickly get the same tech'.

RocketLab was to small and had to first grow the company in other ways. And the CEO initially didn't believe in large rockets. And their own efforts of re-usability, despite excellent engeeners didn't pan out to 'quickly get the same tech'.

Arianespace had enough market in theory, they just didn't want to invest money. And now that they do, they are completely failing at at 'quickly getting the same tech' despite them getting lots and lots of money. More money in fact then SpaceX used to develop the Falcon 9 initially. And at best they get some demonstrators out of it.

ULA has invested many billions in their next generation rockets, and they were absolutely not confident that they could 'quickly get the same tech'.

Tons of money flowed into the rocket business, specially if you include Blue. Japan, India, Europe, China and US market have all ramped up investment. And nobody has replicated what SpaceX did more then 10 years ago.

So as far as I can tell, there is exactly 0 evidence that people who can invest money can replicate the technology and the operations.

> partially because they used a lot of the public funds to just throw shit at the wall

The used all their costumers rockets to do tests after they had performed the service. Some of those rockets were bought by 'the public'. And the first reflown rockets didn't carry public payloads. Other companies could have done the same with not that much investment, they just didn't care to.

What result SpaceX caring less, is because they were already so good at building rockets that even their non-reusable rockets were cheaper then anybody else, even with reusable tech like legs attached. Falcon 9 was so much better then anything else that even without re-usabiltiy they were profitable.

Their business didn't depend on re-usability. I don't think the other rocket companies could even imagine something like that to be possible.


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