You are not logged in.
found the GW image and its a large based capsule with struts landing legs. reverse engineering from Dragon 
The page is here for the rocket that pushes the payload to mars
GW's site Chemical Mars Lander Designs “Rough-Out” 2012
surprise we are still in the same range for material mass whether its the 304L or the Austenitic High-Manganese Steel: roughly 1,000 tons for the same tubing dimensions
bumping for all to find for delivery to payload of construction items.
The rockets landing on mars require the EDL systems but to change the equation for payload mass to not require more fuel for retro propulsion means changing the amount of atmospheric drag. These are just the small changes of the HIAD inflatable, Expandable heat shield, ADEPT umbrella structured fabric, and any other ballistic ballute type which can add just minimal mass but gain mass to the surface.
It does not change the core of the rocket or its landing legs or other structures used to make it set stable on the Martian surface. It is just how we cheat to get more mass to the surface with the same rocket.
Here is the topic Forty 40 Ton Mars Delivery Mechanism
Landing 40 metric tons or more at a time on the surface of Mars is a critical requirement for human missions, representing a massive technological leap from the ~1 metric ton currently landed by NASA's largest robotic missions.
Key Aspects of the "40 Tons to Mars" Challenge:
The Technical Challenge: Landing heavy, human-rated payloads (40–100+ tons) requires landing systems that can manage descent through the thin Martian atmosphere, a feat currently beyond proven operational capabilities.
Mission Requirements: NASA studies and industry experts suggest that approximately 40 to 80+ tons of useful, landed mass—including habitats, supplies, and return vehicles—are required per crewed mission.
SpaceX Starship Capability: SpaceX’s Starship is designed to carry over 100 tons of cargo to the surface of Mars, with plans to use the vehicle's large payload capacity to deliver infrastructure and enable propellant production (ISRU) on the surface.
Alternative Approaches: Some proposals suggest delivering 40 tons of return propellant directly, or alternatively, delivering 40 tons of water to be converted into propellant on the surface to simplify missions.
Challenges and Solutions:
Entry, Descent, and Landing (EDL): Because the Martian atmosphere is too thin to slow down heavy spacecraft with parachutes alone, new technologies like supersonic retro-propulsion are necessary.
Power and Infrastructure: Landing 40+ tons allows for the deployment of heavy, efficient power sources (such as nuclear reactors) rather than relying on massive solar arrays.
Return Trip: The 40-ton target is often tied to delivering the necessary equipment to produce return propellant on-site (In-Situ Resource Utilization - ISRU).
The goal of landing 40+ tons is considered crucial for making human exploration, and potential settlement, of Mars viable by the 2030s-2040s
How to make a hard surface might be the issue to solve once we are there
2-16-26 postings
The logistics of building on mars is a situation that needs a means to prepare for landings of larger ships for mars which can not land currently.
Wiki Landing Site preparation mission using a 40 mT payloads
items that we require on the surface WIKI Constructing things on Mars equipment needs
wiki Block 4 starship first mission propellant creation system required for a crewed ship to be up and functional
Power for the Wiki Landing Site preparation mission using a 40 mT payloads
suggested to be brought for the site to build
Here is the double torus exoskeleton
Still waiting on decision for the exoskeleton but in the mean while even copilots gives and errored view that we can work with.
It was confused for the saddle area tie in of the domes and cutting the sections of each then bridging them but that may be the locations for the airlocks on each side
Have been working on a duel mars to earth calendar for side by side use in Excel manually done.
The reuse of the 304L is looking to change direction for some uses.
Change of direction due to starships ability to land near work site which forces site prep landings of equipment to sent with a 40 mT cargo payload ship.
SpaceNut,
Here are some documents for your AI program to evaluate, related to the use of Austenitic High-Manganese Steel:
Material Properties, Applications, Q&A:
High-Manganese Steel: Properties, Performance, and ApplicationsGeneral Welding Info:
How to Weld Hadfield (Austenitic Manganese) SteelA Welding Procedure Example:
Welding of Austenitic Manganese SteelHistorical and Casting Info
Man of Steel: Austenitic Manganese SteelSouth Korean Base Metal and Weld Qualification Testing for LNG Tankers:
Fracture Toughness Characteristics of High-Manganese Austenitic Steel Plate for Application in a Liquefied Natural Gas CarrierCasting Process Info:
Cast Austenitic High Managanese Steels - Some Practical NotesIndia's Acceptance Testing Criteria:
Guidelines on Approval of High Manganese Austenitic Steel for Cryogenic ServiceSpecific Named Grades of Low-Temperature Capable Tubing / Piping:
Sunny Steel - Low-Temperature Service PipeIf we're not going to send the Starships all the way to Mars, then there is no source of 304L, so payloads consisting of austenitic high-Manganese steel tubing can be sent to the surface of Mars using NASA's HIAD inflatable heat shields and storable chemical propellants for retro-propulsion. Austenitic high-Manganese steels suitable for cryogenic temperatures possess room temperature yield strengths more than double that of 304L. We could use 56ksi as our yield strength, which would be typical for 25% Manganese steel. 304L is a very weak structural steel, with a nominal yield strength of only 28ksi, hence my desire to use a much stronger material to reduce the mass of steel required for habitation structures.
The upside is that we don't need metal smelting / seamless tube forming equipment and power sources, nor tools to deconstruct and recycle the Starship propellant tank structures, only tubing bending and welding equipment. That change drastically simplifies the types of equipment required for pressurized surface habitation construction and reduces the energy requirement to something far more manageable with minimal surface power infrastructure.
How to get large payloads to mars with smaller rockets require the EDL's to make it possible.
Here is one of the topics that contain the hyper cone
Ballistic Delivery of Supplies to Mars: Lithobraking post #9
HIAD inflatable drag increasing
Here is what it looks like if things do not work
Heat Shield Design Manufacture Application Maintenance several posts contained all three types
Again multiple posts Heat on aerobreak
Change of direction due to starships ability to land near work site which forces site prep landings of equipment to sent with a 40 mT cargo payload ship.
Change of direction due to starships ability to land near work site which forces site prep landings of equipment to sent with a 40 mT cargo payload ship.
SpaceNut,
Here are some documents for your AI program to evaluate, related to the use of Austenitic High-Manganese Steel:
Material Properties, Applications, Q&A:
High-Manganese Steel: Properties, Performance, and ApplicationsGeneral Welding Info:
How to Weld Hadfield (Austenitic Manganese) SteelA Welding Procedure Example:
Welding of Austenitic Manganese SteelHistorical and Casting Info
Man of Steel: Austenitic Manganese SteelSouth Korean Base Metal and Weld Qualification Testing for LNG Tankers:
Fracture Toughness Characteristics of High-Manganese Austenitic Steel Plate for Application in a Liquefied Natural Gas CarrierCasting Process Info:
Cast Austenitic High Managanese Steels - Some Practical NotesIndia's Acceptance Testing Criteria:
Guidelines on Approval of High Manganese Austenitic Steel for Cryogenic ServiceSpecific Named Grades of Low-Temperature Capable Tubing / Piping:
Sunny Steel - Low-Temperature Service PipeIf we're not going to send the Starships all the way to Mars, then there is no source of 304L, so payloads consisting of austenitic high-Manganese steel tubing can be sent to the surface of Mars using NASA's HIAD inflatable heat shields and storable chemical propellants for retro-propulsion. Austenitic high-Manganese steels suitable for cryogenic temperatures possess room temperature yield strengths more than double that of 304L. We could use 56ksi as our yield strength, which would be typical for 25% Manganese steel. 304L is a very weak structural steel, with a nominal yield strength of only 28ksi, hence my desire to use a much stronger material to reduce the mass of steel required for habitation structures.
The upside is that we don't need metal smelting / seamless tube forming equipment and power sources, nor tools to deconstruct and recycle the Starship propellant tank structures, only tubing bending and welding equipment. That change drastically simplifies the types of equipment required for pressurized surface habitation construction and reduces the energy requirement to something far more manageable with minimal surface power infrastructure.
Here is the double torus exoskeleton
Still waiting on decision for the exoskeleton but in the mean while even copilots gives and errored view that we can work with.
It was confused for the saddle area tie in of the domes and cutting the sections of each then bridging them but that may be the locations for the airlocks on each side
Have been working on a duel mars to earth calendar for side by side use in Excel manually done.
related topics for mars EDL are in housekeeping which include the HIAD, ADEPT, Hyper-cone ect...
Here is one of the topics that contain the hyper cone
Ballistic Delivery of Supplies to Mars: Lithobraking post #9
HIAD inflatable drag increasing
Here is what it looks like if things do not work
Heat Shield Design Manufacture Application Maintenance several posts contained all three types
Again multiple posts Heat on aerobreak
asking for engine and propellant change
I would like to change engines to the super draco and hydrogel fuels
See my thinking
You’re making a pretty big architectural pivot here—doable, but it changes the whole “ecosystem logic” of the lander.
Let me split this into two parts: SuperDraco reality, and what “hydrogel fuels” could mean in a Mars context.
SuperDraco as main landing engines
What they are:
Type: Hypergolic, pressure‑fed engines
Propellants: NTO + MMH (or similar)
Thrust (per engine, vacuum): ~73 kN
Isp: ~235–250 s (much lower than Raptor‑class methalox)
To match your previous 600–800 kN thrust band, you’d need on the order of:
8–12 SuperDracos clustered around the base
Total thrust:
8
×
73
≈
580
kN
to
12
×
73
≈
876
kN
Implications:
Pros:
Very deep throttling.
Instant start/stop, multiple restarts.
Mature tech, simple pressure‑fed plumbing.
Great for terminal descent and hover‑slam control.
Cons:
Much lower Isp → more propellant mass for the same Δv.
Toxic, corrosive propellants → handling, contamination, and long‑term surface ops issues.
Breaks methalox commonality with Starship and ISRU.
For an EDL‑only expendable lander, SuperDracos can work, but your wet mass will go up for the same performance, or your payload will go down for the same mass.
“Hydrogel fuels” — what do you mean?
This phrase is ambiguous, and it matters a lot. It could mean:
Gelled hypergolic propellants (e.g., gelled MMH/NTO or green hypergols)
Gelled cryogenics (e.g., gelled LOX/CH₄ or LOX/H₂)
Green monoprop/bi‑prop gels (AF‑M315E‑like, but gelled)
Each of these has different:
Density (affects tank size and lander geometry)
Storability (important for months‑long cruise to Mars)
Isp (directly hits your landed mass or bulldozer size)
If you want a SuperDraco‑style, pressure‑fed, storable system, the most realistic interpretation is:
Gelled hypergolic bi‑prop (storable, higher density, slightly better safety/handling than classic NTO/MMH, but still not “nice”).
What changes in the lander if we go SuperDraco + storable gel?
Structurally and operationally, your landing system can stay almost the same:
Same 6 m diameter, ~24 m tall lander
Same clamshell ramp
Same wide landing legs
Same bulldozer + reactor payload
But under the skin:
Engine bay:
Ring of 8–12 SuperDraco‑class engines instead of 3 big Raptors.
Smaller nozzles → more clearance for legs and heat shield cutouts.
Tanks:
Two storable‑prop tanks (oxidizer + fuel gel) instead of LOX/CH₄.
Likely smaller volume (higher density) but higher mass fraction (heavier tanks, pressurization).
Mass budget:
More propellant mass for the same Δv because of lower Isp.
But simpler feed system (pressure‑fed, no turbopumps).
Net effect: the lander probably stays in the same 80–90 t to Mars band, but:
You trade methalox efficiency + ISRU compatibility
for
Storability + simplicity + SuperDraco heritage.
Where I’d suggest we go next
Before I lock in numbers, I need one thing from you:
When you say “hydrogel fuels,” do you mean:
Gelled hypergolic storable propellants (SuperDraco‑like, pressure‑fed, toxic but simple), or
Some kind of gelled methalox / cryogenic system (trying to keep CH₄/LOX in a gel form), or
Something else entirely that you have in mind?
Once you pick (1) or (2) (or clarify your own idea), I can:
Rebuild the mass budget for a SuperDraco/gel lander, and
Redraw the engine bay + leg layout around a ring of smaller engines instead of 3 big Raptors.
redraw
Great — since you said “redraw”, I’ll give you a clean, updated layout of the lander specifically redesigned around SuperDraco‑class engines and gelled hypergolic propellants, instead of methalox Raptors.
This is a full architectural redraw, not just a tweak.
Here’s the new configuration, optimized for:
8–12 SuperDraco engines
Storable gel hypergolic propellants
Expendable lander
Clamshell ramp deployment
6‑meter diameter, ~24‑meter height
? REDRAWN LANDER — SUPERDRACO + GEL PROPELLANT VERSION
Below is the updated geometry and subsystem layout.
1. Overall Shape (Side View)
Code
┌───────────────────────────┐
│ Payload Bay │
│ (Bulldozer + Reactor) │
│ 5.5 m ID × 6–8 m tall │
└───────────┬───────────────┘
│
┌───────────┴───────────────┐
│ Upper Gel Oxidizer Tank │
│ (Gelled NTO derivative) │
└───────────┬───────────────┘
│
┌───────────┴───────────────┐
│ Lower Gel Fuel Tank │
│ (Gelled MMH derivative) │
└───────────┬───────────────┘
│
┌───────────┴───────────────┐
│ Engine Bay (8–12 SDs) │
│ Ring‑mounted SuperDracos │
└────────────────────────────┘
\ \ \ \ \ \ \
\ \ \ \ \ \ \
Wide 9–10 m landing legs
2. Engine Bay (Top‑Down Redraw)
SuperDracos are small, so we use a ring layout instead of a central cluster.
Code
┌───────────────────────┐
│ 6 m dia │
│ │
│ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ │
│ ○ ○ │
│ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ │
└───────────────────────┘
Legend:
○ = SuperDraco engine
Engines evenly spaced around the perimeter
8, 10, or 12 engines depending on thrust requirement
Why this works
SuperDracos are pressure‑fed, so no turbopumps.
Ring layout gives:
Excellent gimbal authority
Redundancy (you can lose 1–2 engines)
Clear space in the center for:
Landing leg actuators
Ramp hinge structure
Propellant feed manifolds
3. Propellant Tanks (Gelled Hypergolic)
Upper Tank: Gelled Oxidizer (NTO‑derived)
High density → smaller tank volume
Storable for months → ideal for Mars cruise
Pressure‑fed → spherical or near‑spherical dome
Lower Tank: Gelled Fuel (MMH‑derived)
Also storable
Slightly lower density than oxidizer
Sits above engine bay for short feedlines
Tank Geometry
Because gels are denser than cryogenics:
Tanks are shorter
Lander can be shorter overall
Center of mass is lower, improving landing stability
4. Clamshell Ramp (Updated for Hypergolic Layout)
The ramp system stays almost identical to the methalox version, but the internal structure changes:
Ramp hinges attach to the lower tank ring, not the engine skirt.
Gel tanks allow more internal volume near the bottom → bulldozer can sit even lower.
Ramp length: 5–6 meters
Ramp angle after kneeling: 15–20°
Ramp Sequence
Lander kneels on ramp side
Clamshell unlatches
Ramp swings down
Deck lip deploys
Bulldozer drives out
5. Landing Legs (Unchanged Geometry)
Still using:
6 or 8 legs
9–10 meter footprint
Crush‑core pads
Optional auger‑tip anchors
SuperDraco ring engines give more clearance for leg mounts.
6. Mass Budget (Updated for Hypergolic System)
Hypergolic gels → lower Isp → more propellant needed.
New estimates:
Dry mass: 42–48 t
Propellant (gel): 35–45 t
Bulldozer: 6 t
Reactor: 3–4 t
Misc cargo: 2 t
Total to Mars: ~88–95 t
Still inside Starship’s expendable payload capability.
7. What This Redraw Achieves
✔ Fully storable propellants
No boiloff, no cryo insulation, no chilldown.
✔ Simpler plumbing
Pressure‑fed → no turbopumps → fewer failure modes.
✔ More engines = more redundancy
Lose one? Lose two? Still land.
✔ Lower center of mass
Gelled propellants are dense → tanks compact → bulldozer sits lower.
✔ Ramp deployment even easier
Shorter tanks = lower deck height = shallower ramp.
If you want, I can now produce:
A. A clean ASCII blueprint of the full lander
B. A top‑down structural diagram showing tank walls, ramp cutout, and engine ring
C. A mass‑optimized version (8 engines vs 12 engines)
D. A landing sequence diagram updated for SuperDracos
E. A bulldozer envelope drawing inside the new bay
Trying to do without prefilling of numbers being generated making use of excel and auto fill to do my best
starting post is carried from the previous days 2-14-2026 last number for the day 238078 - last post 238093
2-15-26 postings
Martian Calender - I have created a martian calender...
Martian Calender - I have created a martian calender...
Utilizing Ice Caves
Utilizing Ice Caves
Utilizing Ice Caves
Utilizing Ice Caves
Wiki Landing Site preparation mission
WIKI Starship repurposed to make or build what we need
Rubble Pile Sinter/Glass Jar/Double Cone Tent
Google Meet Collaboration - Meetings Plus Followup Discussion
Google Meet Collaboration - Meetings Plus Followup Discussion
Google Meet Collaboration - Meetings Plus Followup Discussion
Hopefully all are rested from the weekend off and ready to talk Mars.
I have several items that we can make note of, landing site preparation of how to achieve when starship can not.
How to make use of what we do land on the surface to gain the Mars foothold we desire.
Plus thinking big for the future down the road once enough ability is present.
Still waiting on decision for the exoskeleton but in the mean while even copilots gives and errored view that we can work with.
It was confused for the saddle area tie in of the domes and cutting the sections of each then bridging them but that may be the locations for the airlocks on each side
Have been working on a duel mars to earth calendar for side by side use in Excel manually done.
Care taker mission might create a base torus and use the crewed ships systems to make the foot hold for mars from the empty care ships with the core engine removed and tanks to be used elsewhere for waste and water.
it might look something like this torus that is made around the crewed ship hull.
copilot only partially remembers as the ring was to join the hull and make a larger diameter ring but the concept is sufficient.
Hello GW, could you look at the topic to see if what I have put together looks sane at all.
Wiki Landing Site preparation mission
Its going to look like a fat 1st stage with changes.
modified staship is also is expendable
See my thinking
Got it—so now we’re in a fully expendable stack:Expendable carrier Starship
Expendable 6m lander
Expendable lander‑delivered reactor + bulldozer
Let’s lock where the mass budget sits under that assumption.
1. Expendable Starship → what changes for us
If Starship is expendable on this mission:It doesn’t need:
Earth‑return TPS margin
Earth‑landing propellant
Structural life for multiple flights
Practically, that means:
More of its on‑orbit propellant can be spent on TMI and Mars capture, or
It can carry more payload mass for the same refueling effort.
For our purposes, the key effect is:
Our ~80–90t lander+bulldozer+reactor stack is now even more comfortably inside what an expendable, fully refueled Starship can throw at Mars.
We don’t need to increase payload mass—we just gain margin.
2. Current best‑guess mass budget (expendable lander + reactor)
Let’s freeze a clean design point:Lander dry (expendable): ~40–45t
Structure, tanks, 3 Raptor‑vac‑class engines, legs, TPS, ramp, avionics
Lander propellant (EDL only): ~30–35t
No ascent/hop capability, just robust EDL + landing margin
Bulldozer: ~6t
Tele‑operated, battery‑electric, D2/D3‑class
Reactor system: ~3–4t
10–40kWe class, including shielding, radiators, structure
Misc. surface gear: ~2t
Comms mast, tools, spares, small pallets
That gives: ? total ≈ 81 – 92 t
Call it ~90t to Mars as a round design number.
For an expendable, fully refueled Starship, that’s very plausible with margin.
3. Architecture summary in this expendable world
Launch:Expendable cargo Starship (possibly stretched) launches with the 6m lander inside, mostly dry.
LEO refueling:
Tanker flights refuel Starship.
Lander is filled with ~30–35t methalox via internal plumbing.
TMI:
Expendable Starship spends whatever prop it needs to send ~90t to Mars.
At Mars:
Lander separates, performs EDL and landing.
Starship can:
Aerobrake and be abandoned in some orbit, or
Follow a disposal trajectory—either way, it’s not coming home.
Surface:
Lander is static infrastructure.
Ramp drops, bulldozer deploys.
Reactor is deployed/towed to a safe standoff distance and charges the dozer indefinitely.
Dozer builds and maintains Starship pads.
Seems that we have plenty of mass even when bumping the starship payload mass such that we could make this a reality.
the lander is expendable and solar could be swapped with kilowatt reactor to charge the bull dozer as required.
See my thinking
Good—making the lander expendable and giving the dozer a kilowatt‑class reactor instead of solar actually simplifies the architecture and tightens the role of each element.
Here’s how that changes the picture.
1. Expendable lander: what we can strip out
If the lander never has to move again after touchdown:No ascent/hop capability:
We only size propellant for EDL + landing, not for any Mars ascent.
No reuse margins:
Structural life can be single‑use with safety margin, not multi‑mission.
No need for precision refuel interfaces on Mars:
All refueling happens in Earth orbit; on Mars it’s a dead‑end asset.
That lets us:
Keep dry mass around 40–45t instead of creeping higher for reusability.
Keep propellant around 30–40t (robust EDL, no ascent).
Stay in the ~80–90t total band including the bulldozer and reactor.
2. Swapping solar for a kilowatt‑class reactor
Instead of a big solar farm:Reactor power level:
Think 10–40kWe continuous, not megawatts.
Enough to slow‑charge the bulldozer between work shifts and run comms, heaters, and local systems.
Mass:
A compact fission system in that range is plausibly 2–5t including radiator, shielding, structure.
Location:
Either:
Mounted on the lander deck with a deployable mast to move it away from the hull, or
Delivered as a separate pallet that the bulldozer drags to a standoff distance.
You’ve effectively turned the lander into:
A one‑time delivery bus for:
Bulldozer
Reactor
Maybe a small comms mast and local infrastructure
Once empty, the lander is just a tower and structural anchor.
3. Bulldozer + reactor operational concept
Day 0–1:Lander touches down.
Ramp drops, bulldozer drives out.
Reactor is deployed to a safe distance (towed or on its own mobility base).
Ongoing:
Bulldozer works in duty cycles:
Work for a few hours → return to charging point → repeat.
Reactor provides:
Charging power
Heat for local equipment
Stable power for comms and sensors
No dependence on dust‑sensitive solar, no need for huge arrays before Starship arrives.
4. Updated mass picture (first‑pass)
Rough design point with expendable lander + reactor:Lander dry: ~40–45t
Propellant (EDL only): ~30–35t
Bulldozer: ~6t
Reactor system: ~3–4t
Misc. surface gear: ~2t
Total to Mars: ≈ 81 – 92 t
Still inside a ~100t Starship‑to‑Mars envelope, with some margin.
ok so lets talk about how to get the ship to mars so that it can be used.
could this rocket be sent with a fully fueled starship from earth orbit
Short answer: yes, in principle—a Falcon‑9‑derived, 6m‑class Mars lander with a 5–8t bulldozer can be sent along with a fully fueled Starship from Earth orbit, as long as we keep the lander’s wet mass in the right ballpark.
1. What Starship can move from Earth orbit to Mars
Starship, when fully refueled in Earth orbit, is designed to send on the order of ~100t of payload to Mars in a fully reusable mode.So your constraint is roughly:
Mars‑transfer payload budget: ~100t (order of magnitude)
That 100t must include:
The lander dry mass
The lander propellant for Mars EDL + landing
The bulldozer and support gear
2. Plausible mass budget for your lander
For a 6m‑diameter, ~24m‑tall methalox lander with 3 Raptor‑vac–class engines:Dry structure + engines + legs + TPS: ~25–35t (reasonable estimate)
Mars EDL + landing propellant: ~20–30t
Bulldozer + tools: 5–8t
That puts the total injected mass in the range of 50–70t, comfortably under Starship’s ~100t Mars‑transfer capability.
So yes—one such lander plus bulldozer is well within what a fully fueled Starship can push from Earth orbit to Mars.
3. How it would actually fly with Starship
Conceptually:Launch & refuel:
Starship reaches LEO, is refueled by tanker flights.
Lander integration:
Your bulldozer lander is either:
Launched separately and docked in orbit, or
Pre‑integrated in Starship’s payload bay from the start.
Trans‑Mars injection:
Fully fueled Starship performs the burn, carrying the lander as payload.
At Mars:
Starship either:
Stays in orbit and deploys the lander, or
Enters a high‑elliptic capture and releases the lander for independent EDL.
As long as we keep the lander+bulldozer stack under ~70t, Starship has margin for trajectory shaping, comms gear, and maybe a second smaller payload.
If you’d like, next we can tighten that mass budget (assign specific numbers to tanks, engines, legs, TPS, bulldozer) and see exactly how much margin you’d have inside Starship’s ~100t Mars payload window.
lets see where we are with the mass budget
See my thinking
Great, let’s put numbers on this thing instead of vibes.High‑level target
We want a lander + bulldozer stack that:Stays comfortably under ~100t Starship‑to‑Mars payload (order‑of‑magnitude for cargo Starship).
Still has enough propellant to do full Mars EDL + powered landing.
Delivers a useful 5–8t bulldozer.
Let’s build a first‑pass mass budget for the 6m‑diameter, ~24m‑tall methalox lander with 3 Raptor‑vac–class engines.
Draft mass budget
Subsystem Mass estimate (t) Notes
Primary structure + tanks 15–20 6m dia, 24m tall, stainless or Al‑Li, domes, frames, decks
Engines (3× Raptor‑vac‑like) 6–9 2–3t per engine including gimbal, plumbing
Landing legs + mechanisms 4–6 4–6 legs, wide 9–10m footprint, actuators, crush cores
TPS + base heat shield 4–6 Tiles/ablator, base shield, ramp‑segment TPS
Avionics, power, GNC, comms 2–3 Computers, sensors, harness, antennas
Ramp/clamshell mechanisms 2–3 Hinges, actuators, latches, reinforcement
Margins & misc. 3–5 Piping, insulation, internal structure, contingencyDry mass subtotal: ≈ 36 – 52 t
Let’s pick a working dry‑mass design point: 45t.Propellant for Mars EDL + landing
We need enough methalox to:Deorbit (if needed)
Perform supersonic retropropulsion
Do a terminal landing burn with margin
For a Raptor‑class lander, a reasonable first‑cut:
Propellant mass: 25–35t
Let’s pick 30t as a design point.
Now we’re at: ? lander, wet = 45 t (dry) + 30 t (prop) = 75 t
Bulldozer + tools
From the earlier envelope:Tele‑operated electric dozer: 4–8t
Let’s pick 6t (D2/D3‑class electric, with batteries).
Tools, spares, support gear: 1–2t
Call it 8t total surface payload.
Now the full stack mass at Earth‑departure: ? total = 75 t (lander wet) + 8 t (payload) ≈ 83 t
Check against Starship’s Mars payload window
Cargo Starship is often framed around ~100t class payload to Mars when fully refueled in Earth orbit.Our current design point:
Total to Mars: ~83t
Margin vs 100t: ~17t
That margin can cover:
Analysis/engineering reality creep (dry mass drifting up)
Extra propellant for more aggressive entry profiles
Additional surface equipment (solar, comms mast, small rover, etc.)
So at this level of fidelity, the answer is:
The 6m stubby lander + 6t bulldozer closes comfortably inside a Starship‑to‑Mars payload budget.
Where you might want to tighten next
We can now:Push this into a more precise split (e.g., 6m vs 7m diameter, exact tank volumes, propellant mass from Δv).
Or lock the bulldozer: pick a 5–6t class machine and back‑solve the lander around it.
Or do a Δv‑based propellant sizing for a specific Mars entry profile and T/W.
Which knob do you want to turn first—lander geometry refinement, or a more exact Δv/propellant calculation?
Lets assume that the payload is refueled at the same time as the starship so that it can be launched from earth to orbit within a taller ship
See my thinking
Nice—this is a really powerful assumption, and it actually makes your architecture cleaner, not messier.You’re basically saying:
Launch the lander inside a (slightly taller) cargo Starship, mostly dry, then refuel both Starship and the lander in Earth orbit before the Mars transfer burn.
Let’s walk through what that buys you and what it changes.
1. Launch configuration: lander inside a taller Starship
Geometry assumption:Lander: ~24m tall, 6m diameter
Starship cargo bay (current): ~9m diameter, ~18m tall usable volume
So you’d need either:
A taller cargo Starship variant, or
A “double‑deck” internal arrangement where part of the lander extends into an upper volume.
Simplest mental model:
A “stretched cargo Starship” with ~25–30m of internal height.
Lander stands upright, hard‑mounted to a structural ring at the base.
Nosecone closes over it like a fairing.
On ascent:
Lander is mostly dry or partially fueled.
Starship carries it to LEO as pure payload.
2. Refueling both Starship and the lander in orbit
Once in LEO:Tanker flights arrive and refuel Starship’s main tanks.
A portion of that transferred propellant is routed to the lander’s methalox tanks:
Via docking interface between Starship and the lander
Or via a propellant transfer umbilical inside the cargo bay
Key point:
You’re no longer constrained by launch mass from Earth for the lander’s propellant—only by on‑orbit refueling capacity.So your earlier propellant budget (e.g., 30t) can be:
Kept as‑is for a pure descent lander, or
Increased (e.g., 40–50t) if you want:
More aggressive EDL profiles
Extra divert capability
Or even partial ascent capability for sample return or relocation
3. Impact on the mass budget
Previously we had a rough design point:Dry lander: ~45t
Propellant: ~30t
Bulldozer + gear: ~8t
Total to Mars: ~83t
With orbital refueling of the lander, you can choose between:
Option A — Keep it conservative
Keep 30t propellantYou just gain margin on Earth launch (lander can go up nearly dry).
Starship still sends ~83t to Mars.
Option B — Increase lander propellant
Bump lander propellant to 40–50t without worrying about launch mass.New stack (example with 45t dry, 45t prop, 8t payload): ? total ≈ 98 t
Still within a ~100t Starship‑to‑Mars window.Now you have:
Very robust EDL
Big divert margins
Potential for limited ascent or hop capability on Mars.
4. Operational sequence with this architecture
Launch:Stretched cargo Starship launches with lander inside, mostly dry.
Orbit & refuel:
Tanker Starships refuel the carrier Starship.
Lander is filled via internal plumbing/docking.
Trans‑Mars injection:
Fully fueled Starship + fully fueled lander depart LEO.
At Mars:
Starship performs capture or flyby.
Lander separates, performs its own EDL and landing.
Bulldozer deploys and starts pad prep.
Starship can then:
Stay in Mars orbit as a comms/relay node, or
Eventually attempt its own EDL (in later missions).
5. Why this is a strong architecture
Decouples Earth launch constraints from lander propellant needs.Lets you oversize the lander’s propellant for safety and flexibility.
Keeps the bulldozer lander as a self‑contained, reusable asset that can be:
Delivered early
Potentially reused for multiple pads or sites