
Originally Posted by
ugordan
I don't think you really understand what I mean by "more real now". Having a bunch of hardware sitting on the pad is irrelevant. Yes, I'm basing it on confidence levels of tested hardware, not the amount of built-and-unflown hardware sitting on the pad, which is a sound engineering approach. Even Musk will tell you he expects the chances of success are substantially lower than 100%. ULA on the other hand would be able to practically guarantee the inaugural Atlas Heavy to work, based on the loads of actual engineering data collected in flight.
One vehicle has 95% of the hardware built, already flown and verified. The other has 100% hardware, but none of it flown and verified. By my metrics that makes the confidence level at this moment that A-V H would successfully put a payload into orbit higher than what it is for F9.
Make no mistake, I'm not claiming F9 is a paper rocket, far from it, however the chances of it becoming operational soon are anybody's guess. What would you say if it blew up 5 seconds after liftoff next week? That it's still more real than an Atlas Heavy?