Here's what they said:
So, what's the skinny on this? Are space elevators really as unfeasible as this guy says they are?I wrote:Someone else wrote:It's amazing that until now, voices of reason have been insulted, slammed, and silenced in the mainstream, and even in scientific publications.
Even more amazing is that voices of reason continue to be universally slammed on the topic of space elevators, an idea that's easily a million times more unfeasible than Mars One.
What's wrong with space elevators? True, we don't yet have a cable strong enough for them, but that kind of thing hardly out of the reach of potential advances in materials science.
I think that misapprehends what makes space elevators useful. It's not about heavy lifting per se - any fission-powered rocket will do that - but rather it's about efficiency. A fleet of rockets will consume fuel/propellant with every trip, whereas a space elevator only has to be built once and can then exchange energy between stuff going up and stuff going down with minimal losses.Someone else wrote: A society that is technologically advanced enough to build a space elevator doesn't need a space elevator. The problems that the elevator would alleviate, heavy-lifting, would have needed to be dealt with in order to build it.
It's like saying that railroads are useless because we have motor vehicles, when in fact both have their own sets of advantages and disadvantages making them useful in different situations. Heavy lift launch vehicles are good for when you need something quickly lifted into orbit, like transferring passengers from a spaceport on a planetary surface to a space station in orbit. Space elevators would be useful for providing a steady stream of materials to and from space in an efficient if not fast manner.
Someone else wrote:Strength isn't enough. Not only must the cable must be made of a material stronger than we've ever discovered, it must also be lighter than any material ever discovered (including gases), more rigid than any material ever discovered, and harder than any material than ever discovered. And even then, it has to break the previous record for these qualities by many orders of magnitude to even be considered suitable. And even then, there has to be a way to mass-produce this miracle fantasy material in a way that no material has ever been mass-produced before. And even then, there's no known way to actually get the elevator up there than to break it into millions of pieces and spend trillions of dollars and millions of tons of rocket fuel with thousands of missions into space to deliver the payload and weld each piece to the next one at a time. Wasn't the whole point of the space elevator to avoid wasting fuel on trips to space?
... if all those things were true, it would be such a world-changing miracle that the last thing on anyone's mind would be to build a rope to climb nowhere. It would literally make more sense to try to use the material to make a floating railway across the pacific ocean.
But your question really exemplifies what I'm saying. You've been reading articles that cast the idea in a non-skeptical light. This is what mainstream journalism does on topics it can't comprehend such as space travel.