Daily unmanned cargo runs from Earth to the lunar surface.
Boring Company tunnel → electromagnetic rail launch → Space Tug → Blue Moon Mk2 → Lunar base.
The pods land. The pods stay. The pods become the walls.
Apollo was a mission. The colony is a civilization. A civilization needs daily deliveries — food, water, medicine, equipment, radiation shielding, fuel. No rocket-per-delivery model can sustain a permanent lunar presence. What's needed is a pipeline.
Five stages. Four partners. One cargo pod launched per day minimum, scaling to 10–20/day at operational volume. Each stage hands off to the next. Nothing returns to Earth except the Space Tug for refueling. Target orbit: NRHO (Near-Rectilinear Halo Orbit) — the Artemis Gateway station orbit, 9:2 lunar resonance, ~1,263 km periapsis / ~68,263 km apoapsis, only ~10 m/s/year station-keeping.
EARTH SURFACE MOON
│ │
│ ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │
│ │ BORING CO. TUNNEL · 12 km · Underground · Sealed │ │
│ │ ████████████████████████████████████████████████████ │ │
│ │ ████ NbTi MAGLEV COILS · 20g · UNMANNED POD ██████ │ │
│ │ ████████████████████████████████████████████████████ │ │
│ └──────────────────────────────────┬──────────────────────┘ │
│ │ Exit: Mach 5+ │
│ ┌──────┘ │
│ ● ▼ ←── VacuumGate LH₂ seal │
│ Pod enters atmosphere (patent IP) │
│ Onboard rockets ignite at exit │
│ Aerodynamic ascent → LEO │
│ │ │
│ ▼ │
│ ┌──────────────────┐ │
│ │ SPACE TUG (LEO) │ │
│ │ 400 km orbit │ │
│ │ Delivery-van │ │
│ │ Permanent orbit │ │
│ │ Collects pods │ │
│ │ Assembles stack │ │
│ └────────┬─────────┘ │
│ │ TLI burn: 3,082 m/s │
│ │ Transit: 4.98 days │
│ │ │
│ └─────────────────────────────────▶│
│ Hohmann Transfer │
│ ┌──────┤
│ │ BLUE │
│ │ MOON │
│ │ Mk2 │
│ │ │
│ │ Crane│
│ │ ↓ │
│ └──────┤
│ │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
████ LUNAR SURFACE ████
Pods stack as shielding
Daily deliveries build base
The BGKPJR maglev track doesn't sit on the surface — it lives underground. Elon Musk's Boring Company pioneered fast, low-cost tunnel boring machines (TBMs) designed to dramatically cut tunnel construction time and cost. For a 12 km unmanned cargo track, a single Boring Company TBM can complete excavation in 12–18 months. The underground environment solves multiple engineering problems at once: weather-proof operations, no FAA airspace restrictions, natural thermal stability for superconducting magnets, and no surface footprint. The track is invisible until launch.
The tunnel is bored at a 15–25° incline, pointing toward an open exit at the top of a ridgeline or coastal cliff where the pod's trajectory clears the horizon. Boring Company's actual Vegas Loop cost ran ~$30.9M/mile — at 12 km (7.5 miles), that's a ~$232M tunnel cost at current rates before track and magnet installation. Their long-term target is under $10M/mile as scale increases; with manufacturing improvements, $75–100M is achievable for a dedicated 12 km bore. Note: current Prufrock TBMs bore a 3.66m inner diameter — BGKPJR requires a custom large-bore design (~10m) for pod clearance. Next-gen TBMs are already in development.
No crew. No crew rating. No life support. No acceleration limit of 4g. With an unmanned cargo pod, the BGKPJR system can sustain 20g acceleration — five times the human limit. This single change collapses the required track length from 28.7 km to roughly 12 km, cuts construction cost by more than half, and allows the entire system to fit inside a Boring Company tunnel with room to spare.
The pod exits the tunnel at Mach 5+ through the patent-filed VacuumGate LH₂ membrane (see Section 09), transitions to atmosphere, and ignites onboard solid or hybrid rocket motors to complete the delta-v to LEO (~8,200 m/s remaining after maglev contribution of ~1,200 m/s). No pilot. No abort system. Simple, repeatable, daily.
The Space Tug is a delivery-van-sized orbital transfer vehicle that never comes home. It parks in a stable LEO orbit (~400 km), collects incoming cargo pods as they arrive from the rail system, assembles them into a transfer stack, performs the Trans-Lunar Injection (TLI) burn of exactly 3,082 m/s, and coasts 4.98 days on the Hohmann ellipse to lunar orbit. It then returns to LEO on a low-energy trajectory, waiting for the next delivery.
The critical insight: a pod launched ballistically from the surface peaks at 400km apogee with 7,551 m/s tangential velocity — only 117.5 m/s short of the tug's 7,669 m/s circular orbit. The maglev does the hard work. The Tug fires one tiny circularization burn to catch the pod. That's it.
The Tug's constraint is propellant. It needs resupply — either from an orbital depot fed by the same rail system, or from periodic propellant deliveries via Starship or similar. The Tug itself is fuel-limited, not mass-limited: once the propellant budget is spent, it waits. The key advantage: the Tug is reusable over hundreds of missions. Its dry mass (~2,500 kg) is amortized across every kg it ever delivers to the Moon.
Blue Origin's Blue Moon Mark 2 lander receives the cargo pods in lunar orbit and executes powered descent to the lunar surface. The lander includes a crane system to off-load pods to precise locations — not just dumped at an LZ, but placed where they're needed. Blue Moon Mk2 is already contracted for NASA's Artemis program. BGKPJR cargo pods are designed to match Blue Moon's cargo envelope for direct compatibility.
Every cargo pod that lands on the Moon stays on the Moon. The structural containers stack and interlock as radiation shielding for habitat modules. Lunar surface radiation is the single largest health threat for colonists — approximately 200 millisieverts per year vs. Earth's 3 mSv. Heavy aluminum/steel pod walls, filled with regolith between launches, become the colony walls.
Over 365 daily supply runs: 365 pods on the surface. That's the frame of a base. Each pod ~2m × 2m × 5m is a building block. The supply chain doesn't just keep people alive — it builds the infrastructure that lets them stay permanently.
Every number is derived from first principles. Full derivations in /math. Unmanned specs replace crewed specs throughout.
No single entity builds this alone. BGKPJR is the rail launch and VacuumGate IP. Three industry leaders supply the rest. All four already exist. All four are already pointed at the Moon.
The Artemis engineer's estimate: 5–7 years from full commitment to operational supply pipeline. Phase 0 starts now.
The hardest physics problem in the architecture: a cargo pod moving at Mach 5 transitions from near-vacuum to full atmospheric pressure in milliseconds. This is BGKPJR's patented solution.
| Track Length | ~12 km (unmanned 20g) |
| vs. Crewed Design | 28.7 km (4g limit) |
| Inclination | 15°–25° (underground) |
| Exit Velocity | Mach 5+ (~1,700 m/s) |
| Tube Pressure | 10⁻³ atm partial vacuum |
| G-Load (unmanned) | 20g sustained (50g peak capable) |
| Magnet Type | Superconducting NbTi |
| Operating Temp | 4.2 K |
| Field Strength | 8 Tesla |
| Power Demand | 50–150 MW continuous |
| Configuration | Cylindrical aero shell |
| Mass (total) | ~6,000 kg (pod + cargo) |
| Cargo Capacity | 2,000–5,000 kg |
| No crew rating | 20g–50g capable |
| No life support | ~40% mass savings vs crewed |
| Propulsion | Solid/hybrid rockets at exit |
| Pod dimensions | ~2m × 2m × 5m (stackable) |
| Surface use | Radiation shielding walls |
| Disposal | Stays on Moon permanently |
| Configuration | Delivery-van sized OTV |
| Dry mass | ~2,500 kg |
| Propellant load | ~3,700 kg per TLI cycle |
| Propulsion | LH₂/LOX bipropellant |
| Isp | ~450 s |
| TLI ΔV | 3,082 m/s (from 400 km LEO) |
| LOI ΔV | 821 m/s (100 km lunar orbit) |
| Rendezvous ΔV | 117.5 m/s (pod catch at apogee) |
| Transit time | 4.98 days (Hohmann minimum energy) |
| Parking orbit | 400 km LEO (permanent) |
| Return to Earth | Never |
| Length | 12 km |
| Bore diameter | ~10 m |
| Inclination | 15°–25° |
| Construction time | 12–18 months |
| Cost estimate | ~$75M tunnel only |
| TBM type | Boring Co. Prufrock-class |
| Surface access | None required above ground |
| Thermal stability | Natural (underground) |
Full engineering transparency. Unmanned architecture removes several hard barriers from the crewed design — but does not eliminate all of them. Here is the honest assessment.
Before seeking real-world expert feedback, Shane Brazelton pressure-tested the architecture through a sequential chain of AI agents, each trained on a real expert's published body of work.
[BGKPJR Case File + Feasibility Report]
↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ AGENT 1 · McNab (EM Propulsion) │
│ Trained on: 200+ publications, 15 patents │
│ Finding: Railgun → Coilgun (LSM) required │
│ Correction: $44B → $34.6B cost revision │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────┘
↓ (original + McNab analysis)
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ AGENT 2 · Boyd (Hypersonic Aerodynamics) │
│ Trained on: 300+ CFD publications, NASA │
│ Finding: Thermal load 3× underestimated │
│ Correction: 15 MW/m² → 42 MW/m², nose redo│
└─────────────────────────────────────────────┘
↓ (original + McNab + Boyd analysis)
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ AGENT 3 · Shotwell (Systems Integration) │
│ Trained on: Falcon 9, Dragon, Starship dev │
│ Finding: Waterfall approach will fail │
│ Output: Phase 0→3 roadmap, $50M subscale │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────┘
↓
[Architecture updated. Real experts contacted.
Artemis engineer validation received April 2026.]
BGKPJR operates in three distinct flight regimes — each requiring a distinct control architecture.
Full implementations in /control_systems.