They will spend 4 days getting to the moon and back, and the rest of their lives fending off claims that they didn't go.
Anyone else think 'late next year' is a bit of a tight schedule? I know SpaceX have done the hard bit already and the rest is just point it in the right direction, but even so...
SpaceX never met a deadline it didn't miss. They deliver on their promises
eventually, but at this point I don't even pay attention to announced dates. They fly when they fly and yay when they do, but they routinely overpromise on dates. Crew Dragon was
supposed to be delivered this year but got pushed back (same with Boeing's CST-100). FH was supposed to fly
years ago, it may actually fly late this year.
Granted, the main reason for those delays was the non-stop tweaking of the F9 platform - it made sense to hold off on FH until the F9 platform had stabilized a bit. Crew Dragon slipped because Space Is Hard, Manned Space Flight Is Stupid Hard
TM. This is going to be a major test of power, guidance, comms, life support, and a hot return, with the very real risk of death to liven things up. SpaceX is willing to take risks, but up until now they haven't knowingly taken any
stupid risks (AMOS-6 was a Rumsfeldian "unknown unknown" biting them in the ass).
So, I fully expect to private citizens to fly around the moon in a Crew Dragon; I don't expect it will happen next year. 2019, maybe. 2020, definitely.
And yeah, it's a free-return trajectory, so they won't be in any kind of position to image any Apollo landing sites, which is a shame. But they should still be able to get some awesome images of the lunar surface, and maybe even the far side if it's in daylight when they make the trip. Wonder how much volume and mass an IMAX camera would cost them?