Speaking of rediscovering old engineering ideas...
I frequently hear (read) the question, usually from HBs, that if we had the technology to go to the moon 43 years ago, why don't we have it now? How can the technology have been lost, considering the tech advances we've made since then?
I've been pondering this question and it seems to me that it's not so much the technology that we don't have as the ability to (re-)construct the hardware that was used. We're all aware that the reason that the hardware didn't continue to be built and refined is simple - money. Once the "national goal" was accomplished, public support and therefore budget allotments dropped off quickly and that was the end of the Apollo Program. If there had been commercial profits to be had from lunar missions it would have been a different story, of course, but sadly that wasn't the case.
I guess my point is that, as a non-engineer on the outside looking in, it seems to me that the current "technology", in terms of knowledge, is not the bottleneck to future manned lunar missions so much as - once again - money. We've gained a tremendous amount of experience in spaceflight since 1969. In other words, if Congress would open up the expletive deleted pocketbook, we could get off the ground in relatively short order.
So my question is directed at those of you in the industry, who actually know what out current tech level is. If the practically unlimited budget of the 60s were available, are there many new things we need to learn, questions we need the answers to, as it was during Gemini-Apollo when almost everything was an unknown? Or would it be pretty much a matter of putting what we already know to work. Obviously there's an HLV to build, whether the Space Launch System or something else, but how difficult would that be if the cash river was flowing?
Stupid questions, maybe, or at least naive, but some of us laymen can't help wondering.