I wonder if IFT-6 will put Ship in orbit. That would change their mission profile
Ad Lunam
Sea Speed said:
You realize it is a joke, right?
BuddysBud said:Sea Speed said:
You realize it is a joke, right?
Often it is difficult to know what is a joke nowadays
They had approval to do another IFT-4 style mission for flight 5, but they had a booster to catch. SpaceX isn't going to launch just to do the same thing again.normaleagle05 said:
I'd doubt they deviate from an already approved plan given what they had to do to get the approval. What does the flight plan say now?
Demanding excellence and amazing execution and you’re at reusable rockets after a decade.
— Lord Bebo (@MyLordBebo) October 14, 2024
WOW … unbelievable pic.twitter.com/ifi5irZ91k
Hope some of those engines get sent to McGregor. Flight-proven Raptors put through their paces on the test stand will be amazing data points for future reusability.
— Chris Bergin - NSF (@NASASpaceflight) October 14, 2024
The 1-million square foot Starfactory brings many parts of the manufacturing process under one roof for the first time, moving as much system integration work as possible earlier in the build process, with the goal of eventually producing 1,000 Ships a year pic.twitter.com/vz44XcTTN8
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) October 13, 2024
The spacecraft will help scientists determine if Europa’s salty ocean harbors the ingredients for life
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) October 13, 2024
will25u said:
One of the premier terrestrial space photographers.I don’t usually post photos of myself but @TechieTex got this photo of me after I witnessed the booster catch… and I thought it captured my emotions better than words ever could. How can we articulate the magnitude of what we just witnessed? pic.twitter.com/UUY1yuFXXl
— Andrew McCarthy (@AJamesMcCarthy) October 13, 2024
You could do a suborbital flight back to your point of origin, but I would have thought he'd want to get to orbit and/or do precision landings in the Gulf first.hph6203 said:
Musk said he wanted at least three accurately placed ship landings before they went to a recovery for ship. Seems the simplest path to achieving the next, and validating the heat shield/flap location success is to do another suborbital, then an orbital with no recovery and then recovery. Especially when IFT-5 was delayed by multiple months due to the change.
people are justly amazed at this but it’s important to remember SpaceX isn’t our only space company and by many metrics not even our most successful.
— blighter (@blightersort) October 13, 2024
Boeing, e.g., is light years ahead on both amount spent and workforce diversity, both of which are key drivers of success. https://t.co/vb1jgPh9eR
Every engineer in the world tonight pic.twitter.com/fVi2jKmApz
— #Marcher (@MarcherReborn) October 13, 2024
If I'm Biden, I encourage a landing in the gulf and I have navy ships help salvage the parts. Those rockets are ITAR protected. It should be in all of our best interests to keep that out of the hands of the Chinese.OnlyForNow said:
FAA doesn't control pollution control in the Indian Ocean.
I'd personally bet, that is a big reason.
Watch as our largest planetary spacecraft takes flight!@EuropaClipper is targeted to launch at 12:06pm ET (1606 UTC) on a Falcon Heavy rocket from @NASAKennedy, beginning its journey to Jupiter’s ocean moon, Europa. https://t.co/ajxnh7LMhQ
— NASA (@NASA) October 14, 2024
TexAgs91 said:They had approval to do another IFT-4 style mission for flight 5, but they had a booster to catch. SpaceX isn't going to launch just to do the same thing again.normaleagle05 said:
I'd doubt they deviate from an already approved plan given what they had to do to get the approval. What does the flight plan say now?
Congratulations to @SpaceX, what an incredible feat of engineering! Mars, here we come.
— Rocket Factory Augsburg (@rfa_space) October 14, 2024
At the same time, the coin has a second side: it shows and confirms that #Europe has completely lost touch. Can it still catch up? No chance. At least not the way things are going at the… pic.twitter.com/uW2lNbg6q9
aTmAg said:If I'm Biden, I encourage a landing in the gulf and I have navy ships help salvage the parts. Those rockets are ITAR protected. It should be in all of our best interests to keep that out of the hands of the Chinese.OnlyForNow said:
FAA doesn't control pollution control in the Indian Ocean.
I'd personally bet, that is a big reason.
I'm just going by what happened with IFT-4 and IFT-5. If IFT-4's booster didn't land where it was supposed to then they'd make some modifications to IFT-5 and IFT-5 would have flown IFT-4's mission again, and they would have used the same launch license from IFT-4. Since IFT-4 was a success, they didn't have to fly that same mission again and didn't use that launch license.normaleagle05 said:TexAgs91 said:They had approval to do another IFT-4 style mission for flight 5, but they had a booster to catch. SpaceX isn't going to launch just to do the same thing again.normaleagle05 said:
I'd doubt they deviate from an already approved plan given what they had to do to get the approval. What does the flight plan say now?
You're suggesting that they turned in a Flight 6 mission profile they had no intention of flying?
Yeah, Starship is well on its way to being 2 full generations ahead of the rest of the worldnortex97 said:Congratulations to @SpaceX, what an incredible feat of engineering! Mars, here we come.
— Rocket Factory Augsburg (@rfa_space) October 14, 2024
At the same time, the coin has a second side: it shows and confirms that #Europe has completely lost touch. Can it still catch up? No chance. At least not the way things are going at the… pic.twitter.com/uW2lNbg6q9
Tough statement really.
Recall on IFT3 they lost control of Starship during the suborbital coast. Because of its targeted landing point when it did start reentering without control it broke up and landed harmlessly across a pre-designated keep out zone in the remote and very deep Indian Ocean.aTmAg said:
Anybody know why they land starship in the Indian ocean? Seems like that runs the risk of China or Russia recovering parts (like the Raptor engines). Why not have it do a full orbit and then land in the gulf of Mexico?
OnlyForNow said:
It looked like there was a planned RUD of starship right as it touched down in the water (based on the bouy cam)
I can't remember if it was the SpaceX feed directly or Everyday Astronaut, but one of the two mentioned that Space X was going to try to recover some of Starship to analyze. If they can recover it, then I assume the Chinese or Russians could recover it in the same way.ABATTBQ11 said:aTmAg said:If I'm Biden, I encourage a landing in the gulf and I have navy ships help salvage the parts. Those rockets are ITAR protected. It should be in all of our best interests to keep that out of the hands of the Chinese.OnlyForNow said:
FAA doesn't control pollution control in the Indian Ocean.
I'd personally bet, that is a big reason.
Depending on where they land them, they're probably unrecoverable. Basins in the Indian Ocean can be 3-4 miles deep. Even if you know precisely where the rocket landed, there's no telling where it actually ends up due to drift on the way down, so you need to go look for it. Think looking for something 1/4 the size of the Titanic that exploded into a bunch of smaller pieces. Even if you find it, pulling up something that big from that deep is a huge challenge. There's also going to be a lot of damage from corrosion, so you may not be able to get any insight from precision parts or electronics.
aTmAg said:
Anybody know why they land starship in the Indian ocean? Seems like that runs the risk of China or Russia recovering parts (like the Raptor engines). Why not have it do a full orbit and then land in the gulf of Mexico?
The vehicle was likely still very hot when it hit the water. Hot metal carrying residual pressurized rocket propellant and quenching water don't mix well.OnlyForNow said:
It looked like there was a planned RUD of starship right as it touched down in the water (based on the bouy cam)
Quote:
The flawless launch of SpaceX's 5,000-ton Starship and its Super Heavy Booster, and the precision recovery of the booster on its launch pad, has opened the way to a manned mission to the moon next year and perhaps to Mars as soon as 2030. One giant leap for Elon Musk's company on Sunday was one more reminder that Europe's space programme is a colossal failure.
Europe is currently unable to launch even its own weather satellites, and India, which managed a soft landing on the Moon last year, now has a more credible space program. Twenty years ago, before SpaceX had launched a single rocket, Richard Bowles, a sales director of the European Arianespace launch consortium, said SpaceX's ambition to launch, recover and reuse rockets, cutting the price of launches in half, was a dream.
'SpaceX primarily seems to be selling a dream. Which is good, we should all dream,' he said. 'I think reusability is a dream… How am I going to respond to a dream?… First of all you don't wake people up. They have to wake up on their own… They're not supermen. Whatever they can do, we can do.'
Elon's Musk's dream has become Europe's nightmare. France's Arianespace has this year managed to launch just one of the new Ariane 6 rockets made by its ArianeGroup umbrella company. It came four years late and hundreds of millions of euros over budget. SpaceX has already completed 96 launches this year, recovered and reused almost all of them, and expects to reach 148 launches by the end of December. Even if Arianespace can get the new rocket to work properly, it has planned to launch no more than nine missions a year, of which four will be institutional missions, such as reconnaissance satellites, and only five commercial missions.
European failure to embrace reusable rockets has made it completely uncompetitive. The estimated cost of a launch using the already obsolete Ariane 6, when it becomes operational, perhaps next year, is more than 83 million.
. . .
Access to space is the sine qua non of a credible space program. Without it, the scientific and commercial applications of space technology are impossible.
The Galileo global satellite system created by the European Union through the European Space Agency to compete with the Americans has so far launched 32 satellites and has failed to deliver a robust system.
. . .
OneWeb, the private European communications satellite project designed to compete with SpaceX's Starlink, has launched its own limited constellation using SpaceX and Indian rockets. Even the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT) is now buying launches from SpaceX.
'This decision was driven by exceptional circumstances' said EUMETSAT's Director General Phil Evans. The exceptional circumstance being that Arianespace had no capability. SpaceX has meanwhile launched 7,000 Starlink communications satellites offering high-speed internet access and text messaging to mobile phones.
Europe's space agency (the UK remains a member) is an example of European hubris at its absolute worst, its failures a masterclass in how not to be globally competitive, while spending billions on institutional grandiosity. The European Space Agency, which presides over Europe's failed efforts, has a budget of 7.8 billion and a staff of around 2,500. ArianeGroup, which is subsidised by ESA, employs 8,300 people.
. . .
It's been a while since I was at the European launch base in Kourou, French Guiana, but I'm not missing much because nothing is happening there. The last launch of the small European Vega rocket was last month. Perhaps four launches of the new Vega C rocket might be attempted next year. Fewer missions in a year than SpaceX completes in a fortnight. Europe's space programme is all show and no-go.
aTmAg said:I can't remember if it was the SpaceX feed directly or Everyday Astronaut, but one of the two mentioned that Space X was going to try to recover some of Starship to analyze. If they can recover it, then I assume the Chinese or Russians could recover it in the same way.ABATTBQ11 said:aTmAg said:If I'm Biden, I encourage a landing in the gulf and I have navy ships help salvage the parts. Those rockets are ITAR protected. It should be in all of our best interests to keep that out of the hands of the Chinese.OnlyForNow said:
FAA doesn't control pollution control in the Indian Ocean.
I'd personally bet, that is a big reason.
Depending on where they land them, they're probably unrecoverable. Basins in the Indian Ocean can be 3-4 miles deep. Even if you know precisely where the rocket landed, there's no telling where it actually ends up due to drift on the way down, so you need to go look for it. Think looking for something 1/4 the size of the Titanic that exploded into a bunch of smaller pieces. Even if you find it, pulling up something that big from that deep is a huge challenge. There's also going to be a lot of damage from corrosion, so you may not be able to get any insight from precision parts or electronics.