Well yeah, it is a rocket. It's not like filling your car up. It's going to be more complex, but that is part of what's required to refuel it. Good insight on the process though,.
2nd replaced, and the 3rd out.
— The Ringwatchers (@Ringwatchers) November 17, 2023
📸 @NASASpaceflight / @SpaceX pic.twitter.com/MCGmP34B79
Malachi Constant said:
OFT-1 had the grid fins fixed.
Just drive down Hwy 4 anytime today. They will clear the beach and close the road at midnight tonight. there shouldn't be any reason they would close the road long term. They might be rolling some heavy equipment up Hwy 4 from the launch site back to the production site but this will be intermittent. Just be sure to yield to construction vehicles and security. Don't block driveways and in general stay on the opposite side of the road to the various sites if you are parking or on foot.Premium said:
Any tips on seeing the full stack up close today? Does it close down at any point today?
Full stacc welcome bacc
— Max Evans (@_mgde_) November 17, 2023
Ship 25 has just been lifted and placed atop Booster 9 for what may (hopefully) be the final time before liftoff.
📸 - @NASASpaceflight
đź“ş - https://t.co/9cg7QTG2Lj pic.twitter.com/0GbCUBLMG5
Thanks to you and another poster for the clarification. I (and I think others) know/knew they do not fold so when I read/heard they were "fixed" i thought they were 100% locked in place without actuators for that test flight.YellowPot_97 said:Malachi Constant said:
OFT-1 had the grid fins fixed.
They were fixed in the up position, not folded down, for the first test. They could still turn and control the booster on the return.
Kenneth_2003 said:Thanks to you and another poster for the clarification. I (and I think others) know/knew they do not fold so when I read/heard they were "fixed" i thought they were 100% locked in place without actuators for that test flight.YellowPot_97 said:Malachi Constant said:
OFT-1 had the grid fins fixed.
They were fixed in the up position, not folded down, for the first test. They could still turn and control the booster on the return.
I agree with the reasoning to not fold them. They do create excess drag, but as a percentage or as a lifting capacity penalty the extended fins are probably a much smaller percentage then they would be on the smaller Falcon 9. In fact the added structural and mechanical elements required make them foldable might outweigh the drag penalty. They might also not be strong enough then to be used to catch the booster on landing.
This actually begs the question... Could F9 ditch the landing legs and RTLS to a catch tower at the current landing pads? Would the weight savings from ditching the landing legs out-perform the drag penalty of the grid fins being permanently deployed?
ABATTBQ11 said:
Why truck it in instead building production onsite?
Premium said:
Premium said:
Starship stacked for flight. This is another chance to put Starship in a true flight environment, maximizing how much we learn.
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) November 16, 2023
Rapid iterative development is essential as we work to build a fully reusable launch system capable of carrying satellites, payloads, crew, and cargo… pic.twitter.com/Gkx7lKYVuz
Standing below Starship on the night before launch pic.twitter.com/X0as94JqAc
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 18, 2023
Standing under Starship’s 33 engines pic.twitter.com/Z3cGQ1hE5q
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 18, 2023
TriAg2010 said:
SpaceX was inquiring with vendors for an on-site air separation plant around 2021-2022. I know my firm bid on it. For the scale they wanted, it's roughly a $10-20 million capex investment. Agree with the comments above that until they've got a sufficient launch cadence you can just truck in a lot of LN2.
ABATTBQ11 said:
Need to get a picture of you laying down and it sticking up from your crotch
bmks270 said:TriAg2010 said:
SpaceX was inquiring with vendors for an on-site air separation plant around 2021-2022. I know my firm bid on it. For the scale they wanted, it's roughly a $10-20 million capex investment. Agree with the comments above that until they've got a sufficient launch cadence you can just truck in a lot of LN2.
I think it's for the oxygen, not nitrogen.