Nasa gets a lot of grief, some deservedly so, but this is what they do really well. They have this Mars rover system down cold.
5. Spirit, Opportunity, Phoenix, Curiosity and now Perseverancewill25u said:
US has landed 3 successful Mars missions since its last failure in 1999(Mars Polar Lander).
The odds makers/Elon have posited they have roughly a 60 percent shot at this one. Engine relights (fuel supply or something breaking in the plumbing/engine itself) have been the issues on both so far, but the vehicle/controls work pretty well other than those two itty bitty details (/sarcasm.)Decay said:Realistically, is there much chance for that? This model is still mostly parts built before SN8 right?PJYoung said:Unfortunately I think they're gonna stick this landing.double aught said:Good luck to them.PJYoung said:
Although, I do kind of enjoy watching them crash.
First time I saw actual video from Mars... awesome!will25u said:
I queued up the video to the landing videos. Pretty damn neat!
But apparently needed another engine swap out so another test fire after. No launch until Monday, if so.Quote:
That could mean that SpaceX quickly determined that Tuesday's static fire wasn't satisfactory, though it could just as easily be SpaceX hedging its bets in the event that it needs to redo SN10's static fire on Wednesday, February 24th. If Tuesday's test went well, SpaceX could turn SN10 around for a launch attempt as early as Thursday, moving to Friday if a hypothetical Wednesday static fire redux goes well. Stay tuned for updates (and hopefully confirmation from CEO Elon Musk).