Kceovaisnt- said:
Not necessarily. The catch mechanism is what will also stack the stages. The load points on the the ship will be directly underneath the forward flaps. It looks as though the tower could still be tall enough to stack a larger starship.
That crane doesn't look tall enough.TexAgs91 said:Kceovaisnt- said:
Not necessarily. The catch mechanism is what will also stack the stages. The load points on the the ship will be directly underneath the forward flaps. It looks as though the tower could still be tall enough to stack a larger starship.
Yeah, and the forward flaps would be about 7M higher. Maybe the tower is tall enough already. If not, just need to plug in another section.
It's not. They'll need to extend itaTmAg said:That crane doesn't look tall enough.TexAgs91 said:Kceovaisnt- said:
Not necessarily. The catch mechanism is what will also stack the stages. The load points on the the ship will be directly underneath the forward flaps. It looks as though the tower could still be tall enough to stack a larger starship.
Yeah, and the forward flaps would be about 7M higher. Maybe the tower is tall enough already. If not, just need to plug in another section.
I'm not a craneologist.. is that easy to do?TexAgs91 said:It's not. They'll need to extend itaTmAg said:That crane doesn't look tall enough.TexAgs91 said:Kceovaisnt- said:
Not necessarily. The catch mechanism is what will also stack the stages. The load points on the the ship will be directly underneath the forward flaps. It looks as though the tower could still be tall enough to stack a larger starship.
Yeah, and the forward flaps would be about 7M higher. Maybe the tower is tall enough already. If not, just need to plug in another section.
Kceovaisnt- said:
I think that was originally a concept, but no longer. The only winching mechanism moves the catch arm carriage up and down the tower. With a great deal of speed as I understand. The design was simplified to combine the functionality of a crane and the catch system since the catch arms will need to lift and reorient the rockets with a great deal of precision to quickly place it back on the table for reuse. Why not just use the same system for integration of the second stage?
Me either, but I think their franken crane is modular and made to be customized. They've extended it in the past at Starbase.aTmAg said:I'm not a craneologist.. is that easy to do?TexAgs91 said:It's not. They'll need to extend itaTmAg said:That crane doesn't look tall enough.TexAgs91 said:Kceovaisnt- said:
Not necessarily. The catch mechanism is what will also stack the stages. The load points on the the ship will be directly underneath the forward flaps. It looks as though the tower could still be tall enough to stack a larger starship.
Yeah, and the forward flaps would be about 7M higher. Maybe the tower is tall enough already. If not, just need to plug in another section.
It was really just the upper stage Persei tug that didn't fire. The Angara might work to replace the Proton, but I am not sure it will be competitive anyway. I don't really keep up with them but I thought the real future as they see it was to be the Feniks though perhaps that is not the case, as in 2020 they did show a F9 copy (using methelox).Ag_of_08 said:
Didn't realize Angara had failed. Wonder if that's some of why the announcement about the Chinese parallel staged heavy launcher is being announced, Russia is throwing in with them by all appearances
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nortex97 said:
It's a hot topic.
Outstandingnortex97 said:
It's a hot topic.
Quote:
A meteor that caused a loud boom heard in western Pennsylvania on New Year's Day exploded in the atmosphere with a blast equivalent to 30 tons of TNT, NASA said on Monday.
What's an infrasound station? Do we have stations set up to just listen to the sky?munch96 said:
https://www.cnn.com/2022/01/04/americas/meteor-pennsylvania-pittsburgh-scn/index.htmlQuote:
A meteor that caused a loud boom heard in western Pennsylvania on New Year's Day exploded in the atmosphere with a blast equivalent to 30 tons of TNT, NASA said on Monday.