will25u said:Team at Starbase completed a single Raptor engine static fire test of Super Heavy Booster 7 on the orbital launch pad pic.twitter.com/16R7eE985V
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) August 9, 2022
will25u said:Team at Starbase completed a single Raptor engine static fire test of Super Heavy Booster 7 on the orbital launch pad pic.twitter.com/16R7eE985V
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) August 9, 2022
They'll launch the full stack I think. Haven't seen any sort of mass simulator mount on any of the boosters to date.YellowPot_97 said:
Will there be a super heavy booster test launch without a starship stacked on? Or will they go for a full stack on the first attempt?
No. The static fire of S24 (second stage) was on the sub-orbital launch mount. The most they can fire there is six. This one was three. This launch mount puts the ship about 28-30 feet off the ground and it uses a deluge.bmks270 said:
It looks just a little too close to other ground infrastructure and it started a brush fire. And they are going to fire 30 of these? It will be an impressive sight.
I would assume they stick with the plan - first stacked flight would have Ship go to Hawaii and the Booster soft-land in the Gulf. There's no reason to change that.nortex97 said:
Correct. On the booster I read that they didn't mount the inner engines again yet (those are the ones that pivot). They're just firing up some of the outer ring of engines right now. I'm guessing they are keeping it simpler than they had initially planned as far as test firings.
Also, switching to electrical gimballing might mean there's some work/changes they need to do with the thrust puck or whatever it is. I really doubt they try to catch this first booster.
Very interesting...PJYoung said:
You're both probably right but that's not what they have said.
https://www.teslarati.com/spacex-starship-booster-catch-plans-2022/
Quote:
"will separate[,] perform a partial return[,] and land in the Gulf of Mexico or return to Starbase and be caught by the launch tower."
I disagree with a 80% fatality-per-launch rate. It probably was more like 5% rather than 2% like the shuttle. Which are both incredibly high and intolerable in normal circumstances.nortex97 said:
Yes, and spending an absolute fortune in the process, with various contractors bits bolted together in one stack.
I love that it worked, but the Apollo program also, if re-run 50 times in parallel universes, probably gets people killed in at least 40 of those. Luck/divine intervention played a role, imho.
Starship, despite it's incredible power, is fundamentally a simple rocket by comparison (Raptor complexity to the side), with vastly less pneumatics/superior electronics/telemetry abilities, and of course only two stages (the 1st stage doesn't even go as far up/across earth as the F9 1st stage does).
Testing/firing the 2nd stage separately makes a lot of sense, as we still have rocket programs today that are serially delayed due to stage separation issues (and this almost killed the falcon program/SpaceX years back, in it's infancy launching out there in the pacific).
It's amazing they did one manned LEO flight with Apollo 7, and the very next flight they go around the moon.Ag_of_08 said:
Apollo 8 was probably the most dangerous of the Saturn V launches truth be told.... the dependability was not there, and the rocket was only border line rated at that point. The real saving grace was that it had so much excess dV it could limp to orbit pretty easily.
This seems pretty crazy …. Definitely will want to watchDecay said:Very interesting...PJYoung said:
You're both probably right but that's not what they have said.
https://www.teslarati.com/spacex-starship-booster-catch-plans-2022/Quote:
"will separate[,] perform a partial return[,] and land in the Gulf of Mexico or return to Starbase and be caught by the launch tower."
Agreed though. Seems a crazy risk to take... aiming the largest fuel-air-explosive ever made at your launch site
TexAgs91 said:It's amazing they did one manned LEO flight with Apollo 7, and the very next flight they go around the moon.Ag_of_08 said:
Apollo 8 was probably the most dangerous of the Saturn V launches truth be told.... the dependability was not there, and the rocket was only border line rated at that point. The real saving grace was that it had so much excess dV it could limp to orbit pretty easily.
Quote:
"We must put scarce universal service dollars to their best possible use as we move into a digital future that demands ever more powerful and faster networks," FCC chair Jessica Rosenworcel said in a statement.
"We cannot afford to subsidize ventures that are not delivering the promised speeds or are not likely to meet program requirements."
There's a siren... 10 minute warningTexAgs91 said:
The launch mount is venting. Could be another engine test coming soon?
TexAgs91 said:
21 second burn
About to attempt long duration engine firing to test autogenous pressurization
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 11, 2022