I'm wondering if they're concerned with landing and turbulence/reflection on the diverter
I will cherish all the wonderful memories of our life together but I will miss my husband terribly.
— Mary (@BocaChicaGal) January 20, 2023
I want to thank the @NASASpaceflight family and our neighbors at SpaceX for their love, support and kindness through this difficult time. ❤️
Kceovaisnt- said:
They will not likely excavate downward to build a flame trench but they may build the implement above grade. The OLM at Boca is about 60' high. So I would expect that they will construct a flame diverted/diffuser along with a deluge system below the OLM but above grade. It will likely be a solution that can roll out of from under the OLM when they need to raise the maintenance platform.
As I understand it, the launch pads at KSC are built up and the flame trench is not below grade either. Likely for the same water table concerns. This is why the crawlers have that last hill to climb before reaching the launch sites in FL.
I have been asked to evacuate ahead of today’s full WDR. Booster 7 and Starship 24 will be getting frosty. Road closure is from 8 am - 8 pm. 🤩🚀@NASASpaceflight pic.twitter.com/o0REQvP86h
— Mary (@BocaChicaGal) January 23, 2023
OKCAg2002 said:
That's a huge next step for Starship. We are so close to a liftoff.
Not a rocket scientist by any means.... I suppose the vertical test stands allowed testing the engine knowing that flow conditions would be identical to the flow conditions on the vertical rocket. I guess advancements in 3D fluid modeling and better understanding/computational ability of fluid dynamics allows them to build horizontal test stands?Ag_of_08 said:
Some are very tall, some of them are horizontal still if I remember right.
Horizontal test stands seem to be the current favored development stands, just for the relatively low building cost.
OKCAg2002 said:
I believe that a wet dress rehearsal is everything up to pushing the "button" for launch. They'll fill the entire vehicle with propellant and then empty it, roll it back to inspect, and evaluate. I assume the next step after this will be the full static fire.
Quote:
A wet dress rehearsal simulates every stage of a rocket launch without the rocket actually leaving the pad. A dry run, if you will. However, what makes the practice launch countdown a wet dress rehearsal is the act of filling the spacecraft's propellant tanks, resetting the countdown clock and draining the tanks.
One day this will be a normal site. Today it is incredible.https://t.co/6wkCBPDBXx pic.twitter.com/pgNitYbNkY
— Michael Baylor (@nextspaceflight) January 23, 2023
Give new meaning to a "tall cool one"will25u said:
That looks a little chilly.
Wow. Check out this before and after showing the significant compression of the booster while under full load of the Starship.
— Zack Golden (@CSI_Starbase) January 23, 2023
Edited by @DeffGeff
Credit🎥@Labpadre pic.twitter.com/cgVbBteEGC
Frost is coming down now. Detanking is confirmed to be underway! Looks like a great test.
— Michael Baylor (@nextspaceflight) January 23, 2023
Today’s test will help verify a full launch countdown sequence, as well as the performance of Starship and the orbital pad for flight-like operations
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) January 24, 2023
Kenneth_2003 said:Not a rocket scientist by any means.... I suppose the vertical test stands allowed testing the engine knowing that flow conditions would be identical to the flow conditions on the vertical rocket. I guess advancements in 3D fluid modeling and better understanding/computational ability of fluid dynamics allows them to build horizontal test stands?Ag_of_08 said:
Some are very tall, some of them are horizontal still if I remember right.
Horizontal test stands seem to be the current favored development stands, just for the relatively low building cost.
No doubt a horizontal test stand is much simpler to build.
It sounds a lot like @ArianeGroup CEO André-Hubert Roussel is pointing to ESA oversight as being the reason that Ariane 6 is delayed. pic.twitter.com/9AvfUVQUmE
— Andrew Parsonson (@AndrewParsonson) January 24, 2023
Ag_of_08 said:
Aren't SpaceX's certification test stands vertical though? The ones the actually test fire engines before putting them in service on.
bthotugigem05 said:
They have both vertical and horizontical test stands at McGregor.
After completing Starship’s first full flight-like wet dress rehearsal, Ship 24 will be destacked from Booster 7 in preparation for a static fire of the Booster’s 33 Raptor engines pic.twitter.com/YXSfyBufmX
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) January 24, 2023