When you need to light 33 up, a lot has to go right.
Bregxit said:nortex97 said:
With that many shutting down 'essentially' immediately I just assume there was an issue with a fuel/oxidizer feed. Probably not as dramatic an 'omen' as maybe some broadcasters might favor for viewership. A pump/contaminant/single point of failure would be much easier to 'solve' than a complex issue involving a bunch of engines that have been tested pretty thoroughly previously, or the new deluge system etc.
I'm just saying between the test launch and this static fire it needs to get figured out.
Still rearranging some items near the pad I see. Probably going to be more concrete poured in the coming months. Those fence panels didn't stand much of a chance!flakrat said:
Replay of the static test with multiple angles
NEWS 🚨: NASA's James Webb telescope has spotted a giant 'question mark' object in deep space pic.twitter.com/fU5K5nKeil
— Latest in space (@latestinspace) August 7, 2023
Quote:
Amazon originally intended to use its nine Atlas V missions to deploy operational Kuiper satellites, with several dozen flying on each rocket. Now Amazon will use one of those Atlas Vs to launch just the first two Kuiper test platforms. All of ULA's remaining Atlas V rockets are already sold to customers, so there's no opportunity to build more.
The first two Kuiper test satellites were originally contracted to fly on a new rocket from the startup launch company ABL Space Systems. Last year, Amazon moved the satellites off of ABL's rocket and onto the first Vulcan launch with ULA.
Amazon has not revealed much about the design of its Kuiper satellites other than that they are three-dimensional in shape, not flat-packed for launch like SpaceX's Starlink broadband satellites. Each Kuiper spacecraft likely weighs a few hundred kilograms at launch, so a dedicated Atlas V launch into low-Earth orbit for just two of Amazon's satellites is a bit of overkill.
Whoah. Buying a whole Atlas V rocket to launch two fairly small satellites.https://t.co/TzjVyOIYZ2
— Eric Berger (@SciGuySpace) August 7, 2023
Quote:
But Amazon apparently thought it was worth expending one of the Atlas V rockets it has under contract, allowing the company to get its satellites into orbit sooner to verify their performance before proceeding into full-scale production of Kuiper spacecraft. Amazon needs to deploy half of its 3,236 satellites by July 2026, a deadline to maintain network authorization from the FCC. That would require at least two launches per month beginning next yearand perhaps morefrom Amazon's stable of launch service providers.
Looks like that's where humanity need to go to start it's first interstellar quest.lb3 said:NEWS 🚨: NASA's James Webb telescope has spotted a giant 'question mark' object in deep space pic.twitter.com/fU5K5nKeil
— Latest in space (@latestinspace) August 7, 2023
TexAgs91 said:
Looks like the "Booster Bidet" name is sticking
I love all the terms associated with Starship:
Chopsticks
Mechazilla
Teapot
Dog house
Rock tornado
BFR
Recent views from NASA's Mars helicopter 🚁 pic.twitter.com/3E3tVtlF6N
— Latest in space (@latestinspace) August 8, 2023
https://arstechnica.com/space/2023/08/starliner-undergoing-three-independent-investigations-as-flight-slips-to-2024/Quote:
The manager for the company's Commercial Crew Program, Mark Nappi, said the spacecraft should be ready for flight by early March, or seven months from now. However, Nappi said that date is conditional on availability of an Atlas V rocket, provided by United Launch Alliance, and an opening in NASA's visiting vehicles schedule.
...
Perhaps the more significant issue, from a schedule standpoint, are changes to Starliner's parachutes. At issue were "soft link" joints in the canopy of the parachutes that were found to not have a high enough safety factor. Nappi said the parachute's manufacturer, Airborne, is fabricating a new version of the parachute joints using a stronger Kevlar material. Boeing plans to conduct a drop test of this new parachute in mid- to late-November, which would leave time for analysis ahead of a launch next spring.
...
In addition to the hardware work, Boeing must also comply with three separate investigations. According to Stich, there is an "independent team" at Boeing reviewing the company's actions. In addition, NASA's chief engineer, Joseph Pellicciotti, has interviewed every one of Starliner's subsystem managers to ensure there are no other potential surprises looming. Finally, Pellicciotti, his deputy, and the NASA Engineering & Safety Center have been conducting their own independent review of Starliner's soundness.
if the sky could dream
— Oukham (@OPhommachanh) August 8, 2023
it would dream of falconspic.twitter.com/SJvQFzZSWk
I would say there is a very good chance of that happening. SpaceX as well perhaps.nortex97 said:
Nasa and Boeing should, in a sane world, figure out a way to just give up on that debacle and write off future payments/launches/investigations.