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Blue Origin Thread (merged)


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36 minutes ago, Scotius said:

1st stage is down, the bird is up. 10\10 mission :D Congrats SpaceX!

Forget 'nominal' - everything is BIOBOB!

Bird In Orbit - Booster On Boat.

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My typical rundown of the mission:

The Falcon 9 soared upwards from a seemingly smooth countdown, with the usual issue of upper levels winds. This turned out to be no big deal. at T+2:28(Wizard engineer dude called it), the first stage separated and began it's voyage to OCISLY. The crowd cheered through the entry burn, per usual.

At T+8:00, we got some sweet drone ship footage. There was a bright light which made all of us watching kind of spooked. The screen whited out. The crowd was dead silent. After not even a second of white screen, we suddenly see a freshly landed Falcon in all of it's glory. There were supposedly reports of a little residual flame, but I was too busy jumping and yelling. The second stage entered it's coast and the stream was reduced to some music and a trajectory view. The hosts came back for the second burn. The 2nd stage cameras now got shown on the webcast as the vehicle passed into the light side of the Earth. The spacecraft separated on it's journey to apogee. Another perfect launch by SpaceX.

Track Record for Falcon 9 1.1 FT:

Orbcomm 2: Total mission success: RTLS successful.
SES-9: Mission success, barge landing failure. Landing footage was "to bad to release"
CRS-8: Total mission success: Barge landing success
JCSAT-14: Total mission success: Barge landing success

"We don't expect this one to succeed."
Lands directly in the center of the barge. 

Edited by Hysterrics
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WOOOOOOHOOOOO Now that's a great thing to wake up to! Hey look, they have nav blinkers on the legs!

4 hours ago, CptRichardson said:

From Musk:

 

"We may need a bigger rocket park."

They'll just have to start getting those birds back in the air!

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4 minutes ago, Spaceception said:

I MISSED IT!? ;.; I WAS ASLEEP!

 

Oh well, there's always next launch.

Congrats SpaceX on your landing!

For those who missed it:

Landing starts around 38:00 in the vid.

Edited by Ignath
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I don't care what anybody says, I like the hosted webcast. Much more dramatic.

I don't think this will ever get boring. Routine maybe...hopefully, but not boring. I could sit at the airport and watch airplanes taking off and landing all day. 

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1 minute ago, Lukaszenko said:

I don't care what anybody says, I like the hosted webcast. Much more dramatic.

I don't think this will ever get boring. Routine maybe...hopefully, but not boring. I could sit at the airport and watch airplanes taking off and landing all day. 

Same. Cheering with the crowd was much more fun for me.

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Did anyone notice that there was no call out for Max-Q and this rocket barreled into Mach speed alot faster than CRS-8, and turned faster also.?

Yep, they hit max v1250 5 seconds earlier and 1700 meters lower than CRS-8. Either this craft is alot lighter or they increased the output of their engines again.

Edited by PB666
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well I could not see it for the hour, but OMG, we can see how spacex are perfected themselves in matter of weeks...
How much we need to wait to see the same thing in other companies? 
I guess track the progress of spacex never will become boring, their are always pushing their limits and tech all the time.

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Just now, sevenperforce said:

Can't wait to see the full video from OCISLY once they pull it from the cams.

Probably not much to see in the dark, and then the glare from the rocket engine. 

Which begs the question, if it's a GTO flight, then why did they need to launch in the middle of the night?

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1 hour ago, PB666 said:

Did anyone notice that there was no call out for Max-Q and this rocket barreled into Mach speed alot faster than CRS-8, and turned faster also.?

Yep, they hit max v1250 5 seconds earlier and 1700 meters lower than CRS-8. Either this craft is alot lighter or they increased the output of their engines again.

Appearantly the payload was heavier this time: JCSAT with 4696kg, CRS8 with 3136kg. 

https://www.reddit.com/r/spacex/comments/4hvn24/estimation_of_jcsat14_mass_via_linear_regression/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpaceX_CRS-8

Edit: I guess, for CRS8 we would have to add the weight of the capsule. Then it might be heavier than JCSAT...

Edited by rudi1291
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22 minutes ago, StrandedonEarth said:

Probably not much to see in the dark, and then the glare from the rocket engine. 

Which begs the question, if it's a GTO flight, then why did they need to launch in the middle of the night?

Well if it's part of a constellation, then launch windows would still matter.

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58 minutes ago, PB666 said:

Did anyone notice that there was no call out for Max-Q and this rocket barreled into Mach speed alot faster than CRS-8, and turned faster also.?

Yep, they hit max v1250 5 seconds earlier and 1700 meters lower than CRS-8. Either this craft is alot lighter or they increased the output of their engines again.

 

Lighter payload, I believe. Plus less going easy on the rocket and punching the throttle through to 'Plaid' on the dial.

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13 minutes ago, CptRichardson said:

 

Lighter payload, I believe. Plus less going easy on the rocket and punching the throttle through to 'Plaid' on the dial.

Agreed- After they recovered 2 boosters, they decided they could push the engines a bit harder with no modifications, were able to push harder, and thus reserve more fuel for the expirimental landing attempt.

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2 hours ago, Lukaszenko said:

I don't care what anybody says, I like the hosted webcast. Much more dramatic.

The host commentary seemed that bit more technical this time. They were discussing the need for ullage thrusters on the first stage for example, although not in so many words. I like it too. The telemetry feed in the top right corner is still the best part though - the pure numbers involved in getting something to orbit just hit me every time.

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JCSAT-14 MECO ~2.3km/s (from eyeballing 8348km/h on the screen when MECO was called)

EntryburnCO ~2.0km/s from spacex announcers explaining why this was expected to crash.

Unless spacex has significantly changed the upper booster for the Falcon Heavy (and that doesn't appear possible.  They are pretty much stuck with the Falcon 9 upper stage plus possible reinforcement for a 25 ton greater load), this is nothing compared to what the center booster of a Falcon Heavy has to deal with.  From previous data from expendable loads, we can assume that the Falcon 9 with max (expendable) load of 22.8 tons will be going ~4km/s at 1st stage MECO.  Since they have [nearly] the same upper stages, the Falcon Heavy will have to provide exactly  that.  Of course, JCSAT-14 just proved that it is possible to land after burning "only" 2km/s of delta-v afterwards instead of 3km/s, so presumably Falcon Heavy

will need only twice the reserves of Falcon 9.  Getting to 30-40 tons make me expect they will lose the center booster.

At this point the economics get interesting.  With 30% of the [recoverable price of] $62M we might guess that the center booster costs $18M (or more accurately, not recovering adds to the cost).  A lot depends on how much leaving the landing reserve of the side tanks matters.  Presumably, they will need much less than 10% reserve (less than a Falcon 9 for landing).  If trying to recover the side boosters drops the Falcon Heavy cargo from 54.4 to ~40 tons while trying to recover all boosters drops the tonnage to ~22 tons, the cost delta hits $1000/ton: a no-brainer to expend the booster (assuming you somehow have a manifest to deliver some sort of arbitrary cargo in multiple trips, say a Mars spacecraft).  A lot depends on just how fast they can get the center booster [plus upper stage] going and still slow the thing down and land it, vs. how much delta-v they lose when just returning the side boosters.  And of course, the whole exercise is moot unless they manage to talk customers in the ~20 ton range into buying a "twofer" launch instead of individual launches.

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1 hour ago, CptRichardson said:

 

Lighter payload, I believe. Plus less going easy on the rocket and punching the throttle through to 'Plaid' on the dial.

I'm going to do the math later, will be able to tell, they certainly did not reduce stage 1 or 2 fuel, just my sense, this was more of a throttle push than a lower weight issue.

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12 hours ago, AngelLestat said:

the benefit of having many engines is that you reduce manufacture cost due quantity.. is also easier to design different launchers or stages changing the numbers of engines and in case one or two fails, you can still achieve your goal.

Certainly, but I was asking about engine arrangements not multiple engines in general.

2 hours ago, rudi1291 said:

Appearantly the payload was heavier this time: JCSAT with 4696kg, CRS8 with 3136kg. 

https://www.reddit.com/r/spacex/comments/4hvn24/estimation_of_jcsat14_mass_via_linear_regression/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpaceX_CRS-8

Edit: I guess, for CRS8 we would have to add the weight of the capsule. Then it might be heavier than JCSAT...

LEO vs GTO.

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On 5/3/2016 at 4:55 PM, StrandedonEarth said:

This is a GTO launch with little margins left for landing, but apparently they will try another barge landing anyways without expecting success. Hopefully the hole will be smaller this time.

SpaceFlightNow article link

Just woke up and caught up on the thread. The hole is definitely smaller this time :wink:

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11 hours ago, Rakaydos said:

I'm pretty sure you dont have the right crane to do that, in your yard, though. :P

Crane?

I understood it to be an offer to have the stage land directly in the yard.

I did not realise that this was a landing burn using 3 engine rather than one. Awesome timing on the suicide burn considering how much G that much have been pulling, to get the whole 0 velocity at 0 altitude thing. For me that is the most impressive part of the whole thing.

 

Edited by codepoet
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21 minutes ago, codepoet said:

Crane?

I understood it to be an offer to have the stage land directly in the yard.

I did not realise that this was a landing burn using 3 engine rather than one. Awesome timing on the suicide burn considering how much G that much have been pulling, to get the whole 0 velocity at 0 altitude thing. For me that is the most impressive part of the whole thing.

 

That's a ball-sy landing. The only reason they would care about gravity losses at that point is if they were fuel strapped.

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