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CHR1SZ

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Posts posted by CHR1SZ

  1. Definitely my first successful rendezvous mission. I'd just made a new space station (as the old one had suffered a serious rocket malfunction and ended up in a stupidly inclined orbit) and I sent the core module up, crewed by 3 kerbals (but with a second cockpit/viewing area with room for one more). I sent up a rocket with 3 more kerbals, intending to do a full crew exchange. I managed to eventually dock and, over a period of 10 minutes, swapped the crews by EVA. Exchange completed, I undocked, made the de-orbit burn to a perfect splashdown in the sea.

  2. Well, I've just sort of landed my first unmanned probe on Gilly. However, the pads on the small landing legs I'm using have sunk into the ground, and the lander is happily sliding along the surface at a steady 2.7 m/s and is showing no sign of stopping. It's basically stable, but I cannot quicksave or go back to the space center as the lander is still technically moving! How do I make it stop?! :0.0:

  3. I haven't been very far at present (my consists purely of an SSTO, a large LKO station, a small Mun base and rover, and a reliable rocket system for putting large objects in LKO), but I have safety systems present in all my craft (i.e. I've made rescue ships and I can safely abort any manned mission inside the atmosphere). I'm considering sending something to Eve but I'm not sure whether I can be bothered to make something that can return to Kerbin, so it's unlikely any kerbals will get to visit. If any of my kerbals are killed by pilot error, then it's their fault. If they are killed due to mechanical failure (e.g. parachute comes off) then it does sadden me somewhat. I've placed a flag amongst the debris of my various SSTO prototype tests at the end of the runway as a memorial to all kerbals K.I.A. in this way

  4. You come up with an ingenious system to dock your mun rover to your mun base, and, upon trying it out, this happens:

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    Does anyone know why this happened? I think it's something to do with the magnetism physics on the docking clamps, but I don't know how that can supply enough force to fling a Mk1 command pod 500m across the mun. On the up side, it could have been worse. Somehow.

  5. The rules don't seem to prohibit the use of infini-fuel (though common sense would, since mods aren't allowed :P ) so here's my try:

    Around 60 km/s, and it takes but a few seconds to splash into the water... :D

    Sorry mate, you've got to have a kerbal in there who survives the landing or it doesn't count.

    Even if infini-fuel was permitted.:(

  6. OK, I've smashed the stock record: my time is 1 minute 3 seconds

    Here is my craft (parachute overkill on the capsule)

    GohtpCV.png

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    WNJtRaM.jpg

    After going for a merry ride around the Mun (sadly I failed to get a grav-assist off Minmus as well, maybe I'll try that if someone beats this record) Jebediah had a lot of fun re-entering the atmosphere in excess of Mach 10. The 2 screenshots here are each side of re-entry (i.e. reentry began somewhere between 4:04:42:29 and 4:04:42:30)

    YPI1y8Y.png

    p9ahDyq.png

    After pulling the 'chutes and jettisoning the upper stage at just 100m above sea level, the craft floated to splashdown and Jeb suddenly looked very bored

    HoxQi6i.png

    Mission log:

    M4td1p3.png

    Have fun beating this and subjecting your kerbals to more extreme G-force in the process!

  7. Hi guys, this is my first post on the KSP forums, so rather than ramble on in the welcome forum, I've got a submission for the K Prize!

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    (sorry if I've screenshot-spammed a bit, I don't know how much I need to post as proof)

    As I suffer from a slight case of lazy designer syndrome, the Sepratrons you can see on the nose are fired at the end of the runway to force the nose up and assist in take-off. They don't decouple though.

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    Sadly, it takes a while to get going, and doesn't like flying up steeply or being timewarped. As a result, ascent is a bit dull.

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    The rockets are toggled separately from the air-breathing engines, so by leaving the jets on when the rockets are fired more air is forced into the intakes, allowing the jets to run for longer.

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    The HyPerformance weighs in at 13.37 tons, in case it's not clear from the screenshot. :D

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    Touchdown!

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    Jeb insisted on planting a flag on the runway to mark his (unusually) successful landing. He is seen here daring me to run it over.

    As regards a piloting guide, keep the nose pointing between 20-30 degrees during the ascent as it is quite unstable and has a tendency to do sneaky backwards loops if you're not watching. Air-breathers are toggled with key 1, aerospikes are toggled with 2. It's unlikely to have enough fuel for a high orbit, so I tend to keep it circular at around 100K. Landing at KSC isn't difficult, although I would advise keeping it in orbit and waiting until daytime to land. You will have to glide most of the way in, although there should be enough aerospike fuel for the odd descent correction burn, and don't hesitate to put the jets back on if you need a little more control during runway approach (<2000m). I'll upload the .craft file as soon as I can find out how.

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