Remember the Apollo 11 launch?
Posted: 10 Feb 2022, 16:19
The long and "exciting" run out of the rocket on the huge platform running at 1.5mph? Leading up to the eventual launch.
All these new things the Apollo brought us with the Saturn V.
Well last night SpaceX created a new first. they stacked their Starship on top of the super heavy booster on the orbital launch pad using the lifting arms on the launch tower. The SpaceX watchers are calling them chopsticks.
https://youtu.be/mhJRzQsLZGg
You may want to skip quite a bit. It is just as slow as the old Satrun V roll out.
The next first will be when they use the same arms to lift the booster followed by stacking the starship on top.
The third first will be when they catch the booster using those same arms and place it back on the orbital launch pad (if it doesn't all go boom)
The fourth first will be when they land a starship next to the booster, pick it up with the arms and place it back on top of the recently landed booster.
For those interested in the numbers, when they get 32 of their Raptor 2 engines on the booster it will have twice the thrust of a Saturn V. Currently it has 29 first gen Raptor engines on the booster and will only generate about 1.5 times the thrust of a Saturn V.
Next step is the FAA completing their environmental assessment of Starbase so that they can launch the thing. Musk is very pragmatic in terms of success criteria. He says if it actually lifts off and doesn't blow up destroying the tower and the tank farm, that will have been a success. The goal of the first test flight is for the booster to come down under power and hover over the sea near Hawaii before gently dropping into the sea and for the Starship to reach orbit and then re-enter without blowing up, also hovering above the sea before a gentle drop into the ocean. I don't think the drone landing ships are specced for a Starship landing, much more mass than a Falcon 9 booster.
All these new things the Apollo brought us with the Saturn V.
Well last night SpaceX created a new first. they stacked their Starship on top of the super heavy booster on the orbital launch pad using the lifting arms on the launch tower. The SpaceX watchers are calling them chopsticks.
https://youtu.be/mhJRzQsLZGg
You may want to skip quite a bit. It is just as slow as the old Satrun V roll out.
The next first will be when they use the same arms to lift the booster followed by stacking the starship on top.
The third first will be when they catch the booster using those same arms and place it back on the orbital launch pad (if it doesn't all go boom)
The fourth first will be when they land a starship next to the booster, pick it up with the arms and place it back on top of the recently landed booster.
For those interested in the numbers, when they get 32 of their Raptor 2 engines on the booster it will have twice the thrust of a Saturn V. Currently it has 29 first gen Raptor engines on the booster and will only generate about 1.5 times the thrust of a Saturn V.
Next step is the FAA completing their environmental assessment of Starbase so that they can launch the thing. Musk is very pragmatic in terms of success criteria. He says if it actually lifts off and doesn't blow up destroying the tower and the tank farm, that will have been a success. The goal of the first test flight is for the booster to come down under power and hover over the sea near Hawaii before gently dropping into the sea and for the Starship to reach orbit and then re-enter without blowing up, also hovering above the sea before a gentle drop into the ocean. I don't think the drone landing ships are specced for a Starship landing, much more mass than a Falcon 9 booster.