SpaceX Test-Fires Booster For Second Starship Launch (spacenews.com) 65
SpaceX says it successfully test-fired the booster for its next Starship launch, although that liftoff may still be weeks away. SpaceNews reports: SpaceX fired the Raptor engines in the Super Heavy booster designated Booster 9 in a static-fire test at its Starbase test site in Boca Chica, Texas, at approximately 1:35 p.m. Eastern Aug. 25. SpaceX said it conducted a "full duration" firing, which appeared to last about five to six seconds. SpaceX later stated that all 33 engines successfully ignited, although two shut down prematurely. "Congratulations to the SpaceX team on this exciting milestone!"
The company did not state if that performance was sufficient for it to proceed with a launch attempt, but it was better than an earlier test of the same booster Aug. 6. That test ended early, after the engines fired for less than three seconds, with four of the Raptors shutting down prematurely. If SpaceX is satisfied with the outcome of the test, it is likely one of the final technical milestones before it is ready for a second integrated Starship/Super Heavy launch. The first, April 20, failed four minutes after liftoff when several Raptor engines in the Super Heavy booster shut down and vehicle later lost control and tumbled.
The company did not state if that performance was sufficient for it to proceed with a launch attempt, but it was better than an earlier test of the same booster Aug. 6. That test ended early, after the engines fired for less than three seconds, with four of the Raptors shutting down prematurely. If SpaceX is satisfied with the outcome of the test, it is likely one of the final technical milestones before it is ready for a second integrated Starship/Super Heavy launch. The first, April 20, failed four minutes after liftoff when several Raptor engines in the Super Heavy booster shut down and vehicle later lost control and tumbled.
Launch Starship and Cancel SLS (Score:5, Insightful)
$4 billion per launch - and throwing away reusable Shuttle engines - is an abomination.
The Old Space, throwaway dinosaurs must die, and sooner not later.
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Must, but is unlikely before at least two more launches, maybe four.
Re: Launch Starship and Cancel SLS (Score:2)
Itâ(TM)s unlikely in general. SLS is a jobs program, not a rocket. Congresspeople care only that it generates employment in their state, not that itâ(TM)s horribly inefficient 1980s technology.
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It pointed out (a year ago) that SLS only continues BECAUSE it generates employment in the states of the congressmen who support it.
It points out that THAT is its raison d'etre.
So it backs up my comment and the comment you replied to.
And does nothing to actually justify the money wasted on SLS.
Now go back to your armchair.
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And NASA should RIGHT NOW be making contingency plans for that cancellation to happen.
Anything else is gross financial mismanagement by them. Again.
(*) It is annoying that Spacex have decided that "Starship" means both the Starship first+second stage AND just the second stage.
I guess they never use the term "Starship" in engineering m
Re:Launch Starship and Cancel SLS (Score:4, Interesting)
Redundant or not, we need these extremely highly trained people and their rockets to exist in much larger numbers than just a few private space companies can provide. Even though the price is inflated. This is a "jobs program" that is crucial to our economic and national security IMO.
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Hopefully we can use these rockets to launch millions of satellites into an orbit that would keep those satellites positioned between the Earth and the Sun to start blocking a couple of percentage points of the sun light hitting the planet to offset the 3000 tons of CO2 that each such test or launch produces in 3 minutes of operation, which is 3 billion grams of CO2, which is what 1 billion people produces in 3 minutes by breathing.
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I wish we'd been moving on this a few years ago. People are irrationally afraid of this kind of thing. IT's not polluting the atmosphere or anything invasive, and we could easily modulate it!
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You can read the responses to me even saying things like tha here, on /.
https://slashdot.org/comments.... [slashdot.org]
https://slashdot.org/comments.... [slashdot.org]
https://news.slashdot.org/comm... [slashdot.org]
https://news.slashdot.org/comm... [slashdot.org]
whether the suggestion is to block the Sun light by a couple of percentage points by satellites or aerosols (probably will be a combination), the reaction is always universally the same - you are a troll, how dare you suggest there is a problem in the first place, this is stupid, this is too expensive, this
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You didn't miss a bit. Methane doesn't have to be extracted and thousands of tons of it doesn't have to be burnt in seconds to stroke someone's ego. If it is done anyway, may as well use it for something useful.
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SLS briefly useful. (Score:2)
>Spacex don't even need to land either stage to be better and WAAAAY cheaper than SLS!
You're telling me they can build, launch, and throw away several Starship plus SuperHeavy combos for way less than one SLS? That seems a little optimistic this early on.
Because as incredible as even a disposable Starship will be for getting stuff to low orbit just as soon as it can do so reliably, it'll need at least a couple tankers worth of orbital refueling to get significantly higher.
Last estimate I heard out of Sp
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That quarter billion is to design and develop and build a prototype Starship, not to build another copy of the final, designed-to-be-easy-to-manufacture model.
"even one failed attempt could do serious damage to the launch tower"
They will practice at sea first, and only when they know they can do it quite safely will they risk the OLIT tower.
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You sure about that? I remember that being an estimate for the per-unit production cost a year or two ago.
Sure, once they really finalize and streamline things it'll likely be considerably cheaper, maybe even 90% cheaper as Musk is hoping, but how close to that goal are they today? Are you really prepared to say they'll get there *before* at least a few Starships are flying regularly? At present they're still scrapping a lot more ships that they're flying.
Because once Starship flies regularly, SLS is out
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If a Starship costs more than $250 million per unit then ( 16 times cheaper than an SLS launch ), I will eat one.
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But what about all the jobs across America that will be lost if SLS is permanently shutdown?
That's how the government legislative sponsors of SLS think about it.
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It's not the "jobs," it's the skillsets. We cannot afford for all these people to go to work for McDonalds.
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They can sell their skills in other industries
Reminds me of the scene from Margin Call.
Sarah Robertson: What's your background?
Peter Sullivan: My background?
Sarah Robertson: Your CV.
Peter Sullivan: I've been with the firm for two and a half years, working with Eric that whole time. But I hold a doctorate in engineering, specialty in propulsion, from MIT with a bachelor's from Penn.
Jared Cohen: What is a specialty in propulsion, exactly?
Peter Sullivan: My thesis was studying the ways that friction ratios aff
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Other industries are not the same industry. The rockets and all their parts and technologies usually do not continue to exist, and new people are not being churned in.
No matter how you slice it, you cannot just rebuild a national rocket program once it's ended.
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Spacex delays vs Old Space delays.
Hmm.
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But their argument is 100% correct. I support SpaceX's program, but those other rocket scientists are gonna be needed in the near future. And if war does come, the very first thing China or Russia is gonna do is start killing rocket scientists.
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Do you listen to your own questions?
Because that the high ground, they're China and Russia!
What happens when there's war and China and Russia are able to lob asteroids at us and we've not prepared?
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I worry about your own science education if this is not something you understand.
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It would help if you would say something remotely science related, if you're gonna vaguely insult my supposed lacking high school education.
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I just went back and re-read your comment and _I_ think _YOU_ thought I was saying China and Russia are geographically north of us, and therefore have the high ground. :D
It that's it, then thank you for the laugh. That was funny, though you maybe should have added an "LOL" something!
If that's not what your original "high school" snark was about, I am gonna need you to explain it cuz I'm not fucking getting it (and I'm pretty decent at these subjects).
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There are tons of options to attack from outer space, if we were to cede it. Many are not immediately viable, but that doesn't mean they won't be. And you don't need to lob "asteroids." One could put up a small asteroid containing and deorbit it at different points aimed at something large, or our own space facilities.
At the very least, we would let China take out all out satellites, or just gain a surveillance advantage.
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Voting my above comment "Troll" is probably a lot closer to trolling.
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I believe there is a very good reason to keep it around, at a much reduced cost: redundancy! It takes several decades to (re-)train up and develop a rocket program, so when those people leave or stuff is thrown out, it's an enormous loss.
We will always need a government space program, and soon I think all those extra rocket scientists are gonna come in extremely handy!
Re: Launch Starship and Cancel SLS (Score:2)
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The government program is large, lots more people, not subject to market forces, and far harder for an enemy to destroy during war. Same reasons it's so expensive. ;)
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and far harder for an enemy to destroy during war.
If you are at war with a enemy capable of destroying your space program, then having a space program is the least of your problems.
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OK the point is to make sure they CAN'T destroy you space program. Private companies go bust, governments do not.
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>I believe there is a very good reason to keep it around, at a much reduced cost: redundancy!
I *suppose* that SLS at a greatly reduced price might produce, say, those water rockets from when we were kids . . .
But I see no reason to think it could get to space on half of what it's currently wasting, let alone at a mere order of magnitude more than Starship.
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Once Starship launches, SLS is obsolete and MUST be cancelled.
It has no LES and an as-yet unproven, risky reentry method. It will be many, many flights before people fly on Starship. And the engines are still unreliable.
"Don't count your eggs..."
Re: Launch Starship and Cancel SLS (Score:2)
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Agreed. "Many, many" is not an exaggeration.
That´s why we would use the well/tested Falcon 9+Dragon to bring people to orbit and back.
Re: Launch Starship and Cancel SLS (Score:2)
Still needs work (Score:5, Interesting)
The progress they're making is amazing, but 2 engines shutdown during the test means they still have Raptor gremlins to sort out. Hopefully the shutdowns were precautionary and not due to actual faults. I doubt they will fly the booster until they can static fire without any shutdowns, otherwise they're just eating into their operating margin.
Can't wait to see that thing get to orbit. It's going to unleash an insane amount of space development once it's flying.
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Are there projects preparing for this?
I think in two years we will have super-cheap access to space and things like massive space telescopes, fairly cheap space stations, etc etc will all be possible.
But two years isn't that long in terms of building hardware and I haven't seen any announcements of actual test hardware.
Are they all there but working in stealth mode?
Re:Still needs work (Score:5, Insightful)
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I hate to even mention his name since it stirs up so much crap, but is you-know-who still working towards a settlement on mars?
If you mean Leon? Perhaps he is...between whiny posts on X.
As for this Booster test...well that's Leon just blowing out his backend again!
/sarcasm in there somewhere.
Re:Still needs work (Score:4, Interesting)
A good point on weight (Score:2)
Your point on not needing to save as much weight making designing stuff to go up on starship considerably easier and probably faster is good.
When launch costs $58k/kg [inverse.com] for SLS [universetoday.com], VS $10 [benzinga.com]-100 [nytimes.com] per kg for starship.
Note: I wouldn't trust these numbers as anything more than order of magnitude estimates.
Still, it would place SLS at around TWO orders of magnitude more expensive per kg than Starship.
Given that historically launch costs were often equal or more than the cost of the satellite, extreme weight saving meas
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Anything set to launch on another platform can be adapted to launch on Starship I imagine.
That said it likely isn't until it looks like Starship is ready to launch the first HLS mission that specific missions for the platform will get funded, and that's with good reason. There are always theoretical and proposed mission concepts, I am sure the engineers have the platform in mind but it's be kind a reckless to fund and engineer something that can only launch on a platform that hasn't reached orbit yet and e
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That would pay for 10 starship flights!
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Imagine you're a freshly minted 'Starship' captain... and they tell you that they're pretty sure only 2 of your engines are likely to fail in a 6-second period under ideal conditions.
Are you going to get on that ride?
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sure.
Scottie will *surel*y fix it before we all get turned to space dust.
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To be clear, that is 2 engines out of 33. So even assuming you CAN'T throttle up any of the other engines to compensate - so you are a freshly minted 'Starship' captain, and you are told you may lose 6% of engine thrust (so be down to 94% max) at some point.
My reply would be "Meh". I'll get on that ride.
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Two engines shut down out of 33... in a six second test firing. The booster is supposed to fire almost 180s in a launch.
Re: Still needs work (Score:3)
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It's going to unleash an insane amount of space development once it's flying.
Let us hope that includes a significant amount of orbital clean up efforts. If not then this will end poorly.
Re: Still needs work (Score:2)
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Nah, it would be cheaper to clean up orbit. It would also provide an excuse for the US to take out every foreign spy sat.
Big badda boom (Score:2)
Hopefully they won't kill anybody when this one blows up too.