SpaceX And/Or Rocketry In General

David S
David S
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Mike Hewson wrote:FWIW :

Mike Hewson wrote:

FWIW : Sorry, I'd missed mentioning what I thought was the most interesting analogy b/w rail car sorting and booster return. The desired braking is proportional to mass and requires a realtime assessment. The disconnected car cresting the hump is weighed and then variably braked prior to switching with the intent of it just rolling to a near stop with some existing manifest. This has feed-back and feed-forward components. Here the gravitational potential energy gifted by the height of the hump is paid out to various 'abrasive' modes. The clamping of the wheels in the braking section is rather like the re-entry burn. Along these lines of thinking then, the Falcon Heavy three-way return is going to be a real hoot ..... or a real **** up :-)

Cheers, Mike.

A hump generally has two sets of retarders. The amount of braking applied by the master retarder is calculated based on the car weight, but the actual effect (resulting speed) is then measured and fed into the calculation for the group retarder. Besides the weight of the car, other contributing factors include the temperature and the wind speed and direction. Really strong winds have been known to actually push cars back up the hump.

Another part of the calculation is the computer's notion of how many cars are already in the destination track and how far down they are. This is NOT measured empirically. Many years ago, I observed the Burlington Northern hump at Northtown Yard when computation was not matching reality. I kept hearing WHAM! and finally noticed a box car rolling into a track and hitting the preceding car really hard. At the distance from which I was watching, it took a few seconds for the next WHAM! to reach me. I imagine there were a lot of claims for damaged lading in the next few days.

At the museum, of course, we don't have a hump, but we do try our best to couple gently. A standing car or train being coupled to would ideally not move at all, but preferably no more than a few inches. But it does have to be hit hard enough for the knuckle to close and the pin to drop, and then you stretch it to make sure.

David

Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.

Mike Hewson
Mike Hewson
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Per SpaceflightNow the next

Per SpaceflightNow the next SpaceX launches have ( allegedly ) firmed up to :

Quote:
June 17 : Falcon 9 • BulgariaSat 1
Launch window: 1810-2010 GMT (2:10-4:10 p.m. EDT) Launch site: LC-39A, Kennedy Space Center, Florida

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch the BulgariaSat 1 communications satellite. BulgariaSat 1 will provide direct-to-home television broadcast and data communications services over southeast Europe for Bulsatcom. The payload will be the first geostationary communications satellite owned by a Bulgarian company. The Falcon 9 rocket’s first stage will be a re-flown booster. Delayed from June 15.


Quote:
June 25 : Falcon 9 • Iridium Next 11-20Launch time: 2024:59 GMT (4:24:59 p.m. EDT; 1:24:59 p.m. PDT) Launch site: SLC-4E, Vandenberg Air Force Base, California      
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch 10 satellites for the Iridium next mobile communications fleet. Delayed from October, December and April. Moved forward from June 29. [May 26]

and there are three TBDs for July.

Cheers, Mike.

I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...

... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal

AgentB
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archae86
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AgentB wrote:CRS-11 | Landing

Sweet. It makes the landing pad look bigger than needed. Wonder if they'll build them smaller for the Texas launch site?

Anonymous

Next launch:  1410 (Eastern

Next launch:  1410 (Eastern Time) June 19 - recycled 1st stage with RTB (return to barge).  Might not be a go because we seem to be in a pattern of daily rain with some areas receiving up to 5 inches/hour.  

archae86
archae86
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robl wrote: recycled 1st

robl wrote:
recycled 1st stage with RTB (return to barge).  

Elsbeth III left Port Canaveral Eastbound, presumably towing Of Course I Still Love You, a day ago.  

I really wonder about weather delay impact on the two week east coast launch cadence SpaceX needs to establish to even begin to grind down the payload backlog.

Maybe they'll raise the priority on getting the Texas launch site ready.  Useless for the polar stuff that needs Vandenburg, but I suppose it should be just fine for the geosynchronous birds that form so much of the market.

 

David S
David S
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More in the category of

More in the category of astronomy than rocketry, Amtrak sent me my Guest Rewards monthly statement today. Of course, it included various special offers. One of them is 30% off travel to Carbondale on August 21 to see the full eclipse. I might just go for that.

Or maybe not. Totality lasts 2 minutes, whereas I could stay home and get close to 90% eclipse. Have to think about it.

David

Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.

Kavanagh
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An article entitled ‘Making

An article entitled ‘Making Humans a Multi-Planetary Species’ presents the vision of Elon Musk, CEO of SpaceX, for future manned trips to Mars and other planets in the Solar System and specifically what will be needed to create a self-sustaining Martian city.

 

 

http://www.spacex.com/mars

Richard

archae86
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Weather and other issues

Weather and other issues permitting, the Bulgariasat launch is about 29 hours away.

Here is a link for the SpaceX launch webcast.

This one is a used first stage, which is intended to do a barge landing.

archae86
archae86
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The earliest possible

The earliest possible BulgariaSat launch date is now June 23, 2017.  It got pushed out to replace a fairing pneumatic valve.  

This sets up a possibility for a rather close spacing between launches on the two coasts as there is an Iridium NEXT launch out of Vandenberg currently showing earliest for June 25 (also a barge recovery shot).

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