SpaceX Conducts First On-Pad Test-Fire of Falcon 9
FleaPlus writes "On Saturday, SpaceX successfully conducted a launch dress rehearsal and on-pad test firing of their completed Falcon 9 rocket, with the 15-story tall rocket held down to prevent launch (videos). SpaceX is one of several likely competitors (ranging from the upstart Blue Origin to the more experienced Boeing) in NASA's new plans for commercial crew transportation to low-Earth orbit. SpaceX has been cleared by Cape Canaveral for the Falcon 9's first orbital launch next month, carrying a test model of the company's Dragon cargo/crew capsule, although CEO/CTO Elon Musk has cautioned that they're still in the equivalent of 'beta testing' for the first few flights."
...of getting to space by making incremental improvements in technology (and substantial cost reductions through cutting bureaucracy).
Let NASA do the high risk/high return investments in fundamentally new technologies (aerospike engines, composite fuel tanks, hypersonic ramjets hell even laser beamed launchers or space elevators!). That, in a nutshell, is Obama's plan isn't it? To me, just a space enthusiast, it sounds good if not ideal. ("ideal" would have been to not have invaded Iraq and instead, COLONIZED Mars. They cost about the same.).
I just don't want to someday have American astronauts make their first landing on Mars and have to order Chinese food from the restaurant there. (It's okay, they can have the Moon).
No. Missed it by that much >| |<
P.S. No LOLspeak allowed here.
I know americans have problems with units for length but really "15 story tall"? Exactly how tall is a story? I don't even know how tall a 15 story tall house is, or even that it's 15 stories tall. Does that include the ground floor or basement? Or the top floor? A penthouse, it that one or two stories and included in this measurement? Can you use "story" to measure something lying down or is everything "1 story long"? The height of a story must differ from house to house so how many stories tall is a 15 story tall house? No one knows how tall a 15 story tall house is, or that it differs from a 12 or 22 story tall house. Intuitively they are just "tall houses" and a 12 story tall house may very well be taller than a 15 story tall house. Insane! Can anyone translate this into some sane unit? And please, keep reports on scientific and technical issues scientific and technical.
- Henrik
- when the Shadows descend -
Whens the IPO for spaceX?
I check finance.google.com and its all BS paper shuffling worthless shells of a company. All either struggling, dying, living off the government teat, or all of the above. Its like watching a bad season of survivor and the only ones left on the island are the biggest crooks and cheats so you wish none of them would win.
On the other hand, I'd like to invest in a company doing something interesting, like spacex. Even if they fail, I'd much rather throw away $$$ on a cool rocket than a bunch of thieving financial industry crooks.
I found one article from Dec 2007 stating they might IPO in the next two years, aka Dec 2009
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN0344600420071204
So, wheres the IPO? I was reading slashdot in the Redhat IPO era and I suspect the combined slashdot readership would probably enjoy buying some SPACEX even more so than RHAT.
If 50K slashdotters alone, each bought $1K of SPACEX at an IPO, that would be enough for one Falcon 9 launch right there.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
Lol :-)
What a depressingly stupid machine.
Ha ha! DRESS rehearsal! (Phil Ken Sebben)
It is spelled iPad, not On-Pad. Get it right, people!
This is the 2nd firing, the submitted cleverly left that out. The first firing was aborted due to a software glitch not opening a valve and the engines started to go up in flames. If this had been ARES the submitter would have included that - but his submissions are always slanted.
http://spaceflightnow.com/falcon9/001/100309hotfire/
SpaceX has been cleared by Cape Canaveral for the Falcon 9's first orbital launch next month,
No it hasn't.
from http://www.spaceflightnow.com/: "Between now and launch, engineers will install the rocket's flight termination system charges that would destroy the vehicle if it flew off course and threatened the public. "
They haven't installed and tested the equipment to allow the Air Force RSO to destroy the rocket in the event of a guidance failure. I doubt the Air Force would have signed off on the launch until that is complete. They're using an Air Force pad; so, they have to follow Air Force rules in addition to NASA flight rules
yes, this launch will be more dahkah and blackah than any other. yes.
THANKS
These guys have taken a large risk, and to make that risk worth it, they want to earn many times that when they have the IPO.
Like it or not, venture capitalists fund innovation. They are not selling manufactured financial instruments that add no value (a generous description of recent history), they are paying the payroll and paying for the equipment at new companies with new ideas. They may expect a 10x or greater return but they know that historically nine out of ten of the ventures they finance will fail. In short, one experiment has to return 10x to pay for itself and the nine failed experiments.
As an engineer my emotions say it is wrong that the VCs get so much of the payoff compared to engineers and other workers but when I force myself to think rationally I realize that my paycheck was secure during years of development and that paycheck came from the VCs' pockets. Same for all the cool equipment I got to geek out over. I took no risk. This was true for the companies that I worked for that were part of the 1/10th that succeeded and the 9/10ths that did not. When I think about it rationally there is some fairness to the system. Is it the ultimate system, probably not, but I can't think of another realistic system(*) that will be somewhat efficient and tolerant of risk. The current system is after all the "winner" of a darwinian process going back millennia.
(*) OK being a parasite and basing your company on industrial espionage is probably far more efficient than anything else but parasites have to be quite benign (small in this case?) or far less common than hosts.
although CEO/CTO Elon Musk has cautioned that they're still in the equivalent of 'beta testing' for the first few flights.
An awfully flippant comment for someone who aspires to launch astronauts to the Space Station Freedom. If a Falcon 9 crashes in the next few months it will be curtains for Obama's new "plan". The political backlash will be tremendous.
an ill wind that blows no good