Anomaly Triggers Self-Destruct For SpaceX Falcon 9 Test Flight
SpaceMika (867804) writes "A SpaceX test flight at the McGregor test facility ended explosively on Friday afternoon. A test flight of a three-engine Falcon 9 Dev1 reusable rocket ended in a rapid unscheduled disassembly after an unspecified anomaly triggered the Flight Termination System, destroying the rocket. No injuries were reported." Update: 08/23 13:33 GMT by T : Space.com has video.
Good on them for making the self-destruct such a high priority!
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
Not with a whimper, but a bang.
Nice to see that "rah rah free market!" is just as meaningless as "for mother Russia!" - every advance is just fallible humans fumbling in the almost-dark, tripping over, picking themsleves up and carrying on. Over and over.
robby rob break it down...
My ism, it's full of beliefs.
Because unlike your life they're doing something interesting.
"rapid unscheduled disassembly"
Talk about an understatement!
George Carlin would have gone mad about that nugget.
This really moves SpaceX up in my estimation as well. Until now, I pictured private space flight as focusing only on making profits, not sacrificing dollars in order to protect people around them. Maybe the privatization of space flight has a future after all!
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
They'll have to refer to it as a "Falcon 9 Dev1 (hopefully) reusable rocket" now. I like their NASA-like spin too - an "anomaly" caused the mission to be "auto-terminated". Stuff happens when you're trying to control that much energy, they'll get there.
I'm boning your mom, is that interesting enough for you?
It is for me, she's ashes in an urn over my fireplace.
Would you like a damp washcloth?
It seems Kerry, Grant and Tory have found a new gig already. And in true Mythbusters fashion they must end it with a bang!
I read a post on this somewhere that the mission was auto-terminated. The way the spokeperson said it made it sound as if it things were detected that meant it blew itself up. ... or was this spin?
Because Space X is so much better than the folks with half a century of experience that their rockets are perfect and never blow up ... Look at all the other posts where the threads devolve to "SpaceX is perfect and the government is bad for not breaking the law to give them launch contracts."
Was it a wormholr? A cloaked Romulan ship?
We'd better scan the area thoroughly before sending anything else up.
I've been told that 3D printing is the game changing technology of the future. Just 3D print a whole new rocket (fueled up) and it's OK.
"The world will pay me one gazillion dollars or I will unleash a rapid unscheduled disassembly upon the moon!!!!"
If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
There is a better video here.
SpaceX has been suing the government to be able to bid on launching military satellites. Will this hurt their chances of getting access to that market?
The video was captured by an onlooker. Because of the noise, SpaceX has to publish when tests happen, so fans know when to head to one of a couple of areas to watch and record them.
You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
So that's both CopSub and SpaceX having a boo-boo thing month - coinkidink?
1. It didn't blow up, it was blown up for safety reasons.
2. Other than the common hardware, this is entirely unrelated to actual satellite launches, it's a test system for landing tests. If it shows up a problem with the engines, which are the same, then all the better: they can fix it now instead of fixing it after they lose a payload on a real launch.
3. No-one else has done what SpaceX are doing with a real, operational rocket before. This actually is rocket science (or, at least, rocket engineering).
A 'rapid unscheduled disassembly'? Really? The damn thing exploded, just say that!
Hey, it's the anti-SpaceX nutter! How've you been?
Why is every single thing that Space X and Tesla does posted on Slashdot?
Because /. IS news for Nerds and Space X & Tesla are involved in nerdy things.
YOU MANIACS! YOU BLEW IT UP! OH, DAMN YOU! GODDAMN YOU ALL TO HELL!
(this text brought to you by the Lameness filter, which wishes to remind you that using too many caps is like yelling)
I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
but none of those conversations will involve random Internet discussion forums.
Eeeeexcept that Musk himself tweeted about it as soon as word had spread on internet discussion forums that SpaceX had a loss-of-vehicle.
But you keep up that holier-than-thou act, Princess. I'm sure you're convincing someone.
But he may have been just making a joke, so I gave him the benefit of the doubt.
Prediction for end of Universe #42: Fencepost error in Quantum_bogosort.cpp
it didn't blow up, it got blown up ... I see the difference.
Nobody? You sure about that? I'm pretty sure the Russians did it long, long before you were born, on a moon far away.The americans did. Hell, it was even that grumman company you fanboys love to disparage. And they did it with slide rules.
Get off my lawn.
Its because Elon Musk has an enchanting musk!
Why the fuck is Kerry?
Q: Did a black hole appear inside the rocket housing during flight?
A: No
Q: Did Earths gravimetric field temporally invert?
A: No
Then its not an Anomaly.
Its more likely a software bug with the termination system, or, faulty internal sensors which triggered it. ;)
Sigh.... It aint rocket science!
3. No-one else has done what SpaceX are doing with a real, operational rocket before. This actually is rocket science (or, at least, rocket engineering).
Except for NASA, 40-50 years ago. Reusable rockets certainly aren't new. This method isn't new. Electronics have made it far easier and more reliable, but they haven't invented shit.
SpaceX isn't doing ANYTHING new at this point, they are riding on the coat tails of work done by agencies like NASA, JAXA, Russia and the EU's space programs.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
Another way to put that is: "Why is it that Tesla and SpaceX are so disproportionately doing things worthy of the News for Nerds title?"
Imagine if there was some competition for cool new science in the consumer space.
:)
Anyone else read this as the "MacGyver" test facility?
I like my version better.