Falcon 9 Explodes On Pad (npr.org)
Reader Mysticalfruit writes: NPR is reporting that a Falcon9 carrying the AMOS-6 satellite that was supposed to launch on Sat exploded during it's scheduled static fire. No injuries are reported. They're reporting that this was going to be the first reflown first stage.
The Verge adds:SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket, meant to launch a satellite this weekend, exploded on the launch pad at Cape Canaveral, Florida this morning. The explosion occurred during the preparation for the static fire test of the rocket's engines, NASA told the Associated Press. The blast reportedly shook buildings "several miles away." The company confirmed to The Verge the loss of the Falcon 9 an hour later: "SpaceX can confirm that in preparation for today's static fire, there was an anomaly on the pad resulting in the loss of the vehicle and its payload. Per standard procedure, the pad was clear and there were no injuries."
The Verge adds:SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket, meant to launch a satellite this weekend, exploded on the launch pad at Cape Canaveral, Florida this morning. The explosion occurred during the preparation for the static fire test of the rocket's engines, NASA told the Associated Press. The blast reportedly shook buildings "several miles away." The company confirmed to The Verge the loss of the Falcon 9 an hour later: "SpaceX can confirm that in preparation for today's static fire, there was an anomaly on the pad resulting in the loss of the vehicle and its payload. Per standard procedure, the pad was clear and there were no injuries."
I couldn't find a video of the actual explosion, but the Mirror has some footage and pics of the aftermath:
It's very likely the used rockets will have micro fractures everywhere that are nearly impossible to find.
This was not the reused booster stage. That was scheduled to launch later this year.
This rocket was brand new it was the first that would have been SCHEDULED TO REUSE later after this launch.
"People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
Sorry I got my sources wrong... This was a brand new booster. I'm sure like everything else SpaceX does there was voluminous amounts of data being recorded and they'll quickly understand the issue.
It sucks they lost the vehicle and the payload, but more so that the pad is likely heavily damaged.
Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
This rocket was brand new it was the first that would have been SCHEDULED TO REUSE later after this launch.
Wrong.
--quote--
For SpaceX, the private space company owned by Elon Musk, it was the "first launch of [a] flight-proven first stage," the company says. The mission was using the same rocket booster that sent the Dragon spacecraft to the International Space Station earlier this year.
--end quote--
Well, my Jewish grandfather's hopes were in no small part hinged on Hitler's failure (he survived). My wife's family's hopes were in no small part hinged on Franco's failure (many of them were executed). What does that say about them, you dullard?
Humanity's greatest threat is not from mediocre people, but from intelligent, charismatic individuals who think they're doing things for the good of humanity. Musk is a great example of this latter group. His failure is inevitable, but we can only hope that he fails early and without loss of life or limb suffered by those under him. Thank goodness nobody was hurt here.
This rocket was brand new it was the first that would have been SCHEDULED TO REUSE later after this launch.
Wrong.
--quote-- For SpaceX, the private space company owned by Elon Musk, it was the "first launch of [a] flight-proven first stage," the company says. The mission was using the same rocket booster that sent the Dragon spacecraft to the International Space Station earlier this year. --end quote--
Sorry, but that quote is wrong. The first reused booster is (was?) scheduled to launch SES-10 later this year.
It wasn't Facebooks satellite - they were just leasing a portion of the satellites broadband capability (36 Ka-band spot beams). This was still owned and operated by Spacecom, they and a lot of customers just lost out because of this failure.
This was the first AMOS satellite to be launched by SpaceX, up until now they had been launched by mainly Russian (AMOS-2 and AMOS-5) or Ukranian (AMOS-3 and AMOS-4) launchers, with AMOS-1 being launched by the Ariane 4 as the only exception.
Sorry, but that quote is wrong. The first reused booster is (was?) scheduled to launch SES-10 later this year.
Correct.
Is there independent confirmation of this, because I'm not hearing that?
Here.
What was blown up: AMOS-6
What's being launched on a reused rocket: SES-10
The first stage which is meant to be reflown, F9-023, is waiting for launch later this year. This first stage was brand new, and given the reports that the rocket was still standing with the top bent after the explosion, it doesn't really look like the first stage exploded. The explosion could have been part of the Falcon, the AMOS satellite, or the pad facilities for fueling the rocket. We'll find out which eventually.
Bruce Perens.
I was comparing Facebook's voracious information-gathering to totalitarianism as an aspect of fascism, hence Spanish and German mentions. The greatest aim of totalitarianism is total information awareness, and Facebook is the organisation in the whole planet with the greatest awareness of the greatest number of people's connections and opinions.
Since I assume you've lost nobody through totalitarianism, I am assuming there is no reason why you would understand why people like Zuckerberg are extremely dangerous. My wife's a Spaniard in her 50s who emigrated to the US, and then to England in 2004 - she does know what it's like to have a secret police take away a family member in the middle of the night. Her father worked for the national telephone company (Telefonica, now mostly privatised) - he would come home telling her about that room where government employees would listen in directly on telephone calls and issue reports on people. It's terrifying, but it's all real and within living memory.
It doesn't matter that Zuckerberg isn't going about offing people himself - what matters is that he is building the tools for others without regard for the consequences if an authoritarian populist streak were to spread through Western Europe and the Americas.
It blew during or shortly after a static firing...
Eyewitnesses said the explosion happened at T-3 minutes. If that is true, the explosion would have occurred during the fuel load and not the firing of the engines. I'm sure we'll learn more as the day goes on. I'm also sure the SpaceX engineers have very valid reasons for conducting a test firing. They are well-trained professionals, and not teenagers given to thinking like "get away with it" and the previous generation is full of "dinosaur idiots". If nothing else, this will provide a vector for making pre-launch procedures safer. Better to figure it out with a $200M satellite on board than human lives.
I'm sorry, but your opinion seems to be wrong.
Here's a video of the explosion. It's just over 1 minute in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...