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Another possible Plesetsk failure today (110/8/05),
of a Rockot/Briz KM carrying ESA's Cryosat, although this has not been confirmed yet. ITAR TASS had this report, which said, "A command to separate the second stage of the carrier rocket didn't get through at the 6th minute of the flight and communication with the probe wasn't established at the designated time," Alexander Bobrenyov, the press secretary of the Khrunichev center, said". We had talked about the elevated space launch failure rate at Plestesk earlier this year. If this is a failure, half of the launches from the Northern Cosmodrome would have failed so far this year. Here's my earlier post from June, 2005 about this: "http://groups.google.com/group/sci.space.policy/msg/b0ca889fde4610a6?dmode=source&hl=en" The June 21, 2005 Molniya-M launch vehicle failure (which was the first Molniya-M failure in 15 years after 52 consecutive successes) is the fifth failed space launch in 35 attempts from Plesetsk in Russia since 1999, exclusive. This includes two failures by the usually-reliable R-7 types. No other launch site in the world has suffered more than two failures during the same time frame. Are they doing something wrong at the Northern Cosmodrome? Launch Results 2000-2005(6/21) (Sites with more than 10 Launches) Site Launches(Failures) ----------------------------- Baikonur 99(1) Canaveral 66(1) Kourou 40(2) Plesetsk 35(5) Vandenberg 28(1) KSC 17(1) Sea Launch 14(2) Xi Chang 11(0) ----------------------------- - Ed Kyle |
#2
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Spaceflightnow article cites a missing command in the flight control
sequence that prevented 2nd / 3rd stage separation. The recent failures are reminiscent of the string of 1998-1999 Titan failures in the multitude of causes from hardware defect to procedural errors. |
#3
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Mike Chan wrote:
Spaceflightnow article cites a missing command in the flight control sequence that prevented 2nd / 3rd stage separation. The recent failures are reminiscent of the string of 1998-1999 Titan failures in the multitude of causes from hardware defect to procedural errors. Rokot was turning out to be a reliable ride until this failure (this was the eighth Rokot orbital attempt and the first failure). It is a shame the vehicle waited until a $170 million spacecraft was aboard before it failed. The UR-100N launcher upon which Rokot is based had not suffered a failure since 1992, as best I can tell, but it did suffer a fair number of failures during its development in the late 1970s. - Ed Kyle |
#4
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![]() Ed Kyle wrote: Another possible Plesetsk failure today (110/8/05), of a Rockot/Briz KM carrying ESA's Cryosat, although this has not been confirmed yet. ITAR TASS had this report, which said, "A command to separate the second stage of the carrier rocket didn't get through at the 6th minute of the flight and communication with the probe wasn't established at the designated time," Alexander Bobrenyov, the press secretary of the Khrunichev center, said". We had talked about the elevated space launch failure rate at Plestesk earlier this year. If this is a failure, half of the launches from the Northern Cosmodrome would have failed so far this year. Here's my earlier post from June, 2005 about this: "http://groups.google.com/group/sci.space.policy/msg/b0ca889fde4610a6?dmode=source&hl=en" The June 21, 2005 Molniya-M launch vehicle failure (which was the first Molniya-M failure in 15 years after 52 consecutive successes) is the fifth failed space launch in 35 attempts from Plesetsk in Russia since 1999, exclusive. This includes two failures by the usually-reliable R-7 types. No other launch site in the world has suffered more than two failures during the same time frame. .. Are they doing something wrong at the Northern Cosmodrome? .. My guess is they're too busy staying warm. :-) It is interesting that the error apparently took place in a system that obviously has to be specifically altered for orbital launch vice warhead delivery--you would think they would be especially careful in those areas... Tom Launch Results 2000-2005(6/21) (Sites with more than 10 Launches) Site Launches(Failures) ----------------------------- Baikonur 99(1) Canaveral 66(1) Kourou 40(2) Plesetsk 35(5) Vandenberg 28(1) KSC 17(1) Sea Launch 14(2) Xi Chang 11(0) ----------------------------- - Ed Kyle |
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![]() Tom Cuddihy wrote: My guess is they're too busy staying warm. :-) It is interesting that the error apparently took place in a system that obviously has to be specifically altered for orbital launch vice warhead delivery--you would think they would be especially careful in those areas... You may have just stumbled on where the FOBS concept came from- somebody forgot to turn the nob from "Orbit" to "United States". :-) Pat |
#6
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![]() Tom Cuddihy wrote: Ed Kyle wrote: Another possible Plesetsk failure today (110/8/05), of a Rockot/Briz KM carrying ESA's Cryosat, although this has not been confirmed yet. ITAR TASS had this report, which said, [...] It is interesting that the error apparently took place in a system that obviously has to be specifically altered for orbital launch vice warhead delivery--you would think they would be especially careful in those areas... BBC News has this report: quote "We confirm from the information we have from the State Commission that there was a problem with the software flight control system in the Breeze upper stage of the launcher," European Space Agency spokesperson, Simonetta Cheli, told the BBC News website. /quote at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4381840.stm /dps |
#7
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![]() snidely wrote: Tom Cuddihy wrote: Ed Kyle wrote: Another possible Plesetsk failure today (110/8/05), of a Rockot/Briz KM carrying ESA's Cryosat, although this has not been confirmed yet. ITAR TASS had this report, which said, [...] It is interesting that the error apparently took place in a system that obviously has to be specifically altered for orbital launch vice warhead delivery--you would think they would be especially careful in those areas... BBC News has this report: quote "We confirm from the information we have from the State Commission that there was a problem with the software flight control system in the Breeze upper stage of the launcher," European Space Agency spokesperson, Simonetta Cheli, told the BBC News website. /quote at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4381840.stm Software strikes again! Yeah, I know. Software doesn't kill rockets, people who use software kill rockets. - Ed Kyle |
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