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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=th6HQ9RtVCE
Content of the email I (and, undoubtedly, many others) just got: Something Big is Coming Elon Musk Holding Press Conference on Tuesday, April 5th Elon Musk, CEO and Chief Technical Officer of SpaceX, will hold a press conference on Tuesday, April 5th at 11:20am EST to discuss SpaceX's latest venture. Get a sneak peak of the discussion on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=th6HQ9RtVCE. The press conference will be webcast live at: http://www.visualwebcaster.com/spacex. The press conference will also be accessible via the home page of SpaceX.com by clicking the main banner. If you are unable to watch live, the press conference will be archived at http://www.visualwebcaster.com/spacex for future viewing. If so, 32 tonnes at 2/3 the cost of Delta IV Heavy.... Bye Bye Boeing! |
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On 5/04/2011 5:47 PM, Brian Gaff wrote:
But one has to ask, where is the money coming from for this? In these times, it has to be said that one is dubious about it being anything other than, The King is dead, Long live the )new?) King? Brian SpaceX site says the Falcon Heavy will launch 2012/2013 from Vandenberg - US recon sat launcher? |
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In article m,
says... On 5/04/2011 5:47 PM, Brian Gaff wrote: But one has to ask, where is the money coming from for this? In these times, it has to be said that one is dubious about it being anything other than, The King is dead, Long live the )new?) King? Brian SpaceX site says the Falcon Heavy will launch 2012/2013 from Vandenberg - US recon sat launcher? It's going to be a big launcher, capable of launching a 53,000 kg payload into an orbit of 28.5 degrees inclination at 200 km altitude. http://www.spacex.com/falcon_heavy.php The most interesting (new) feature I see is "propellant cross-feed from the side boosters to the center core". This has never been done on any launch vehicle to date, so it will be very interesting to see how easy/hard it will be for SpaceX to get this to work. Of course, even if they can't get it to work they say, "Should cross- feed not be required for lower mass missions, it can be easily turned off". It would be interesting to find out just how much this would impact Falcon Heavy's payload capacity. Jeff -- " Solids are a branch of fireworks, not rocketry. :-) :-) ", Henry Spencer 1/28/2011 |
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On Tue, 5 Apr 2011 15:36:20 -0400, Jeff Findley
wrote: It's going to be a big launcher, capable of launching a 53,000 kg payload into an orbit of 28.5 degrees inclination at 200 km altitude. Yes, but what payloads need that capacity anytime in the next decade? Three giant GEO satellites at the same time? Good luck scheduling that. http://www.spacex.com/falcon_heavy.php The most interesting (new) feature I see is "propellant cross-feed from the side boosters to the center core". This has never been done on any launch vehicle to date, so it will be very interesting to see how easy/hard it will be for SpaceX to get this to work. It hasn't exactly been done, but Atlas had something like it with its "stage and a half" engines that had to have severable connections to tankage in flight (and that was in 1959), and Saturn IB had multiple propellant tanks that had to pump around fuel in-flight (but they were all integrated as one unit, not hanging off the side of a core.) It's about damned time someone implement crossfeed. Delta IV-Heavy could do it, but it's probably too little, too late for Delta. It's toast if Falcon Heavy even comes in 100% overbudget. Brian |
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In article , bthorn64
@suddenlink.net says... On Tue, 5 Apr 2011 15:36:20 -0400, Jeff Findley wrote: It's going to be a big launcher, capable of launching a 53,000 kg payload into an orbit of 28.5 degrees inclination at 200 km altitude. Yes, but what payloads need that capacity anytime in the next decade? Three giant GEO satellites at the same time? Good luck scheduling that. DOD satellites. The cost savings isn't huge (what's a billion dollars for DOD?), but it's non-trivial. http://www.spacex.com/falcon_heavy.php The most interesting (new) feature I see is "propellant cross-feed from the side boosters to the center core". This has never been done on any launch vehicle to date, so it will be very interesting to see how easy/hard it will be for SpaceX to get this to work. It hasn't exactly been done, but Atlas had something like it with its "stage and a half" engines that had to have severable connections to tankage in flight (and that was in 1959), and Saturn IB had multiple propellant tanks that had to pump around fuel in-flight (but they were all integrated as one unit, not hanging off the side of a core.) Not the same thing at all. Cross-fed propellants needs three sets of valves for the core stage engines. One between the core engines and the core tanks, one between the core engines and the left booster, and one between the core engines and the right booster. The tricky bit is the transition between having the core engines fed by the booster tanks and having the core engines fed by the core tanks. Pressure transients in the lines could be an issue. You *really* don't want your turbopumps to suck gas, because if they do they overspeed and go *boom*. That's one of the most violent failure modes of a liquid turbopump fed rocket engine. It's about damned time someone implement crossfeed. Delta IV-Heavy could do it, but it's probably too little, too late for Delta. It's toast if Falcon Heavy even comes in 100% overbudget. It's also toast even if SpaceX can't get cross fed propellants to work, because they've got a *lot* of extra payload margin to work with. LOX/kerosene is a nice, dense propellant mix, leading to a very good fuel/dry mass ratio on their boosters. It looks like their mass ratio is a bit better than the Titan II first stage, which was one of the best stages by this metric (also dense propellants, but they were very toxic). The mass ratio is so good, in fact, that one of the SpaceX boosters ought to be SSTO capable (obviously with a tiny payload). And since it has nine engines, you could keep G's under control by shutting down unneeded engines in pairs. I'd be surprised if someone at SpaceX hasn't already run such a simulation just to see what kind of payload you could get out of a Falcon Heavy Booster SSTO... Jeff -- " Solids are a branch of fireworks, not rocketry. :-) :-) ", Henry Spencer 1/28/2011 |
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On 6/04/2011 8:43 AM, Brian Thorn wrote:
On Tue, 5 Apr 2011 15:36:20 -0400, Jeff Findley wrote: It's going to be a big launcher, capable of launching a 53,000 kg payload into an orbit of 28.5 degrees inclination at 200 km altitude. Yes, but what payloads need that capacity anytime in the next decade? Three giant GEO satellites at the same time? Good luck scheduling that. Compare the 'Big Three' U.S. launchers (Delta IV Heavy, Atlas V and Falcon Heavy) - Atlas 401 (basic version) - $187 million (much more expensive for the proposed heavy version); Delta IV Heavy - about $250 million. Both more expensive with less than half the payload. Simple answer - current satellites will be launched, but much *MUCH* bigger versions will be just around the corner - longer lives; more powerful commsats etc. Then there's the replacement for ISS - bigger modules with longer lives mean less expense overall. Then there's early Lunar ops - heard of my idea for Apollo NG? I worked out, that to get 7 tonnes payload onto the Lunar surface, I needed an LEO lift of 55 tonnes - I think I can save just a little on LEO, or reduce Lunar Surface payload by less than a tonne. Easy, Peasy. |
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On 04/05/2011 02:36 PM, Jeff Findley wrote:
In pond.com, says... On 5/04/2011 5:47 PM, Brian Gaff wrote: But one has to ask, where is the money coming from for this? In these times, it has to be said that one is dubious about it being anything other than, The King is dead, Long live the )new?) King? Brian SpaceX site says the Falcon Heavy will launch 2012/2013 from Vandenberg - US recon sat launcher? It's going to be a big launcher, capable of launching a 53,000 kg payload into an orbit of 28.5 degrees inclination at 200 km altitude. http://www.spacex.com/falcon_heavy.php The most interesting (new) feature I see is "propellant cross-feed from the side boosters to the center core". This has never been done on any launch vehicle to date, so it will be very interesting to see how easy/hard it will be for SpaceX to get this to work. Of course, even if they can't get it to work they say, "Should cross- feed not be required for lower mass missions, it can be easily turned off". It would be interesting to find out just how much this would impact Falcon Heavy's payload capacity. The previously announced payload capacity (32,000 kg) assumed Merlin 1C and no crossfeed, so I assume a launch with Merlin 1D and crossfeed disabled would be somewhere in between. Based on the specs of the 1C vs the 1D, I would say most of the performance increase comes from the Merlin, not the crossfeed, so probably closer to 53 than 32. Still big enough for the heaviest DoD/NRO payloads. |
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does anyone here have good data on the specifications of falcon 9?
i am looking specifically for empty mass / fuel mass for both stages .. servus markus Am 05.04.2011 21:36, schrieb Jeff Findley: In pond.com, says... On 5/04/2011 5:47 PM, Brian Gaff wrote: But one has to ask, where is the money coming from for this? In these times, it has to be said that one is dubious about it being anything other than, The King is dead, Long live the )new?) King? Brian SpaceX site says the Falcon Heavy will launch 2012/2013 from Vandenberg - US recon sat launcher? It's going to be a big launcher, capable of launching a 53,000 kg payload into an orbit of 28.5 degrees inclination at 200 km altitude. http://www.spacex.com/falcon_heavy.php The most interesting (new) feature I see is "propellant cross-feed from the side boosters to the center core". This has never been done on any launch vehicle to date, so it will be very interesting to see how easy/hard it will be for SpaceX to get this to work. Of course, even if they can't get it to work they say, "Should cross- feed not be required for lower mass missions, it can be easily turned off". It would be interesting to find out just how much this would impact Falcon Heavy's payload capacity. Jeff |
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In article ,
says... does anyone here have good data on the specifications of falcon 9? i am looking specifically for empty mass / fuel mass for both stages .. Since SpaceX is a private company, short of signing a nondisclosure agreement and talking to the SpaceX engineers, the best information you're going to find is on their website. FALCON HEAVY OVERVIEW http://www.spacex.com/falcon_heavy.php From above: Anticipating potential astronaut transport needs, Falcon Heavy is also designed to meet NASA human rating standards. Falcon Heavy is designed to higher structural safety margins of 40% above flight loads, rather than the 25% level of other rockets, and triple redundant avionics. Despite being designed to higher structural margins than other rockets, the Falcon Heavy side booster stages have a mass ratio (full vs. empty) above 30, better than any launcher in history. By comparison, the Delta IV side boosters have a mass ratio of about 10. Jeff -- " Solids are a branch of fireworks, not rocketry. :-) :-) ", Henry Spencer 1/28/2011 |
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