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We all got to see history made today.
If you hang out here, this is unlikely to be news to you, but SpaceX has finally successfully recovered a booster by landing it at sea on their barge. So, having landed one booster back in the area of the pad and another out at sea, there really can no longer be any question if it's possible to recover a booster. The only remaining questions have to do with what percentage of boosters can successfully be recovered. After all, ocean conditions won't always be as pretty as they were today, everything must work perfectly every time, and recovery still may not be possible for certain mission profiles. Still, It seems to me that every launch provider must now be looking at recovery, or innovate some other way of drastically reducing launch cost. In short: This changes everything. |
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On Friday, April 8, 2016 at 5:21:43 PM UTC-4, Vaughn Simon wrote:
We all got to see history made today. If you hang out here, this is unlikely to be news to you, but SpaceX has finally successfully recovered a booster by landing it at sea on their barge. So, having landed one booster back in the area of the pad and another out at sea, there really can no longer be any question if it's possible to recover a booster. The only remaining questions have to do with what percentage of boosters can successfully be recovered. After all, ocean conditions won't always be as pretty as they were today, everything must work perfectly every time, and recovery still may not be possible for certain mission profiles. Still, It seems to me that every launch provider must now be looking at recovery, or innovate some other way of drastically reducing launch cost. In short: This changes everything. spacex is sending a dragon to mars asa proof of concept. it will be unmanned, but still that progress ![]() |
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