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The first launch of the Space Launch System [SLS] 1

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WKTaylor

Well-known member
Sep 24, 2001
4,094
FYI ONLY...

If I have seen farther than others, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants." --Sir Isaac Newton

The first launch of the Space Launch System [SLS] live on August 29th, 2022! The launch is currently scheduled for 0833 AM USA-EST.

NASA's epic Artemis 1 moon mission launch is just 1 week away

I'm getting that old 'tingle'... anticipation mixed with apprehension and awe and admiration and pride and 'wonder-how-heck'... as I did watching the Saturn 5 launches as a kid.

The Long Journey Beyond Reach: Saturn 5 Launch History

Trivia... [before?] E.F. Bruhn wrote the first edition of the staggering Analysis and Design of Flight Vehicle Structures, he partially wrote and edited the [more obscure] book Analysis and Design of Missile Structures. E.F. Bruhn, J.I. Orlando, J.F. Meyers

Regards, Wil Taylor
o Trust - But Verify!
o We believe to be true what we prefer to be true. [Unknown]
o For those who believe, no proof is required; for those who cannot believe, no proof is possible. [variation,Stuart Chase]
o Unfortunately, in science what You 'believe' is irrelevant. ["Orion", Homebuiltairplanes.com forum]
 
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it'll be great to see, for sure; but I think SpaceX have eclipsed them.

"Hoffen wir mal, dass alles gut geht !"
General Paulus, Nov 1942, outside Stalingrad after the launch of Operation Uranus.
 
Oh yeah I have a special wake-up call already set up for the day. I'm in a western time zone so activities will start early in the morning for me.
 
rb1957 said:
but I think SpaceX have eclipsed them.
For sure.
I'm not sure NASA really knows how to do this now. They are good at building and operating probes to the planets and the Webb telescope is a marvel to be sure. This SLS has been a scheduling and financial debacle for a decade. There are serious problems with the ground support equipment and launch tower. Remember how poorly the rocket performed during the first wet test too. I've been expecting some type of problem to arise this week and won't be surprised to see it rolled back to the assembly building. If that happens, then I expect the SpaceX starship to launch first. That would probably kill the SLS program.
I hope I'm wrong and hope for great success. BUT- after following this program for years I really will be surprised if this thing ever launches a manned mission.

Brad Waybright

The more you know, the more you know you don't know.
 
nah, SLS has support in Congress ... if they remove life support then things'll be different.

"Hoffen wir mal, dass alles gut geht !"
General Paulus, Nov 1942, outside Stalingrad after the launch of Operation Uranus.
 
RB...

For a few extreme launch conditions, SpaceX has 'bit-the-bullet' and accepted loss of the first stage of launch vehicles... no landing gear, no grid-fins and full expenditure of fuel.

Also, the the super-sized SpaceX launch vehicle has yet to lift-off with all [33] stage-1 engines running. That cacophony of engines seems pretty sketchy/chancy to me. I figured that the first stage would/should have flown a typical launch profile, by now, with a throw-away dummy upper-stage.

But, hey... my SWAG... what do I know...?

Regards, Wil Taylor
o Trust - But Verify!
o We believe to be true what we prefer to be true. [Unknown]
o For those who believe, no proof is required; for those who cannot believe, no proof is possible. [variation,Stuart Chase]
o Unfortunately, in science what You 'believe' is irrelevant. ["Orion", Homebuiltairplanes.com forum]
 
yes, their new booster is a beast ! At 5000 tonnes, it is nearly double the Saturn V (3000 tonnes).

"Hoffen wir mal, dass alles gut geht !"
General Paulus, Nov 1942, outside Stalingrad after the launch of Operation Uranus.
 
I still think SpaceX is light years ahead of NASA, considering their accomplishments and available resources. As with Artemis, there are many concurrent activities involved with the Starship project. Aside from SpaceX efforts, government agencies, particularly the FAA have been slow completing the permitting process. The last environmental assessment was finished in late June after many delays. I believe this process still isn't complete, but does not yet seem to be delaying launch. Also, whether the first booster and ship is recovered for reuse, they are being built as such using nascent techniques. I'm still fascinated to watch 2 boosters land instantaneously within sight of each other. I can't wait to see a super-heavy booster recovery using the launch tower 'chopsticks'. SpaceX may be slightly behind schedule, and no idea about the state of their finances, but it's nothing like the overages that have defined the SLS.

Brad Waybright

The more you know, the more you know you don't know.
 
BTW... I always wondered why the base of launch vehicles [with engines, structure and guidance] wasn't separated from the tank-section... allowing the base-section to be recovered by parachute/flotation-bag for re-use... then repair/refurbish and install the base on another disposable 1st stage tank module.

A test case could have been tried years ago using the original Atlas design... which was a clever single stage to-orbit concept... with additions of the [2] booster engines/structure/fairings that fed from the core-tank... then separated from core booster/tank when no-longer needed... and the core engine pushed itself and the payload to orbit.

The core booster consisted of the center engine... which I think the was optimized for higher altitude... mounted to the tank tank-body with guidance.

The jettisoned booster section... could have had tested with a parachute recovery system and an ocean flotation system plus recovery beacons. DANG opportunity missed. This section was 'ripe' for re-use.

Atlas_Missile_1_hqbj37.jpg


Regards, Wil Taylor
o Trust - But Verify!
o We believe to be true what we prefer to be true. [Unknown]
o For those who believe, no proof is required; for those who cannot believe, no proof is possible. [variation,Stuart Chase]
o Unfortunately, in science what You 'believe' is irrelevant. ["Orion", Homebuiltairplanes.com forum]
 
Bard... SpaceX did not develop space-launch in a vacuum... they hired lots of old-timers from industry with experience... absorbed available technology and lit-a-fire under new eager-guns... then test-test-test. Failure was always an option... assuming vital lessons were learned.

SpaceX's progress is reminiscent of the early USAF missile development. For about 6-months in the 1950s, my dad was in Thor Missile training at Vandenberg AFB CA. Thor and Atlas were being built/tested/launched/tweaked from Vandenberg and Cape Canaveral ~1-X week.

I remember watching ascending missiles from VAFB... weekly. They were dead silent until the 'roar' finally reached-us miles away in Santa Barbara. My Dad couldn't call us... be he let Mom know the night before a launch 'when' to have us kids outdoors playing at a 'certain time'.

PS: Officer and Senior NCO wives [spouses] always know secret stuff... that is why they have clearances ~equal to their GI husbands [spouses].

PS: While working at Santa Maria CA airport, some of our friends worked at VAFB [just-over the low coastal mountains from SM] and would let us know when missile launches were happening. It was cool! One time a bunch-of-us saw a double Minuteman III 'salvo [war] launch'. Kinda pretty, kinda eerie, kinda scary experience.

Regards, Wil Taylor
o Trust - But Verify!
o We believe to be true what we prefer to be true. [Unknown]
o For those who believe, no proof is required; for those who cannot believe, no proof is possible. [variation,Stuart Chase]
o Unfortunately, in science what You 'believe' is irrelevant. ["Orion", Homebuiltairplanes.com forum]
 
I don't think we're saying SpaceX invented everything in a vacuum. But what they did was create an environment where things get done. Their achievements are truly stunning. I remember my own reaction when I heard about landing rockets ... "nuts!" and it took only very few misses before they nailed it. And now this "chopstick" thing ... "nuts !" (and I'll be proved wrong again!)

"Hoffen wir mal, dass alles gut geht !"
General Paulus, Nov 1942, outside Stalingrad after the launch of Operation Uranus.
 
NASA operates under the watchful eye of Congress, many members of which would rather skim off money for other things. Therefore, any time there is a failure those vultures are ready to pick NASA apart. NASA is stuck spending far more money to ensure that not one step has an unexpected outcome, which is terribly expensive in time and money. Worse, there aren't as many "learning" opportunities where engineers and makers get skilled at analyzing what is happening, so when problems do occur the organization isn't in such a good position to recognize the reach of the problem.

SpaceX doesn't have that restriction - recall their earlier, nearly comic, failures. So they get an organization that accepts the need to stop and fix problems as they occur rather than just barrel along.

Neither group is careless, but the NASA effort expends brainpower in trying to imagine everything that could possibly go wrong and SpaceX, having looked at only a smaller set of likely conditions, does more testing to see what does go wrong. This narrows the effort considerably at the cost of sometimes turning hardware into a scattering of fragments.

Since it has turned out that NASA could not, in fact, imagine everything that could possibly go wrong, it's clearly not an infallible strategy, in spite of the extra time and expense, but when they go to Congress they have piles of evidence that they had done everything they knew in order to fight off the vultures.

If Congress were to fund smaller steps in NASA programs, then Congress could also just pull the plug very easily. The extra funding and extra time is not a NASA initiated problem; it's a Congressional lack of consistency in support problem with funding and time being the symptoms of dysfunction in Congress.

A visible difference I attribute to the two methods is the exhaust plumes of the Saturn V engines vs the SpaceX engines. I think part of trying to imagine every failure is a tendency to make everything as perfect as possible. If nothing varies then nothing can vary too much.

Look at the transition where the darker shield gas layer is finally heated to incandescence on the Saturn V F-1 engine. That is about as steady a transition as one can expect - just a few percent variation it the distance from the nozzle exit.

SpaceX doesn't use that method, but the exhaust plume is noticeably more chaotic. I expect a large amount of money was spent on that near perfect performance on the F-1 engines.

The Saturn V transition is seen here: The Falcon engine is seen here: and
They both work, but the F-1 is practically art and Falcon is git-er-done and the difference in price is obvious.
 
I think describing the early SpaceX failures as "near comic" is more than a bit harsh. I agree that SpaceX's tolerance for turning test pieces into a "scattering of fragments" is much higher than NASA's, but part of that equation is what is to cost of imagining every possible failure (and missing some) in terms of dollars and schedule compared to the cost of a failed experiment ? As long as we're not killing people ...

And don't forget all SpaceX launches are licensed by the FAA ... so they're not completely uncontrolled cowboys.

"Hoffen wir mal, dass alles gut geht !"
General Paulus, Nov 1942, outside Stalingrad after the launch of Operation Uranus.
 
The FAA is concerned with having a place for the shrapnel to go and a way to ensure that the rocket becomes shrapnel rather than heading where it shouldn't. They don't review lines of code to ensure the engines operate correctly.
 
This seems salient to this discussion--

Link


Brad Waybright

The more you know, the more you know you don't know.
 
NOTE to 'The bard', all: due to cybersecurity, when submitting a Link, please provide a brief subject/title relevant to the link.

As I recall, instability in the Saturn V F-1 engines, drove innovation towards stability in the F-1 and the SSMEs' with their god-awful million #-thrust engines'. AND having fewer engines resulted in lower potential destructive harmonics.

The Russians tried the use of many small engines for their 'moon-rocket'... and harmonics/instability destroyed all of the vehicles in 1st stage flight. Suggest You go-to Youtube search...
"Soviet N1 Moon Rocket \ The Largest Rocket we have forgotten".
'The Largest Rocket Explosion Ever - The Soviet N1 Moon Rocket Failure'

The brutal facts of today's world, are that that nationally-funded research is the foundation for basic knowledge and change-to-come... and is never cheap. What follows are innovators who take that hoard of hard-earned knowledge/experience and shape/reshape future.

NASA and the Russian Space agency have-had-to... and are-still... learning everything up-front. SpaceX and the all the other Space Agencies... India, Japan, China, PRK, etc... and component developers/contractors are the 'second mouse'**...

YES... BIG/EXPENSIVE/THROW-AWAY launch vehicles 'seem old fashioned'... but for super-sized payloads, the jury is out.

Regardless, SLS and SpaceX Starship... and their derivatives... must be fundamentally safe and reliable.##

***************
Anyway... I love quotes... I believe that these are relevant Fud-4-Thot... IE: perspective.

##"As a pilot, only two bad things can happen to you… and one of them (eventually) will.
a. One day you will walk out to the aircraft knowing that it is your last flight.
b. One day you will walk out to the aircraft not knowing that it is your last flight."
--Unknown

"Experience is one thing you can't get for nothing." -- Oscar Wilde

"In wisdom gathered over time I have found that every experience is a form of exploration." --Ansel Adams

"Experience is a brutal teacher, but you learn. My God, do you learn." --C.S. Lewis

"The early bird gets the worm, but the second mouse** gets the cheese." – unknown

Regards, Wil Taylor
o Trust - But Verify!
o We believe to be true what we prefer to be true. [Unknown]
o For those who believe, no proof is required; for those who cannot believe, no proof is possible. [variation,Stuart Chase]
o Unfortunately, in science what You 'believe' is irrelevant. ["Orion", Homebuiltairplanes.com forum]
 
I can't believe I am even speculating this... but... I was looking at Artemis, and SpaceX Starship... stacked assemblies... and this random thought got 'stuck' in my brain...

I wonder if the Artemis 1st Stage Core booster... with SRBs... would be a 'similar-to-diameter' match for the SpaceX Starship Upper [payload/fly-back] stage?

IF the SpaceX Starship 1st stage gives them 'trouble' due to the huge number of engines... and IF the Artemis 1st Stage core and SRBs are highly reliable [although expensive]... could the 'two' be mated/flown' together?

I think I'll stop daydreaming and go back-to-work.

Regards, Wil Taylor
o Trust - But Verify!
o We believe to be true what we prefer to be true. [Unknown]
o For those who believe, no proof is required; for those who cannot believe, no proof is possible. [variation,Stuart Chase]
o Unfortunately, in science what You 'believe' is irrelevant. ["Orion", Homebuiltairplanes.com forum]
 
never ! the two companies and their philosophies would never allow a merger.

"Hoffen wir mal, dass alles gut geht !"
General Paulus, Nov 1942, outside Stalingrad after the launch of Operation Uranus.
 
.. could the 'two' be mated/flown' together?
That's what payload adapters are for. "structural cone"

Keep on dreamin' Wil
 
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